Balance of payments: China moves to rescue Pak

on 28/06/2018

US$1.6 billion credit line to boost depleting forex reserves.

China has given Pakistan a credit line worth $1.6 billion to stave off a balance of payments crisis. It will boost Pakistan’s fast-depleting foreign currency reserves.

The credit facility that accompanies a currency swap agreement between  State Bank of Pakistan (SBP) and China’s central bank has been hiked to 20b yuan ($3.13b) from 10b yuan, reports claim. The arrangement has been finalized.

People’s Bank of China, the country’s central bank, said it had extended a currency swap agreement with the State Bank of Pakistan. The swap is sized at 20 billion yuan (3.1 b US dollars) or 351 billion Pakistani rupees, according to a statement from the bank.

The two parties believe the extension will facilitate bilateral trade and investment to help economic development in the two countries.

Valid for three years, the agreement can be extended upon mutual consent. A currency swap deal allows two institutions to exchange payments in one currency for equivalent amounts in the other to facilitate bilateral trade settlements and provide liquidity support to financial markets.

After establishing its first branch in Karachi last November,  Bank of China formally launched a clearing and settlement mechanism of Chinese yuan.

Having received clearance from SBP for denominating foreign-currency transactions, one of the main targets of the Long-Term Plan of CPEC for 2017-30 has been achieved.

Giving Yuan equal status to the US dollar will not only strengthen financial bonds between Pakistan and China but also cut costs and speed up efficiency for yuan transactions and enhance market liquidity. Pakistan central bank believes this arrangement will elevate the trade relationship between Pakistan and China.

Back in 2012, the first currency swap agreement was signed by the SBP with the People’s Bank of China, and this was followed up by allowing banks to give trade loans in Yuan and also accept deposits in the Chinese currency.

Devising a loan mechanism for banks to get yuan financing, the SBP initially allowed ICBC (Industrial and Commercial Bank of China) Pakistan to start offering services in 2015.

Though this was on a relatively small scale, the groundwork had begun to promote bilateral trade and investment in the respective local currencies.

Now People’s Bank of China is the second Chinese bank to enter the Pakistani market, but it is much more significant as it has fourth and fifth global ranking currently in terms of Tier 1 capital and total assets respectively.