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Foreign-exchange reserves of China

The foreign exchange reserves of China are the state of foreign exchange reserves held by the People's Republic of China, comprising cash, bank deposits, bonds, and other financial assets denominated in currencies other than China's national currency (the renminbi). As of March 2024, China's foreign exchange reserves totaled US$3.245 trillion, which is the highest foreign exchange reserves of any country.[1]

Foreign exchange reserves of China since 2000

The management of foreign exchange reserves is governed by the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE)[2] and the People's Bank of China.[3]

Size and composition edit

China's foreign exchange reserves are held by People's Bank of China, China's central bank.[3] The total of the reserves is regularly announced by the central bank. In March 2024, China's reserves totalled US $3.245 trillion, which is the highest foreign exchange reserves of any country,[4] more than twice the size of next country.[5]

The exact composition of China's foreign exchange reserves is classified information.[6][7] In July 2019, China's State Administration of Foreign Exchange announced that at the end of 2014, US dollar assets accounted for 58% of China's total reserves, down from 79% in 2005; adding that its share of US currency assets was lower than the global average of 65% in 2014.[8] Analysts believe the remaining foreign exchange assets are held mostly in Euros, Japanese Yen, and British pounds.[7]

As of 2014, China had been the largest foreign holder of U.S. Treasury securities since 2008, when it overtook Japan in this respect,[9] accounting for about 22% of all U.S. Treasuries held by non-Americans.[10]

In January 2023, China held $860 billion of US government debt, 11.6% of the total foreign holdings of US government debt. This ranks China as the second largest holder of US government debt, after Japan.[11] China is gradually reducing its holding of US dollar reserve, down to 25%[failed verification] in 2023 from 59% of its total foreign-exchange in 2016.[11][12] However, China also holds US bonds in custody accounts in Belgium (at Euroclear) and Luxembourg (at Clearstream) and it has a large portfolio of US Agencies (mortgage-backed securities, issued by government-sponsored enterprises). After adjusting for these, China's total US bond holdings declined by 5% between 2013 and 2023.[13]

China's large foreign exchange reserves provide the state with capacity to influence financial markets without the necessity of administrative directives.[14]: 60  The size of its reserves also have a symbolic function as a demonstration of China's growing economic strength and the political legitimacy of the Communist Party.[14]: 60 

History edit

At the conclusion of the Chinese Civil War, the defeated Nationalists stripped China of liquid assets including gold, silver, and the country's dollar reserves as they retreated to Taiwan.[15] China did not have a meaningful amount of foreign reserves, nor a specialized foreign exchange reserve management system, until 1978.[14]: 36–37 

Beginning in the early 1980s, China's foreign exchange reserves grew substantially.[14]: 31 

China's approach to managing its foreign exchange reserves has been strongly influenced by the lessons Chinese policymakers learned from the 1997 Asian financial crisis and the 2007-2008 global financial crisis.[14]: 11  During the Asian financial crisis, Chinese policymakers learned from the experiences of neighboring countries which suffered for their lack of foreign policy reserves (which had been further exacerbated in those countries by capital flight).[14]: 12  China therefore tightened controls over foreign exchange and capital flows, including by making violations of these regulations punishable as criminal offenses.[14]: 12 

From 2001 to 2006, China's foreign exchange reserves nearly quadrupled.[14]: 12  In 2006, China became the world's largest holder of foreign exchange reserves.[14]: 31  This rate convinced Chinese leadership that its foreign exchange reserves would continue to grow and help deter capital flight.[14]: 12  After 2006, policymakers focused less on attracting foreign capital[14] and instead to evaluate how reserves could advance China's interests domestically and internationally.[14]: 12  For example, in December 2006 at a Standing Committee Meeting of the Tenth National People's Congress, Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan advocated for the use of foreign exchange reserves to support Chinese companies in obtaining foreign mineral resources, thereby developing China's access to strategic minerals.[14]: 58 

The volatility of the 2007-2008 global financial crisis prompted Chinese policymakers, academics, and state-owned enterprise executives to begin evaluating whether China was overexposed to US treasury securities.[14]: 61–62  Following the global financial crisis, the Communist Party and the public sentiment generally agreed that investing so much of China's foreign exchange reserves in the US government's debt was untenable.[14]: 62 

