Beijing's goal now is to minimize any impact from potential sweeping sanctions from the West in "extreme geopolitical scenarios," such as a military conflict over Taiwan, which China claims as its territory, wrote Liu.
"Expanding the use of the renminbi in trade is less challenging than increasing its status as an international reserve currency," Liu wrote.
AdvertisementHowever, capital controls are not necessarily a dealbreaker for the broader adoption of the yuan in trade, wrote Liu.
It also shows it's not so easy to displace the mighty US dollar as the world's top reserve and trading currency of choice.
A recent global survey of 1,660 enterprises showed that there is just not enough interest in using the yuan to trade.
Persons:
—, Zoe Liu, Liu, Russia —, Xi, it's
Organizations:
Service, China Studies, Council, Foreign Relations, Business, Monetary, Financial, China's Bank of Communications, Renmin University
Locations:
China, Taiwan, London, Russia, Beijing, East Asia, Southeast, Central Asia