Korea, China and Japan and 10 Southeast Asian
countries are poised to become more aggressive in their joint action in
response to possible currency volatility.
The
Asean Plus Three group plans to endorse an increase in their access to a
regional fund during the meeting of finance ministers and central bank
governors, slated for May 3 in Manila, according to Bank of Korea officials.
Participants
are expected to approve a proposal approved by their deputies who earlier
agreed to double the size of the Chiang Mai Initiative Multilateralization fund
to US$240 billion.
Among
the $240 billion won in funding, a member country has been allowed to use up to
$24 billion in the event of a foreign exchange crisis.
The 13
Asian countries are considering raising the ceiling by 300 percent to $96
billion during this gathering, a Japanese newspaper reported.
But BOK
officials declined to comment on the exact figure of increase. They neither
confirmed nor denied the news report.
A BOK
official said the level of increase was still under discussion and would likely
be finalised at the Asean Plus Three meeting of finance and central bank
chiefs.
The
Chiang Mai initiative fund, which was set up soon after the 1997 crisis, was
expanded into a multilateral fund in 2010 from what was a web of bilateral
currency swap agreements.
In
March, the Asean Plus Three agreed to double their reserve pool to $240 billion
to better absorb shocks against possible crises from Europe.
The
deal, designed to buffer the region from external shocks, allows member
countries to reduce their foreign exchange reserves. It works as a safety net
should members experience liquidity shortages from fast outflow of capital. The
Asean Plus Three up to now had 20 percent of the $120 billion to tap without
linkage to loans by the International Monetary Fund.
The
Asean Plus Three are also expected to raise the portion of available fund
independent of IMF in the coming months to prevent possible shocks from the
European debt crisis.
Rapid
inflow of capital has been a shared concern among emerging markets as Europe
and the US have been keeping ultra-loose monetary policies.
The
proposed increase in CMI fund will be a fraction of the reserves held by Asian
nations, holder of more than half of global reserves. China has accumulated
more than $6.5 trillion won of reserves, followed by Japan who has about $1.2
trillion won.
Korea,
the world’s seventh-largest holder of foreign exchange reserves, has more than $315
billion set aside for crisis prevention.
Kim
Yon-se
The
Korea Herald
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