China will make its capital account basically convertible in the
near future, the Shanghai Securities News said Wednesday, quoting a
senior official with the State Administration of Foreign Exchange
(SAFE).
Zou Lin, director of the Capital Account Department of the SAFE,
told a conference of investors Tuesday that the government will
encourage a greater outflow of capital while maintaining the
balance of capital entry and exit.
However, he said, the total convertible Renminbi (yuan) amount
still remains a long-term goal.
Relaxing control on capital outflow has recently become an
option for the Chinese government, as it faces amounting pressure
to allow yuan appreciation.
Moves considered by the government include further relaxing
control on overseas direct investment by domestic institutions and
gradually removing restrictions on investment in China by qualified
international foreign investors, said Zou.
Others include allowing foreign institutions and businesses to
raise funds from Chinese capital markets and allowing Chinese
institutional investors to invest in overseas securities
markets.
China abandoned its fixed exchange rate last July by delinking
the yuan from the US dollar and placing it in a managed basket of
currencies.
On Wednesday, the exchange rate between the yuan and dollar hit
a new high of 8.0390 to 1 at the China Foreign Exchange Trading
Center, representing an appreciation of 2.97 percent before the
reform.
(Xinhua News Agency March 2, 2006)