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Orderly outflow of
foreign currency from the Mainland
It would be better to
help Mainland residents move their foreign currency out of the
Mainland in a safe and orderly way than to try to restrict them.
Money, like water, very
often finds a way to flow around obstacles blocking its path. When
there is strong demand for capital to move across jurisdictions,
trying to restrict it will often just drive the flow underground,
where malpractices prevail to the detriment of the interests of
those having, possibly quite legitimate, needs for the movement of
funds. Quoting an old Chinese saying: "the sky wishes to rain and
mom wishes to remarry", some people may throw up their hands and say
that there is no way of stopping underground flows altogether. I
would say that building proper facilities to channel such flows, so
that they no longer need to go underground, is a better and more
constructive approach than trying to restrict them.
Perhaps I do not have a
very good understanding of the regulatory framework governing the
mobility of an individualˇ¦s money on the Mainland. We all have to
develop a better understanding of the policies and practices of
Chinaˇ¦s socialist market economy. There are of course complex
issues involved, including the all-important macro-economic
objective of maintaining monetary and financial stability,
protecting the interests of depositors and investors, the legitimate
desire of an individual to achieve higher, risk-adjusted return
(according to his own calculations) for his savings, and the
unquestionable right of the individual to withdraw money from his
bank account and spend it.
The maintenance of
monetary and financial stability is a very important policy
objective, given its importance to the sustainability of economic
growth and development. There is scope for difference of opinion
about what monetary and financial policies should be pursued at this
time on the Mainland. Some still feel that there is a continuing
need for fairly tight exchange controls on capital-account
transactions. Others point to the enormous liquidity in the
financial system on the Mainland, as a result of the large
current-account surplus and the rapid accumulation of foreign
reserves, and think that now is the time for the relaxation of
capital controls. Indeed, the high inflation rate and the
appreciation pressure on the exchange rate suggest that relaxation
may be overdue. But there is obviously a need to emphasise
controllability, gradualism and the ability to take the initiative
in financial reform and liberalisation. To the extent that there is
consensus, this seems to be in favour of the orderly outflow of
capital. It seems, to me at least, that meeting the desire of
individuals to invest overseas in an orderly manner is a policy well
worth pursuing.
A distinction can perhaps
be made between the mobility of capital across different currencies,
for example, from the renminbi to the Hong Kong dollar, and the
mobility of capital denominated in the same currency across
different jurisdictions, for example from the Mainland to Hong
Kong. While there is a need for greater care on the former, one
should feel a little more relaxed on the latter. After all, for
individuals who already have foreign currency, it seems a little
harsh to limit them to holding it in the banking system on the
Mainland in the form of deposits earning low interest, instead of
allowing them to move their own foreign currency to other
jurisdictions where there are investment avenues promising a higher
rate of risk-adjusted return. Allowing individuals to move their
own money, already in the form of foreign currency, for example Hong
Kong dollars, into Hong Kong, may of course increase their demand
for foreign currency. But this is precisely what we all would like
to see on the Mainland, to address the rather unusual macro monetary
environment there. Controllability is still high, given the current
restriction on conversion from the renminbi into foreign currencies
to an amount equivalent to US$50,000 per person per year.
The choice of investment
is a matter best left to the individuals. Everyone has a different
risk-return preference, and it is not the role of the authorities to
decide for individuals how they should invest their money. Such an
involvement of the government creates tremendous moral hazard that
should be avoided. At the same time, there is no doubt that
investors, particularly the smaller ones, do require protection. That
is why there are arrangements for the protection of investors, such
as the disclosure requirements imposed on fund raisers and financial
intermediaries, regulation of financial markets and the supervision
of financial institutions. This is an area in which Hong Kong is
very strong, possibly at the forefront of international standards,
although admittedly against a capitalist, free-market economic
background. But I would argue, in terms of investor protection,
that what is good for Hong Kong investors should also be good for
Mainland investors. If it is considered that Mainland investors
making such cross-border investments require more protection, a
threshold for the amount of money that an individual is allowed to
invest overseas could be imposed so that the channel is only
available to larger and more sophisticated investors.
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Joseph Yam
29 November 2007
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for previous articles in this column.
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