In the view of some Chinese historians, February 2009 comments by Premier Wen Jiabao to Financial Times mark a shift from China's passive approach to managing its foreign reserves to actively using its reserves to generate further profits and advance China's domestic economic development.[14]: 62–63  Wen stated:[14]: 63 

Foreign exchange reserves reflect the economic strength of a country. We are now studying how we can make the best use of foreign exchange reserves in China ... I think foreign exchange reserves are liabilities of the central bank, and if a government wants to make use of the foreign exchange reserves, it has to issue government bonds to buy the foreign exchange reserves. We are now having discussions about how to make rational and effective use of the Chinese foreign exchange reserves to serve the purpose of economic development in China ... Foreign exchange must be spent overseas, and it will be spent mainly on foreign trade and investment ... we want to use foreign exchange to buy the much-needed technology equipment and products.

Other advocates of this approach included governor of China Development Bank Chen Yuan, whose view was that China should hedge against increasing commodity prices and the falling US dollar by using China's foreign exchange reserves to buy energy and minerals.[14]: 63  In 2009, there was broad support among Chinese economists for using foreign exchange reserves in this way.[14]: 64 

China's foreign exchange reserves reached $3.1 trillion in April 2011.[14]: 65  That same month, People's Bank of China governor Zhou Xiaochuan publicly stated that China's foreign reserves had become excessive and recommended that reserves be reduced by instead capitalizing sovereign funds.[14]: 65 

Beginning in 2014, and as of at least 2023, China's relative share of global foreign exchange reserves has remained stable.[14]: 31 

In 2015, China used foreign exchange reserves to recapitalize China Development Bank and the Export-Import Bank of China.[14]: 70  This in turn empowered those policy banks to make significant loans in Eurasia, Latin America, Africa, and the Middle East.[14]: 70 

Concern over Chinese holdings of U.S. debt edit

After the global financial crisis of 2007-2008, Chinese policymakers and the general public viewed China's holdings of US debt as unwisely overexposing China to volatility.[14]: 61–62 

Chinese economist and government advisor Yu Yongding views China's large holdings of US treasuries as a "grotesque misallocation of resources" given that their real net investment income to China has been negative for almost two decades.[14]: 203  Yu also notes that the dollar is depreciating in real terms because of the US's rising national debt and the US Federal Reserve's expansionary monetary policy.[14]: 203  Yu's view is that the US has already "stopped playing by the monetary rules."[14]: 203  Accordingly, Yu favors moving China's foreign exchange reserves away from dollar-denominated assets and instead invest increasingly in raw energy and materials.[14]: 203–204 

Many American and other economic analysts have expressed concern on account of China's "extensive" holdings of United States government debt as part of its reserves.[16][17][18]

A significant number of economists and analysts dismiss any and all concern over foreign holdings of United States government debt denominated in U.S. dollars, including China's holdings.[19][20][21][22]

China's holdings of US debt have been falling since early 2021 and as of 2022 were US$1 trillion and falling.[23]

Evolution over time edit

Foreign-exchange reserves from 2004:[24][25]

