http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/eba6405c-1d7e-11de-9eb3-00144feabdc0.html?nclick_check=1

China and Argentina in currency swap
By Jude Webber in Santiago 

Published: March 31 2009 01:25 | Last updated: March 31 2009 01:25

China, which is pushing to end the dominance of the dollar as a worldwide 
reserve, has agreed a Rmb70bn ($10.24bn, £7.18bn, ?7.76bn) currency swap with 
Argentina that will allow it to receive renminbi instead of dollars for its 
exports to the Latin American country.

Xinhua, the official Chinese news agency, said the deal was signed on Sunday by 
Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of the People's Bank of China, and Martín Redrado, 
Argentine central bank president, in Medellín, Colombia, where they are 
attending a meeting of the Inter-American Development Bank.

An Argentine official confirmed a deal had been discussed and said the fine 
print was being worked out and negotiations were "very advanced".
Beijing has signed Rmb650bn ($95bn, ?72bn, £67bn) of deals since December with 
Malaysia, South Korea, Hong Kong, Belarus, Indonesia and, now, Argentina in an 
attempt to unblock trade financing that has been severely curtailed by the 
crisis.

Gordon Brown, UK prime minister, told a summit in Chile at the weekend that 
this week's Group of 20 meeting in London, which both China and Argentina will 
attend, needed to ensure vast trade credits were unlocked to help get the world 
economy back on its feet. The World Bank estimates as much as $300bn (?227bn, 
£210bn) could be needed.

China has suggested replacing the dollar with an enhanced version of the 
International Monetary Fund's unit of account, the special drawing right or 
SDR. The dollar's future as the world's reserve currency will be on the G20 
agenda.

Economists say the SDR plan is unfeasible for now but see Beijing's currency 
swap deals as pieces in a jigsaw designed to promote wider international use of 
the renminbi, starting with making it more acceptable for trade and aiming at 
establishing it as a reserve currency in Asia, something that would also 
enhance China's political clout.

Mr Redrado voiced support for China's call for a new currency reserve regime at 
his meeting with Mr Zhou. "One of the issues was this idea to incorporate other 
options to the dollar. There was a lot of consensus on this," the Argentine 
official told the Financial Times.

Argentina mostly imports industrial components and electrical goods from China, 
plus a smaller amount of consumer goods including clothing, shoes and toys. 
However, Ernesto Fernandez Taboada, executive director of the Argentine-Chinese 
Chamber of Production, Industry and Trade, said Argentine imports from China 
had fallen about 15 per cent in the past three months because of the slowing of 
the domestic economy. 

In addition, Argentina has recently tightened the rules for imports, including 
the application of non-tariff barriers, in an effort to shore up its national 
industry.


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