VietNamNet
Bridge – Any ODA receiver who borrows yuan from China, including Vietnam, will
be at a disadvantage because of the yuan appreciation and US dollar
depreciation, economists say.
Beijing has been
making every effort to enlarge the influence of the Chinese yuan worldwide. By
mid-2010, the yuan had been used in trade between China and 23 partners. A
report showed that by 2013, the total value of the cross-border transactions in
Chinese yuan reached 4.630 trillion yuan.
Dr. Ta Van Loi
from the Hanoi Economics University noted that lending other countries in yuan
is a part of the policy pursued by China which is attempting to make the yuan
into the third major hard currency in the world, next to the US dollar and the
euro.
Over 10,000
international finance institutions trade in Chinese yuan, a sharp increase from
900 in 2011.
Since mid-2014,
China and the UK have been exchanging their local currencies directly, not via
the US dollar. In October 2014, China and Russia signed an agreement worth $150
billion on trade in yuan and rubles, the move aiming to increase two-way trade
twofold.
According to Dr.
Luu Ngoc Trinh from the Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences, the lending in yuan
will bring big benefits to China and disadvantages to borrowers in the context
of the yuan appreciation and dollar depreciation.
Suppose that
China gives a preferential loan (with no interest rate) of 700 yuans to
Vietnam. At disbursement time, the sum of money equals 100 US dollars, which
means one dollar could be converted to seven yuan. However, five years later,
as the yuan appreciates, one dollar could buy six yuan only. This means that in
order to pay the debt, Vietnam needs to spend 117 dollars.
Meanwhile, in
order to have the additional $17, Vietnam will have to pay more Vietnam dong.
This will lead to dong depreciation and push up the inflation rate.
Bui Ngoc Son,
MA, from the Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences, noted that with the current
abundant foreign exchange reserves, China would push up lending in both dollar
and yuan.
“Even if China
lends in US dollar, it will still get big benefits,” Son commented. “At first,
the borrowers would find it satisfactory with the loans, because the US
reportedly maintains a weak-dollar policy. However, in fact, they are facing
high risks.”
Besides, Son
said, China will also benefit from selling out-of-date technologies it tries to
eliminate from its factories to borrowers. “As such, it can expand
economically, polish its image and sell out-of-date products as well,” he said.
Dat Viet
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