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Issue 4, July/August 2005
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Beyond the Border
Foreign Exchange Policy and Banking Reform in China
Until very recently, the two salient
features of China’s foreign exchange regime had
been capital controls and the de facto peg to the U.S.
dollar. On July 21, China’s central bank—the
People’s Bank of China—changed the dollar
peg to a basket peg based on a number of undisclosed
foreign currencies. It also allowed a simultaneous 2
percent appreciation of the Chinese currency against
the U.S. dollar, from 8.28 yuan to 8.11 yuan per dollar.
Meanwhile, despite gradual loosening,
capital controls are still largely in effect. These
features of the Chinese foreign exchange regime carry
important implications for government efforts to resolve
China’s ongoing banking problems and to maintain
the nation’s financial stability.
Banks Play the Central Role in
Financial Intermediation in China
At
the end of 2004, total bank deposits stood at 185.5 percent
of GDP—with total bank loans at 138.1 percent. In
comparison, the combined market capitalization of the
Shanghai and Shenzhen stock exchanges was only 27.1 percent
of GDP. China’s banking sector is dominated by just
four state-owned commercial banks (SCBs) that account
for 54 percent of China’s total bank assets and
liabilities (Chart 1).
In terms of total assets, all
four SCBs rank among the world’s 40 largest. Quantity,
however, does not mean quality. These banks have proved
inefficient in allocating funds to China’s economy.
All four have low profitability. Moreover, the size
of their bad-loan portfolios has been among the world’s
largest.
Capital Controls Are Crucial
to Banking Stability
Although appearances and
reality can differ sometimes in Chinese banking, even
the appearances look problematic. The latest official
data show the average ratio of nonperforming loans to
total loans for China’s big four banks as 15 percent
in first quarter 2005, down from 20 percent at the end
of 2003 (Table 1).[1] While these ratios are
well above those in most countries, private estimates
have placed total Chinese impaired loans (including
those already taken over by the government in trade
for bonds) in the range of 50 percent of bank assets.
| Table 1 |
| Recent Changes in Nonperforming
Loan Condition in the Four SCBs |
| |
Nonperforming
loan ratio
(percent) |
Nonperforming
loans
(billion yuan) |
| 2003:Q4 |
20.0 |
— |
| 2004:Q1 |
19.2 |
1,889.8 |
| 2004:Q2 |
15.6 |
1,523.1 |
| 2004:Q3 |
15.7 |
1,559.6 |
| 2004:Q4 |
15.6 |
1,575.1 |
| 2005:Q1 |
15.0 |
1,567.1 |
|
| SOURCE: China Banking Regulatory
Commission. |
There are questions about the
adequacy of the capitalization of the four big banks.
The China Banking Regulatory Commission requires all
banks to meet the minimum capital adequacy ratio of
8 percent, consistent with the Basel I international
standard, by January 2007. At the end of 2003, the average
capital adequacy ratio was only 4.6 percent for the
four SCBs. This ratio was calculated with the knowledge
that existing nonperforming loans were not provisioned
for sufficiently.
Although they are technically
bankrupt, none of China’s state-owned banks has
ever faced a bank run or closure. An often cited reason
is that even though China has no official deposit insurance
system, there is an implicit government guarantee on
deposits. Aside from the applicability of this guarantee
to any bank, the four SCBs are perhaps even less likely
to be closed, owing to a dictum common in many countries.
That is, some banks are viewed as “too big to
fail.”
There is, however, another less
discussed reason why Chinese banks have not faced runs
by depositors. The reason is capital controls. These
controls largely prohibit Chinese citizens from investing
overseas. With China’s high domestic savings rate
(as much as 40 percent by some estimates) and the relative
scarceness of alternative financial vehicles such as
stocks and bonds, opportunities for purchasing financial
assets other than bank deposits are highly limited.
Financial Liberalization Puts Increasing
Pressure on Capital Controls
In line with its World Trade
Organization (WTO) commitment, China has gradually opened
its domestic banking and financial sector to foreigners.[2]
By October 2004, 62 foreign banks were operating in China.
These institutions account for only 1.8 percent of total
banking assets. However, with an average nonperforming
loan ratio of only 1.3 percent, they are substantially
more solvent than China’s four SCBs.
Foreign banks differ markedly
from Chinese banks in other ways as well. Government
rules for Chinese banks largely restrict them to the
most traditional functions of commercial banking. In
contrast, many of the foreign institutions are so-called
universal banks. These foreign institutions not only
carry on the traditional functions conducted by China’s
state-owned banks, but also engage in investment banking,
securities and insurance operations. The foreign institutions
have global opportunities for funding. China’s
fragmented financial regulatory system, which includes
completely separate organizations for banking, securities
and insurance, is poorly equipped to deal with universal
banks.
Moreover, despite China’s
WTO-linked openings to foreign financial institutions,
the Chinese government still makes efforts to control
capital flows. In 2004, the Chinese government announced
a new rule under which foreign banks have to apply in
advance for quotas for offshore borrowing.
What If China Removed Capital
Controls Completely?
