From the beginning, the
SPFTZ has been a pilot zone not only for trade but also for broader reform.
There have been four major areas of institutional reform over the past year.
This includes reform of the foreign investment, financial, trade, and legal and
regulatory systems. Of these, financial innovation attracts the most interest.
The People’s Bank of China
and three regulatory commissions on banking, securities, and insurance have
adopted 51 new regulations underpinning a new financial architecture in the
SPFTZ. These include a free trade accounts system that enables eligible organisations
and individuals to enjoy the same regulatory rules on their yuan as apply to
foreign currencies. Cross-border payments, receipts, and exchange related to
direct investment by enterprises can be processed directly by banks. Eligible
individuals can now make various kinds of overseas investments, including
securities investment. Financial institutions in Shanghai can also
independently price the foreign currency deposits of enterprise clients. And
banks can directly provide cross-border RMB settlement services in current
accounts and direct investment accounts to their clients.
All these features are aimed
at loosening capital controls in the SPFTZ,
while maintaining them for now in most of the rest of China. Similar
arrangements are in place in Tianjin, Fujian and Guangdong FTZs. But the
impacts of financial market changes cannot be confined to small geographic
areas. As such, they will likely affect the capital controls in China as a
whole.
In fact, research by the authors shows
that the impact of capital controls in China is lower since the SPFTZ. Capital
flows have increased rapidly since the SPFTZ. The price spread between the CNY
(the onshore exchange rate of RMB) and CNH (the offshore exchange rate of RMB
in Hong Kong) has also shown a tendency to diminish. Furthermore, a formal price
test — analysing the combination of onshore RMB interest rates, offshore US
dollar interest rates and non-deliverable forward (NDF) exchange rates —
indicates that there was a regime break in China’s capital controls when the
SPFTZ started.
These spill-over effects are
more as the result of intentional policy design than of a careless failure of
planning. Chinese reform is generally characterised by its evolutionary
strategy, where tentative policy experiments in confined areas are only
replicated in other areas when they succeed. Although financial architecture
usually occurs organically, in that it gradually results from a myriad of
individual agreements, China can still find ways to trial reforms while
avoiding an unfavourable impact on its whole economy.
That the SPFTZ is expanding
to 120 square kilometres and three similar FTZs in Tianjin, Fujian and
Guangdong are operational proves that loosening capital controls is in
accordance with the purpose of the central government. Beijing may gradually
abandon its current policy of a stable RMB and capital controls to a floating
currency and liberalised capital market.
A liberalised capital market
is a part of the broader objective of the new generation of Chinese leaders,
whose aim is to create a more structurally balanced, domestic demand driven,
environmentally friendly, and equitable form of economic development.
In this sense, the SPFTZ heralds the ‘new normal’ that will
characterise China in the coming decades.
Daqing Yao is an Associate
Research Professor at the Institute of World Economy at the Shanghai Academy of
Social Sciences.
John Whalley is Professor in
the Department of Economics, Western University.
The authors are grateful to
the Ontario Research Fund and the Centre for International Governance
Innovation for financial support. This article refers to the materials from the
authors’ recent paper: Daqing Yao and John Whalley, ‘An
Evaluation of the Impact of the China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone
(SPFTZ)’, NBER Working Paper No. 20901.
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