Southeast Asia Seeks Common Currency Stance to Protect Exports
Daniel Ten Kate | October 28, 2010
Indonesia wants to replace the rupiah with a common Asean currency. Related articles
Ex-Philippine Leader Says Asean Is Poised To Expand Its Role 6:47pm May 7, 2012
Strong US Data Drives Big Day for Southeast Asian Markets 8:03pm May 2, 2012
Burma Changes Bring New Asean-EU Chapter 10:17am Apr 27, 2012
Asean Welcomes EU Suspension of Myanmar Sanctions 12:47pm Apr 25, 2012
Southeast Asia Surging as US, Europe Tread Water: Consultant 9:40pm Apr 22, 2012
Post a comment
Please login to post comment
Comments
403694Thanks
The headline in completely inaccurate. Nowhere does it say Indonesia is pushing for a common currency - it simply says they are seeking "common ideas" on currency policy. Very poor headline writing. Get your subs to read the article before writing the headline...
- Previous
- 1
- Next
Hanoi. Indonesia is pushing fellow members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to adopt a common currency stance ahead of next month’s Group of 20 summit to aid progress on a broader policy initiative.
“We have encouraged Asean to develop a common perspective on the currency situation,” Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa told reporters in Hanoi today. “We must ensure that there are no inadvertent imbalances caused by efforts by some countries to protect export industries by artificially maintaining currencies at an exceptionally low level.”
Asean will send a representative to the meeting of G-20 leaders in Seoul, where leaders will discuss a plan to avoid “competitive devaluations” among members. Asean countries are meeting in the Vietnamese capital this week along with China, Japan, South Korea, India, Australia, New Zealand, the United States and Russia.
China’s restraint of the yuan and the falling dollar has prompted countries such as South Korea, Brazil and Thailand to take steps to weaken their currencies to boost competitiveness.
Some countries are considering new measures after G-20 finance chiefs meeting in South Korea agreed Oct. 23 to refrain from weakening currencies to boost exports.
Indonesia, Asean’s largest economy and a G-20 member, wants the 10-nation bloc to have “common ideas” on currency policy as the issue will become “more and more relevant” before the Seoul summit, Marty said. Asean’s five biggest economies have seen their currencies rise the most in Asia outside Japan this year.
Indonesia’s rupiah has gained 5 percent this year and touched 8,896 on Oct. 26, the strongest since June 2007. The central bank will “guard” the rupiah at its fundamental level and buy foreign currencies to control the local currency’s volatility, Central Bank Governor Darmin Nasution said on Wednesday.
Thailand removed a 15 percent tax exemption for foreigners on income from domestic bonds last month. Thai Finance Minister Korn Chatikavanij warned on Oct. 25 that regulators are “keeping an eye” on speculative inflows.
Bank Negara Malaysia Governor Zeti Akhtar Aziz told Bloomberg Television Oct. 26 she favors a gradual strengthening of the ringgit. The Philippine central bank takes steps so that the peso doesn’t “gyrate in a very wide range,” Governor Amando Tetangco said in an e-mail yesterday.
China has kept the yuan’s rise to about 2 percent since a June pledge to introduce more flexibility, arguing anything other than a gradual appreciation would cause social and economic turmoil. The U.S. Federal Reserve has weakened the dollar by moving toward buying more assets to address unemployment and weak inflation.
Bloomberg
- Indonesia ‘Most Tolerant Country in the World’: Religious Minister
- Indonesian Maid Spiked Boss' Coffee With Her Menstrual Blood
- Hard-Line FUI Says Lady Gaga Promoter Offered it a Bribe
- More Muslim Groups Demand Cancellation of Lady Gaga’s Jakarta Show
- Indonesia Wilts as Deforestation Moratorium Loopholes Go Unaddressed
- Australia’s Corby Could Walk Free as Soon as Next Year
- Update: Australia, Indonesia Deny Corby Deal
- Tomy Winata to Build Jakarta's Tallest Building
- For Businesses, Going Green Begins at the Office and Ends With a Profit
- Fauzi Accused of Using Jakarta Budget to Support Re-Election
-
6:03pm | Nearly Every High School Stude...
Amazing isn't it how countries like the US, with its higher education being ranked number 1 out of 48 countries recently rated (http://www.univers -
5:55pm | Nearly Every High School Stude...
Wow! Proofs again that we have the SMARTEST most INTELLIGENT kids on earth!!! And since yesterday we also all know that we are "Most Tolerant Coun -
5:54pm | Nearly Every High School Stude...
Wouldn't it save much money if they just gave them all a pass certificate. The amount of organisation and logistics plus security for this event m -
5:53pm | Tomy Winata to Build Jakarta's...
He's going to get his security detail to throw people that cross him off the top floor. -
5:38pm | Lady Gaga Refuses to Tone Down...
Good Lady G! The government of Indonistan needs you more than you need them. -
5:32pm | With Corby Clemency, Indonesia...
Indonesia should release this woman immediately on the basis that she is innocent. Why are they ignoring the proff: www.expendable.tv -
5:31pm | Lady Gaga Refuses to Tone Down...
Ali says Indonesia is tolerant , so heres your chance prove it ....!@$*&!@# -
5:24pm | Ask Atheists, Christians, Shii...
RF2102...well said... ASK SIR if he can drink in Banten?
