Asia Needs to Spell Out Changes They Want in International Monetary System
At the recently concluded IMF-World Bank annual meetings, the addition of the yuan to the basket of currencies comprising the IMF's Special Drawing Rights (SDR) was one of the most popular subjects of conversation — not quite as popular, perhaps, as Brexit, Deutsche Bank and Donald Trump, but right behind them.
In this sense, the Fund-Bank meetings were the yuan's coming-out party. The currency's addition into the SDR basket was lauded as a step with great symbolic value. But that step raises the question of what kind of international monetary system China, and Asia more generally, need and how they should construct it.
A professor of Economics at the University of California, Berkeley, and a former senior policy adviser at the International Monetary Fund
- 1Cover Story: China Targets Income Growth to Rebalance Its Economy
- 2Top AI Conference Tightens Sanctions Compliance, Snaring Chinese Tech Giants
- 3Exclusive: Wahaha Halts Production Amid Control Reshuffle
- 4Exclusive: Stranded Chinese Container Ships Begin Crossing Strait of Hormuz
- 5U.S. Court Orders Seizure of $29 Million in Art From South Beauty Founder Zhang Lan
- 1Power To The People: Pintec Serves A Booming Consumer Class
- 2Largest hotel group in Europe accepts UnionPay
- 3UnionPay mobile QuickPass debuts in Hong Kong
- 4UnionPay International launches premium catering privilege U Dining Collection
- 5UnionPay International’s U Plan has covered over 1600 stores overseas



