New | China's yuan no longer undervalued, says IMF
Agency declares currency level 'fair' for first time in decade as it urges faster reforms and a more flexible exchange rate
China's yuan is no longer undervalued after "significant" appreciation over the past 12 months, the International Monetary Fund said yesterday in the agency's first such finding in more than a decade.
Even so, the IMF called on Beijing to make the exchange rate more flexible while quickening reforms in the state sector.
The agency also forecast that China's growth might dip to about 6.8 per cent this year.
The IMF announced its assessment yesterday after wrapping up the 2015 Article IV Consultation Mission to China.
IMF first deputy managing director David Lipton joined the final policy discussions and met Vice-Premier Ma Kai , People's Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan and other regulators.
China has expressed a strong wish for the IMF to include the yuan in the Special Drawing Rights basket in its October review. The SDR now comprises four currencies: the US dollar, the yen, the euro and the sterling.