Year & month Foreign-exchange reserves (US$ billion)
2004-01 415.7
2004-02 426.6
2004-03 439.8
2004-04 449
2004-05 458.6
2004-06 470.6
2004-07 483
2004-08 496.2
2004-09 514.5
2004-10 542.4
2004-11 573.9
2004-12 609.9
2005-01 623.6
2005-02 642.6
2005-03 659.1
2005-04 670.8
2005-05 691
2005-06 711
2005-09 769
2005-12 818.9
2006-01 845.2
2006-02 853.7
2006-03 875.1
2006-04 895
2006-05 925
2006-06 941.1
2006-07 954.6
2006-08 972
2006-09 987.9
2006-10 1009.6
2006-11 1038.8
2006-12 1066.3
2007-01 1104.7
2007-02 1157.4
2007-03 1202
2007-04 1246.6
2007-05 1292.7
2007-06 1332.6
2007-07 1385.2
2007-08 1408.6
2007-09 1433.6
2007-10 1454.9
2007-11 1497
2007-12 1528.2
2008-01 1589.8
2008-02 1647.1
2008-03 1682.2
2008-04 1756.7
2008-05 1797
2008-06 1808.8
2008-07 1845.2
2008-08 1884.2
2008-09 1905.6
2008-10 1879.7
2008-11 1884.7
2008-12 1946
2009-01 1913.5
2009-02 1912.1
2009-03 1952.7
2009-04 2008.9
2009-05 2089.5
2009-06 2131.6
2009-07 2174.6
2009-08 2210.8
2009-09 2272.6
2009-10 2328.3
2009-11 2388.8
2009-12 2399.2
2010-01 2415.2
2010-02 2424.6
2010-03 2447.1
2010-04 2490.5
2010-05 2439.5
2010-06 2454.3
2010-07 2538.9
2010-08 2547.8
2010-09 2648.3
2010-10 2760.9
2010-11 2767.8
2010-12 2847.3
2011-01 2931.7
2011-02 2991.4
2011-03 3044.7
2011-06 3197.5
2011-07 3245.3
2011-08 3262.5
2011-09 3201.7
2011-10 3273.8
2011-11 3220.9
2011-12 3181.1
2012-01 3253.6
2012-02 3309.7
2012-03 3305
2012-04 3298.9
2012-05 3206.1
2012-06 3240
2012-07 3240
2012-08 3272.9
2012-09 3285.1
2012-10 3287.4
2012-11 3297.7
2012-12 3311.6
2013-01 3410
2013-02 3395.4
2013-03 3442.6
2013-04 3534.5
2013-05 3514.8
2013-06 3496.7
2013-07 3547.8
2013-08 3553
2013-09 3662.7
2013-10 3736.6
2013-11 3789.5
2013-12 3821.3
2014-01 3866.6
2014-02 3913.7
2014-03 3948.1
2014-04 3978.8
2014-05 3983.9
2014-06 3993.2
2014-07 3966.3
2014-08 3968.8
2014-09 3887.7
2014-10 3852.9
2014-11 3847.4
2014-12 3843
2015-01 3813.41
2015-02 3801.5
2015-03 3730.04
2015-04 3748.14
2015-05 3711.14
2015-06 3693.84
2015-07 3651.31
... ...
2017-05 3053.57
2017-06 3056.79
2017-07 3080.72
2017-08 3091.53
2017-09 3108.51
2017-10 3109.21
2017-11 3119.28
2017-12 3139.95
2018-01 3161.46
2018-02 3134.48
2018-03 3142.82
... ...
2023-01 3184.46
2023-02 3133.15
2023-03 3183.87
2023-04 3204.77
2023-05 3176.51
2023-06 3193.00
2023-07 3204.27