China has recently adopted
measures to permit more flexible capital flows in response
to increasing pressures on its currency. But there is
much evidence that China continues to be concerned not
only about capital inflows but also about capital outflows.
Creating opportunities for Chinese citizens to invest
abroad could lead to outflows of deposits from China’s
already troubled commercial banks.
A few days before China’s
central bank announced its new exchange rate regime,
the government announced that Chinese multinationals
would be permitted to acquire more foreign currency
and lend the foreign currency to their subsidiaries.
The new rules still limit the ability of Chinese to
place their money abroad. However, if large outflows
were to take place, Chinese banks that now rely on the
government to preserve their captive deposit markets
would have much more difficulty in stanching fund outflows
that would erode the balance between assets and liabilities.
China’s Policy Priority Lies
in Bank Recapitalization and Privatization
On Dec. 31, 2003, the Chinese
government conducted the third large-scale bank bailout
in six years. The two previous bailouts had involved procedures
that are standard across the world—the injection
of domestic-currency-denominated capital and an exchange
with the government of bad assets (impaired loans) for
good assets (government securities). [3]
As part of the third bailout,
however, the government injected $45 billion of foreign-currency-denominated
reserve assets (dollar- and other currency-denominated
bonds) to two SCBs—the Bank of China and China
Construction Bank.[4] The two banks have since been
restructured into joint-stock companies, and they are
planning an initial public offering both domestically
and overseas in an effort to diversify ownership and
privatize, at least partially.
Even though Chinese banks’
nonperforming loan ratios have fallen as a result of
government intervention and the two newly restructured
state-owned banks’ financial footings have strengthened
significantly, China’s domestic banks have far
to go before they are viable. Thus, the government’s
motivations to use capital controls to preserve a captive
domestic deposit base remain strong.
China’s Exchange Rate
Question
The majority of recent disputes
over China’s foreign exchange rate have involved
China’s trade balance. Although China’s
overall current account surplus is small by Asian standards,
its large surplus with the United States and other industrialized
countries has ignited complaints that an undervalued
Chinese currency bestows an unfair advantage on Chinese
exporters. China’s latest move to let its currency
appreciate 2 percent against the U.S. dollar and the
simultaneous change from a dollar peg to a basket peg
are at least partly aimed at addressing the trade problem.
Decisions about China’s exchange rate regime are
driven by factors other than the trade balance, in particular,
the health of the banking system.
China’s still-fragile banking
conditions are likely to continue to motivate exchange
rate intervention even under the new basket peg system.
So far, three of China’s big four banks have received
bailouts involving the exchange of bad loans for dollar-
and other foreign-currency-denominated bonds.[5] The
Chinese currency’s appreciation means a reduction
in the value of these foreign-currency-denominated assets
relative to the banks’ Chinese-currency-denominated
liabilities and an accompanying move back in the direction
of insolvency. The 2 percent appreciation on July 21
may not have a severe impact immediately in this regard.
However, if it leads to further appreciation, there
would be a more significant impact on the current bank
reform plan.
Conclusion
The current debate on the
Chinese currency involves two related but separate issues
that have often been confused. One is capital controls,
and the other is the exchange rate at which the Chinese
currency is pegged, whether to the dollar or to a basket
of foreign currencies.
The debate has largely focused
on trade effects. Banking conditions and bank reform
in China provide an alternative perspective in analyzing
the country’s foreign exchange policy. China’s
latest move from a de facto dollar peg to a basket peg,
together with a simultaneous 2 percent appreciation
of its currency against the U.S. dollar, represents
a major step toward a more flexible foreign exchange
policy.
Meanwhile, combined with the loosening
of capital controls, this new basket peg adds an increasing
urgency for China to resolve its banking problem. In
fact, the quicker the banking problem is resolved, the
sooner a more flexible foreign exchange policy can truly
materialize in China.
—Dong Fu
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| About
the Author
Fu is an assistant
economist in the Research Department of
the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Note
The author would like
to thank Bill Gruben for helpful discussions
and suggestions.
- There are widespread disputes on the
actual figure for nonperforming loans.
Historically, Chinese banks used a four-tier
loan classification system, which tended
to underreport nonperforming loans. In
2002, they started to migrate to a five-tier
classification system, which is more in
line with the international standard.
- Foreign banks can now engage in foreign
currency transactions with all clients
and with no geographical restriction.
By July 2004, their share of foreign currency
loans rose to 17.8 percent. So far, foreign
banks have conducted business in Chinese
currency with Chinese companies in 18
cities. At the end of 2006, foreign banks
will be able to operate freely in China.
- In 1998, the four SCBs received a capital
injection of 270 billion yuan. In 1999–2000,
four asset-management companies were set
up and purchased 1.4 trillion yuan of
nonperforming loans at book value from
the four SCBs and one government policy
bank.
- However, for the time being, the banks
are not allowed to sell the foreign reserve
assets.
- In April 2005, the Industrial and Commercial
Bank of China—the largest of the
four SCBs—received a $15 billion
capital injection of foreign reserve assets.
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Southwest Economy
Southwest Economy
is published six times annually by the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas. The views expressed
are those of the authors and should not
be attributed to the Federal Reserve Bank
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