Seoul (VNA) – The Republic of Korea (RoK), China and Japan agreed on May 3 to reinforce the regional financial safety net, along with members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), by launching a new financing facility programme meant to extend greater support in case of a financial crisis.
According to the RoK’s Ministry of Economy and Finance, the agreement was made during a trilateral meeting of Korean Finance Minister Choi Sang-mok, Japanese Finance Minister Shunichi Suzuki and Chinese Finance Minister Liu Kun held during their meeting in Tbilisi, Georgia.
The trilateral meeting took place on the sidelines of the 27th ASEAN+3 Finance Ministers' and Central Bank Governors' Meeting, which brought together top financial officials, and central bankers from ASEAN and the three Northeast Asian countries.The joint statement has affirmed support of parties with the establishment of the Rapid Financing Facility (RFF) and with the incorporation of eligible freely usable currencies as its currencies of choice, as a new facility under the Chiang Mai Initiative Multilateralization (CMIM) and its modalities.
The RFF will be extended without any conditions in case of a crisis caused by such external shocks as a pandemic and natural disasters, officials said, adding that the ASEAN Plus Three nations will revise relevant regulations this year to officially implement the programme next year.
The CMIM is a 240 billion USD pool launched in 2010 that can be tapped through currency swap deals in times of financial crises in the region.
The nations also shared the need to change the CMIM fund into a paid-in capital structure, rather than pledge funding, and agreed to fix a detailed structure by 2025 after an analysis of various models.
At the meeting, the three nations also shared the assessment that the region is expected to grow at a faster clip this year driven by rising exports and solid domestic demand. However, geopolitical tensions, rising global prices of commodities and raw materials, and growing volatility in the foreign exchange market as near-term challenges. As longer-term risks, they cited climate change and population aging.
They vowed to further enhance cooperation and communication with each other as well as with ASEAN countries in the ASEAN+3 Finance Process to work toward robust recovery and sustainable growth in our region while reaffirming their commitment to "the open, free, fair, inclusive, equitable, transparent, and nondiscriminatory rules-based multilateral trading system./.