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "CNGFOREX Quote - China Monthly Foreign Exchange Reserves Index". Bloomberg.com. from the original on April 15, 2017. Retrieved August 8, 2023.
  2. ^ State Administration of Foreign Exchange's website August 20, 2008, at the Wayback Machine / English / About SAFE / Major Functions
  3. ^ a b About the PBC February 23, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, People's Bank of China website
  4. ^ "Official reserve assets - July 2020". State Administration of Foreign Assets. from the original on February 28, 2021. Retrieved August 19, 2020.
  5. ^ "China Reserves Fall in July as PBOC Steadies Yuan Amid Outflows" July 31, 2016, at the Wayback Machine by Fion Li, Bloomberg, 7 August 2015
  6. ^ "China’s dwindling forex reserves raise worries" February 23, 2016, at the Wayback Machine by Gabriel Wildau, Financial Times, 18 October 2015
  7. ^ a b "China’s large forex reserves constitute both a blessing and a curse" October 30, 2023, at the Wayback Machine by Gabriel Wildau, Financial Times, 30 September 2014
  8. ^ Xin, Zhou (July 29, 2019). "How much of China's foreign exchange reserves are in US dollars?". South China Morning Post. from the original on August 15, 2020. Retrieved August 19, 2020.
  9. ^ "Major Foreign Holders of Treasury Securities" October 17, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, U.S. Department of the Treasury, 18 February 2014
  10. ^ "Report January 7, 2017, at the Wayback Machine on China’s Foreign Exchange Reserves and Holdings of U.S. Securities" by Nargiza Salidjanova, United States-China Economic and Security Review Commission, 21 March 2014
  11. ^ a b Major Foreign Holders of Treasury Securities (Report). Department of the Treasury/Federal Reserve Board. September 16, 2021. from the original on October 17, 2015. Retrieved March 5, 2016.
  12. ^ "China limiting its dependence on US dollar". S&P Global. May 4, 2022. from the original on April 25, 2023. Retrieved April 25, 2023.
  13. ^ "The decline in China's US Treasury holdings isn't as big as it seems". Yahoo Finance. October 20, 2023. from the original on November 14, 2023. Retrieved November 14, 2023.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Liu, Zongyuan Zoe (2023). Sovereign Funds: How the Communist Party of China Finances its Global Ambitions. The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. doi:10.2307/jj.2915805. ISBN 9780674271913. JSTOR jj.2915805.
  15. ^ Karl, Rebecca E. (2010). Mao Zedong and China in the twentieth-century world : a concise history. Durham [NC]: Duke University Press. p. 75. ISBN 978-0-8223-4780-4. OCLC 503828045. from the original on December 12, 2022. Retrieved June 21, 2023.
  16. ^ "Is China's Ownership Of U.S. Debt A National Security Threat?" May 4, 2017, at the Wayback Machine by Kenneth Rapoza, Forbes, 23 January 2013
  17. ^ "... Should Americans be concerned that China has started dumping some of its Treasury holdings? After all, it raises serious questions about whether China will keep lending Washington money to help finance the federal deficit in the future.": From "China is dumping U.S. debt" September 18, 2020, at the Wayback Machine by Matt Egan, CNN, 11 September 2015
  18. ^ "Is it a risk for America that China holds over $1 trillion in U.S. debt? November 11, 2016, at the Wayback Machine", China Power, 2 February 2016
  19. ^ :"...What about indebtedness to foreigners?...To acquire [U.S. gov't bonds], China must export goods to us, not offset by equivalent imports. That is a cost to China. It’s a cost Beijing is prepared to pay, for its own reasons: export industries promote learning, technology transfer and product quality improvement, and they provide jobs to migrants from the countryside. But that’s China’s business. For China, the bonds themselves are a sterile hoard. There is almost nothing that Beijing can do with them;...its stock of T-bonds will just go on growing. And we will pay interest on it, not with real effort but by typing numbers into computers. There is no burden associated with this; not now and not later." From "In Defense of Deficits" March 8, 2016, at the Wayback Machine by James K. Galbraith, The Nation, 4 March 2010
  20. ^ "...The Chinese buy U.S. T-securities by transferring U.S. dollars (not yuan) from their checking account at the Federal Reserve Bank to China’s T-security account, also at the Federal Reserve Bank. When[ever] the Chinese redeem those T-securities, the money is transferred back to China’s checking account at the Fed. During the entire purchase and redemption process, the dollars never leave the Fed." : From "What Policies for Global Prosperity?" March 6, 2016, at the Wayback Machine by Warren Mosler, 23 September 2010
  21. ^ Mitchell, Bill, University of Newcastle (Australia). "The nearly infinite capacity of the US government to spend" March 7, 2016, at the Wayback Machine (28 March 2012); "The US government can buy as much of its own debt as it chooses" March 7, 2016, at the Wayback Machine (27 August 2013)
  22. ^ "...The US, as a sovereign currency issuer, faces no financial constraint. It cannot be forced into default. It controls its policy interest rate. The rest of the world are users of the dollar; not issuers. They can never hold [the United States] hostage." : From "What If China Dumps US Treasury Bonds?" March 7, 2016, at the Wayback Machine by L. Randall Wray, University of Missouri-Kansas City, 12 November 2013
  23. ^ Cox, Jeff (July 18, 2022). "China holdings of U.S. debt fall below $1 trillion for the first time since 2010". CNBC. from the original on February 13, 2023. Retrieved February 13, 2023.
  24. ^ "China Monthly Foreign Exchange Reserves Analysis – CNGFOREX". Bloomberg.com. from the original on April 15, 2017. Retrieved December 4, 2017.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on August 12, 2015. Retrieved August 12, 2015.

