The US dollar continues to be the appropriate anchor for the Hong Kong dollar
for the foreseeable future and no change is needed to the Linked Exchange Rate
System, a Monetary Authority study has found.
With the renminbi not being a freely convertible currency nor a reserve currency,
it is technically not possible for it to be a currency anchor, the HKMA has
concluded.
The study noted that co-movements of business cycles in Hong Kong and the Mainland
have increased steadily since the 1990s. There has also been a significant rise
in the synchronisation of business cycles among the economies of the Mainland,
Hong Kong and the US since 2000.
However, the authority's Chief Executive Joseph Yam said that despite increasing
integration between the Hong Kong and Mainland economies, co-movements of business
cycles between the two are mainly explained by developments in the US affecting
both.
The analysis suggested that over 60% of the variations in output shocks and over
45% of the variations in price changes in Hong Kong can be explained by US shocks,
whereas Mainland shocks explain over one third of Hong Kong's price movements.
There is also little correlation between the components of the business cycles
attributable to domestic shocks in Hong Kong and the Mainland.
However, the influence of the US shocks on these two economies leads to a high
degree of synchronisation. In other words, the business cycle co-movements of
Hong Kong and the Mainland are largely due to the common influence of economic
conditions in the US and possibly their US dollar-pegged exchange rate systems.
Noting that the Mainland progressively liberalises its capital account by encouraging
capital outflows, the study said that economic shocks, specifically financial market
shocks, from the Mainland to Hong Kong are likely to increase progressively
over time.
"This may increase synchronisation of real growth and inflation, but due
to the continuing structural differences between the two economies and different
stages of economic development, the domestic shocks will not necessarily become
more similar," the HKMA argued.
"As the similarity of shocks is the most important factor in the choice
of an exchange rate regime, it follows that the Linked Exchange Rate System
based on the US dollar will continue to be preferable in the foreseeable future,"
the study concluded.