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Why is US dollar access so restrained in China as trade war rages on?

  • Foreign financial institutions increasingly reluctant to lend US dollars to Chinese banks given worries about financial risks amid the trade war
  • China holding onto US dollars by increasingly restricting business and individual transfers out of the country

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China has stepped up capital controls as the trade war escalates. Photo: Kyodo

This is the second article in a three-part series looking at China’s US dollar shortage risks in the trade war, as it aims to open up its markets.

While China’s capital controls have limited how much access its citizens have to foreign currencies at home, banks and companies are finding it harder to obtain US dollars as the trade war not only hinders the nation’s ability to earn dollar revenue from exports, but also foreign lenders’ willingness to supply the US dollar to a slowing economy.

China’s central bank has been picking up its rhetoric to assure the public that economic fundamentals and policymakers’ competence would ensure that both the safety of the nation’s financial system and the yuan’s exchange rate are well under control.

But Beijing’s decision to step up capital controls, a growing number of analysts have said, underscores the perilous state of the economy, which was also reflected by the recent reluctance of foreign financial institutions to lend to Chinese banks and the nervous behaviour of Chinese citizens.

Chinese exporters have been reluctant to repatriate dollars earned abroad amid fears over yuan depreciation and escalating trade tensions. Photo: AP
Chinese exporters have been reluctant to repatriate dollars earned abroad amid fears over yuan depreciation and escalating trade tensions. Photo: AP
Recent cases of individuals refused permission to buy US dollars at Chinese banks have started to accumulate, including one which involved a former central bank adviser, Yu Yongding.
Karen Yeung joined the Post in 2017 after more than 15 years' experience on global newswires in Hong Kong and Shanghai. She spent eight years in Shanghai and has received awards for best feature, analysis and agenda-setting.
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