foreign, exchange, reserves, china, foreign, exchange, reserves, china, state, foreign, exchange, reserves, held, people, republic, china, comprising, cash, bank, deposits, bonds, other, financial, assets, denominated, currencies, other, than, china, national,. The foreign exchange reserves of China are the state of foreign exchange reserves held by the People s Republic of China comprising cash bank deposits bonds and other financial assets denominated in currencies other than China s national currency the renminbi As of March 2024 China s foreign exchange reserves totaled US 3 245 trillion which is the highest foreign exchange reserves of any country 1 Foreign exchange reserves of China since 2000 The management of foreign exchange reserves is governed by the State Administration of Foreign Exchange SAFE 2 and the People s Bank of China 3 Contents 1 Size and composition 2 History 3 Concern over Chinese holdings of U S debt 4 Evolution over time 5 See also 6 ReferencesSize and composition editChina s foreign exchange reserves are held by People s Bank of China China s central bank 3 The total of the reserves is regularly announced by the central bank In March 2024 China s reserves totalled US 3 245 trillion which is the highest foreign exchange reserves of any country 4 more than twice the size of next country 5 The exact composition of China s foreign exchange reserves is classified information 6 7 In July 2019 China s State Administration of Foreign Exchange announced that at the end of 2014 US dollar assets accounted for 58 of China s total reserves down from 79 in 2005 adding that its share of US currency assets was lower than the global average of 65 in 2014 8 Analysts believe the remaining foreign exchange assets are held mostly in Euros Japanese Yen and British pounds 7 As of 2014 China had been the largest foreign holder of U S Treasury securities since 2008 when it overtook Japan in this respect 9 accounting for about 22 of all U S Treasuries held by non Americans 10 In January 2023 China held 860 billion of US government debt 11 6 of the total foreign holdings of US government debt This ranks China as the second largest holder of US government debt after Japan 11 China is gradually reducing its holding of US dollar reserve down to 25 failed verification in 2023 from 59 of its total foreign exchange in 2016 11 12 However China also holds US bonds in custody accounts in Belgium at Euroclear and Luxembourg at Clearstream and it has a large portfolio of US Agencies mortgage backed securities issued by government sponsored enterprises After adjusting for these China s total US bond holdings declined by 5 between 2013 and 2023 13 China s large foreign exchange reserves provide the state with capacity to influence financial markets without the necessity of administrative directives 14 60 The size of its reserves also have a symbolic function as a demonstration of China s growing economic strength and the political legitimacy of the Communist Party 14 60 History editAt the conclusion of the Chinese Civil War the defeated Nationalists stripped China of liquid assets including gold silver and the country s dollar reserves as they retreated to Taiwan 15 China did not have a meaningful amount of foreign reserves nor a specialized foreign exchange reserve management system until 1978 14 36 37 Beginning in the early 1980s China s foreign exchange reserves grew substantially 14 31 China s approach to managing its foreign exchange reserves has been strongly influenced by the lessons Chinese policymakers learned from the 1997 Asian financial crisis and the 2007 2008 global financial crisis 14 11 During the Asian financial crisis Chinese policymakers learned from the experiences of neighboring countries which suffered for their lack of foreign policy reserves which had been further exacerbated in those countries by capital flight 14 12 China therefore tightened controls over foreign exchange and capital flows including by making violations of these regulations punishable as criminal offenses 14 12 From 2001 to 2006 China s foreign exchange reserves nearly quadrupled 14 12 In 2006 China became the world s largest holder of foreign exchange reserves 14 31 This rate convinced Chinese