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China, Japan, South Korea, ASEAN Agree on Wider
Currency Swap Arrangements
ISTANBUL, May 4 (AFP) - Finance ministers from
China, Japan, South Korea and the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (ASEAN) agreed Wednesday to expand their system of bilateral
currency swaps under the Chiang Mai Initiative to a more
multilateral system. The ministers, meeting as the "ASEAN-plus-3" on
the sidelines of the Asian Development Bank (ADB) annual meeting in
Istanbul, said this would make the Chiang Mai Initiative a "more
effective and disciplined framework." Under the currency swaps, an
Asian country hit by a foreign exchange crisis like the one in 1997
could borrow borrow foreign currency -- usually US dollars -- from
another country to bolster its reserves until the crisis had passed.
An ADB analyst remarked that Wednesday's accord was a step towards
setting up an "Asian Monetary Fund," although such an institution
might never actually be created. In a joint press conference, the 1O
ASEAN and three East Asian financial ministers also called for a
review of the quota of Asian countries in the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) "to properly reflect the current realities and their
relative positions in the world economy." The 13 ministers said an
economic surveillance system would be put into place along with the
Chiang Mai Initiative framework, to detect irregularities early and
apply swift remedies. They also said a collective decision-making
mechanism would oversee the current system of bilateral swap
arrangements "as a first step towards multilateralization." This
would make it easier to activate the bilateral swap arrangements in
case of an emergency, the ministers said in a joint statement read
after their three-hour meeting. Crisis-hit countries would also be
able to draw down as much as 20 percent of the money under the
bilateral swap arrangements without having to go through the IMF.
Under the current arrangements, countries that draw more than 10
percent under their swap arrangements must have an IMF-supported
program in place. The decisions of the ASEAN-plus-3 group apparently
followed recommendations made during a meeting of the Chinese,
Japanese and South Korean ministers a day earlier. Previously, the
initiative launched in Chiang Mai, Thailand, in May 2000 involved
only bilateral swaps but the Chinese, Japanese and South Korean
ministers said they would look towards expanding this into
multilateral swaps involving three or four countries. Asian
countries had earlier proposed the creation of an Asian Monetary
Fund after the 1997 fiscal crisis but the United States and the IMF
had strongly opposed this. Chinese minister Renqing Jin said his
country had already agreed to "double the scale of its currency
swap," from its current level. However, when asked if they were
setting up an Asian Monetary Fund, Japanese minister Sadakazu
Tanigaki replied, "only the Chiang Mai Initiative was discussed".
The ministers said the initiative had been very helpful in
maintaining the financial stability of Asian countries even if there
had been no repeat of the 1997 crisis. Masahiro Kawai, special
adviser to the ADB president, who monitored the ASEAN-plus-3
meeting, said the ministers wanted to increase the effectiveness of
the Chiang Mai Initiative which now covers 16 bilateral swap
arrangements. He called it a "step towards multilateralization,"
adding that a "de facto Asian Monetary Fund," may eventually be
created. He said the United States and the IMF had opposed such a
fund in the past partly due to fears it would increase the risk of
moral hazard. But Kawai said this was why the ministers wanted to
increase the surveillance function of the Chiang Mai Initiative. He
remarked that in the past, China had not joined the move to create
an Asian Monetary Fund and that if it joined with the other Asian
countries, they might be more successful. mm/wai |