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POLITICAL ECONOMY
China foreign exchange regulator urges 'Tobin Tax' study
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Jan 04, 2014


A top Chinese financial regulator has suggested the country could introduce a tax on foreign exchange transactions among other steps to guard against speculative capital flows amid further economic liberalisation.

Yi Gang, head of the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE), wrote in an article for the Communist Party theoretical journal Qiushi that China should "study in depth" the so-called "Tobin Tax" on financial transactions.

The levy gets its name from Nobel laureate James Tobin, who proposed it in 1972 as a means of reducing speculation in global markets.

Yi, in his article carried on the journal's website, also called for studying measures including fees on foreign exchange trading and curbing short-term speculative fund flows.

The measures were mentioned in the context of "orderly pushing forward capital market opening, improving and perfecting the foreign debt management system and accelerating the advance of renminbi capital account convertibility", Yi wrote, referring to China's currency, also known as the yuan.

"Persistently guarding against cross-border liquidity flow shocks is the key to good foreign exchange management," he wrote.

In addition to heading SAFE, which regulates China's foreign exchange system, Yi is also a vice-governor of the People's Bank of China (PBoC), the central bank.

The state-run China Daily newspaper reported Saturday that it was the first time a Chinese regulator had commented publicly on the "Tobin Tax".

During the global financial crisis in 2009, then-British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and German Chancellor Angela Merkel expressed support for a transaction tax but it failed to gain sufficient backing within the Group of 20 major economies, including from the United States.

The idea still has supporters, however, among some members of the European Union, though Britain -- home to the City of London financial centre -- staunchly opposes it.

Supporters see such a levy as a way of providing buffers against economic downturns and also curbing excessively speculative transactions.

Chen Bo, a professor at the Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, told the China Daily that a "Tobin Tax" would work as a market-oriented way to cut down foreign exchange speculation in lieu of China's present system in which the PBoC gives approval on a case-to-case basis.

"The tax will make certain otherwise profitable transactions unprofitable and thus reduce speculation," Chen said, according to the paper.

Chen predicted that the tax was likely to be introduced along with a quota system to manage China's foreign exchange market as temporary measures ahead of China making its capital account fully convertible, adding that the tax would probably be imposed nationwide as opposed to selectively in certain areas.

China's Communist Party leaders at their landmark Third Plenum meeting in November vowed to loosen controls on the economy, with the market playing a "decisive" role in the allocation of resources as opposed to its hitherto "basic" function.

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