leadership that its foreign exchange reserves would continue to grow and help deter capital flight 14 12 After 2006 policymakers focused less on attracting foreign capital 14 and instead to evaluate how reserves could advance China s interests domestically and internationally 14 12 For example in December 2006 at a Standing Committee Meeting of the Tenth National People s Congress Vice Premier Zeng Peiyan advocated for the use of foreign exchange reserves to support Chinese companies in obtaining foreign mineral resources thereby developing China s access to strategic minerals 14 58 The volatility of the 2007 2008 global financial crisis prompted Chinese policymakers academics and state owned enterprise executives to begin evaluating whether China was overexposed to US treasury securities 14 61 62 Following the global financial crisis the Communist Party and the public sentiment generally agreed that investing so much of China s foreign exchange reserves in the US government s debt was untenable 14 62 In the view of some Chinese historians February 2009 comments by Premier Wen Jiabao to Financial Times mark a shift from China s passive approach to managing its foreign reserves to actively using its reserves to generate further profits and advance China s domestic economic development 14 62 63 Wen stated 14 63 Foreign exchange reserves reflect the economic strength of a country We are now studying how we can make the best use of foreign exchange reserves in China I think foreign exchange reserves are liabilities of the central bank and if a government wants to make use of the foreign exchange reserves it has to issue government bonds to buy the foreign exchange reserves We are now having discussions about how to make rational and effective use of the Chinese foreign exchange reserves to serve the purpose of economic development in China Foreign exchange must be spent overseas and it will be spent mainly on foreign trade and investment we want to use foreign exchange to buy the much needed technology equipment and products Other advocates of this approach included governor of China Development Bank Chen Yuan whose view was that China should hedge against increasing commodity prices and the falling US dollar by using China s foreign exchange reserves to buy energy and minerals 14 63 In 2009 there was broad support among Chinese economists for using foreign exchange reserves in this way 14 64 China s foreign exchange reserves reached 3 1 trillion in April 2011 14 65 That same month People s Bank of China governor Zhou Xiaochuan publicly stated that China s foreign reserves had become excessive and recommended that reserves be reduced by instead capitalizing sovereign funds 14 65 Beginning in 2014 and as of at least 2023 China s relative share of global foreign exchange reserves has remained stable 14 31 In 2015 China used foreign exchange reserves to recapitalize China Development Bank and the Export Import Bank of China 14 70 This in turn empowered those policy banks to make significant loans in Eurasia Latin America Africa and the Middle East 14 70 Concern over Chinese holdings of U S debt editAfter the global financial crisis of 2007 2008 Chinese policymakers and the general public viewed China s holdings of US debt as unwisely overexposing China to volatility 14 61 62 Chinese economist and government advisor Yu Yongding views China s large holdings of US treasuries as a grotesque misallocation of resources given that their real net investment income to China has been negative for almost two decades 14 203 Yu also notes that the dollar is depreciating in real terms because of the US s rising national debt and the US Federal Reserve s expansionary monetary policy 14 203 Yu s view is that the US has already stopped playing by the monetary rules 14 203 Accordingly Yu favors moving China s foreign exchange reserves away from dollar denominated assets and instead invest increasingly in raw energy and materials 14 203 204 Many American and other economic analysts have expressed concern on account of China s extensive holdings of United States government debt as part of its reserves 16 17 18 A significant number of economists and analysts dismiss any and all concern over foreign holdings of United States government debt denominated in U S dollars including China s holdings 19 20 21 22 China s holdings of US debt have been falling since early 2021 and as of 2022 were US 1 trillion and falling 23 Evolution over time editForeign exchange reserves from 2004 24 25 Year amp month Foreign exchange reserves US billion 2004 01 415 7 2004 02 426 6 2004 03 439 8 2004 04 449 2004 05 458 6 2004 06 470 6 2004 07 483 2004 08 496 2 2004 09 514 5 2004 10 542 4 2004 11 573 9 2004 12 609 9 2005 01 623 6 2005 02 642 6 2005 03 659 1 2005 04 670 8 2005 05 691 2005 06 711 2005 09 769 2005 12 818 9 2006 01 845 2 2006 02 853 7 2006 03 875 1 2006 04 895 2006 05 925 2006 06 941 1 2006 07 954 6 2006 08 972 2006 09 987 9 2006 10 1009 6 2006 11 1038 8 2006 12 1066 3 2007 01 1104 7 2007 02 1157 4 2007 03 1202 2007 04 1246 6 2007 05 1292 7 2007 06 1332 6 2007 07 1385 2 2007 08 1408 6 2007 09 1433 6 2007 10 1454 9 2007 11 1497 2007 12 1528 2 2008 01 1589 8 2008 02 1647 1 2008 03 1682 2 2008 04 1756 7 2008 05 1797 2008 06 1808 8 2008 07 1845 2 2008 08 1884 2 2008 09 1905 6 2008 10 1879 7 2008 11 1884 7 2008 12 1946 2009 01 1913 5 2009 02 1912 1 2009 03 1952 7 2009 04 2008 9 2009 05 2089 5 2009 06 2131 6 2009 07 2174 6 2009 08 2210 8 2009 09 2272 6 2009 10 2328 3 2009 11 2388 8 2009 12 2399 2 2010 01 2415 2 2010 02 2424 6 2010 03 2447 1 2010 04 2490 5 2010 05 2439 5 2010 06 2454 3 2010 07 2538 9 2010 08 2547 8 2010 09 2648 3 2010 10 2760 9 2010 11 2767 8 2010 12 2847 3 2011 01 2931 7 2011 02 2991 4 2011 03 3044 7 2011 06 3197 5 2011 07 3245 3 2011 08 3262 5 2011 09 3201 7 2011 10 3273 8 2011 11 3220 9 2011 12 3181 1 2012 01 3253 6 2012 02 3309 7 2012 03 3305 2012 04 3298 9 2012 05 3206 1 2012 06 3240 2012 07 3240 2012 08 3272 9 2012 09 3285 1 2012 10 3287 4 2012 11 3297 7 2012 12 3311 6 2013 01 3410 2013 02 3395 4 2013 03 3442 6 2013 04 3534 5 2013 05 3514 8 2013 06 3496 7 2013 07 3547 8 2013 08 3553 2013 09 3662 7 2013 10 3736 6 2013 11 3789 5 2013 12 3821 3 2014 01 3866 6 2014 02 3913 7 2014 03 3948 1 2014 04 3978 8 2014 05 3983 9 2014 06 3993 2 2014 07 3966 3 2014 08 3968 8 2014 09 3887 7 2014 10 3852 9 2014 11 3847 4 2014 12 3843 2015 01 3813 41 2015 02 3801 5 2015 03 3730 04 2015 04 3748 14 2015 05 3711 14 2015 06 3693 84 2015 07 3651 31 2017 05 3053 57 2017 06 3056 79 2017 07 3080 72 2017 08 3091 53 2017 09 3108 51 2017 10 3109 21 2017 11 3119 28 2017 12 3139 95 2018 01 3161 46 2018 02 3134 48 2018 03 3142 82 2023 01 3184 46 2023 02 3133 15 2023 03 3183 87 2023 04 3204 77 2023 05 3176 51 2023 06 3193 00 2023 07 3204 27See also editForeign exchange reserves Import substitution List of countries by foreign exchange reserves List of countries by GDP nominal References edit CNGFOREX Quote China Monthly Foreign Exchange Reserves Index Bloomberg com Archived from the original on April 15 2017 Retrieved August 8 2023 State Administration of Foreign Exchange s website Archived August 20 2008 at the Wayback Machine English About SAFE Major Functions a b About the PBC Archived February 23 2016 at the Wayback Machine People s Bank of China website Official reserve assets July 2020 State Administration of Foreign Assets Archived from the original on February 28 2021 Retrieved August 19 2020 China Reserves Fall in July as PBOC Steadies Yuan Amid Outflows Archived July 31 2016 at the Wayback Machine by Fion Li Bloomberg 7 August 2015 China s dwindling forex reserves raise worries Archived February 23 2016 at the Wayback Machine by Gabriel Wildau Financial Times 18 October 2015 a b China s large forex reserves constitute both a blessing and a curse Archived October 30 2023 at the Wayback Machine by Gabriel Wildau Financial Times 30 September 2014 Xin Zhou July 29 2019 How much of China s foreign exchange reserves are in US dollars South China Morning Post Archived from the original on August 15 2020 Retrieved August 19 2020 Major Foreign Holders of Treasury Securities Archived October 17 2015 at the Wayback Machine U S Department of the Treasury 18 February 2014 Report Archived January 7 2017 at the Wayback Machine on China s Foreign Exchange Reserves and Holdings of U S Securities by Nargiza Salidjanova United States China Economic and Security Review Commission 21 March 2014 a b Major Foreign Holders of Treasury Securities Report Department of the Treasury Federal Reserve Board September 16 2021 Archived from the original on October 17 2015 Retrieved March 5 2016 China limiting its dependence on US dollar S amp P Global May 4 2022 Archived from the original on April 25 2023 Retrieved April 25 2023 The decline in China s US Treasury holdings isn t as big as it seems Yahoo Finance October 20 2023 Archived from the original on November 14 2023 Retrieved November 14 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac Liu Zongyuan Zoe 2023 Sovereign Funds How the Communist Party of China Finances its Global Ambitions The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press doi 10 2307 jj 2915805 ISBN 9780674271913 JSTOR jj 2915805 Karl Rebecca E 2010 Mao Zedong and China in the twentieth century world a concise history Durham NC Duke University Press p 75 ISBN 978 0 8223 4780 4 OCLC 503828045 Archived from the original on December 12 2022 Retrieved June 21 2023 Is China s Ownership Of U S Debt A National Security Threat Archived May 4 2017 at the Wayback Machine by Kenneth Rapoza Forbes 23 January 2013 Should Americans be concerned that China has started dumping some of its Treasury holdings After all it raises serious questions about whether China will keep lending Washington money to help finance the federal deficit in the future From China is dumping U S debt Archived September 18 2020 at the Wayback Machine by Matt Egan CNN 11 September 2015 Is it a risk for America that China holds over 1 trillion in U S debt Archived November 11 2016 at the Wayback Machine China Power 2 February 2016 What about indebtedness to foreigners To acquire U S gov t bonds China must export goods to us not offset by equivalent imports That is a cost to China It s a cost Beijing is prepared to pay for its own reasons export industries promote learning technology transfer and product quality improvement and they provide jobs to migrants from the countryside But that s China s business For China the bonds themselves are a sterile hoard There is almost nothing that Beijing can do with them its stock of T bonds will just go on growing And we will pay interest on it not with real effort but by typing numbers into computers There is no burden associated with this not now and not later From In Defense of Deficits Archived March 8 2016 at the Wayback Machine by James K Galbraith The Nation 4 March 2010 The Chinese buy U S T securities by transferring U S dollars not yuan from their checking account at the Federal Reserve Bank to China s T security account also at the Federal Reserve Bank When ever the Chinese redeem those T securities the money is transferred back to China s checking account at the Fed During the entire purchase and redemption process the dollars never leave the Fed From What Policies for Global Prosperity Archived March 6 2016 at the Wayback Machine by Warren Mosler 23 September 2010 Mitchell Bill University of Newcastle Australia The nearly infinite capacity of the US government to spend Archived March 7 2016 at the Wayback Machine 28 March 2012 The US government can buy as much of its own debt as it chooses Archived March 7 2016 at the Wayback Machine 27 August 2013 The US as a sovereign currency issuer faces no financial constraint It cannot be forced into default It controls its policy interest rate The rest of the world are users of the dollar not issuers They can never hold the United States hostage From What If China Dumps US Treasury Bonds Archived March 7 2016 at the Wayback Machine by L Randall Wray University of Missouri Kansas City 12 November 2013 Cox Jeff July 18 2022 China holdings of U S debt fall below 1 trillion for the first time since 2010 CNBC Archived from the original on February 13 2023 Retrieved February 13 2023 China Monthly Foreign Exchange Reserves Analysis CNGFOREX Bloomberg com Archived from the original on April 15 2017 Retrieved December 4 2017 China s foreign exchange reserves Archived from the original on August 12 2015 Retrieved August 12 2015 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Foreign exchange reserves of China amp oldid 1220836980, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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