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China has no plans to raise its proposal for a new global currency to replace the dollar at the G8 meeting this week but is willing to discuss it, a top Chinese diplomat said, as President Hu Jintao left Sunday for Italy. China is not one of the Group of Eight major economies but is attending the meeting in the Italian city of L'Aquila as part of a group of five large developing countries.
Beijing called in March for the creation of a new currency, possibly based on the IMF's Special Drawing Rights, created in the 1960s and used as the monetary standard for dealings between the fund and member governments. "This international financial crisis has fully exposed the weaknesses and loopholes in the international monetary system," a deputy Chinese foreign minister, He Yafei, said at a briefing last week. "If this issue is raised by leaders during the meeting, it is natural, because we are all discussing how to respond to the international financial crisis and promote recovery."
He said Chinese officials have no plans to raise the issue but will discuss it if others raise it. Hu is expected to press for a bigger role for China and other developing countries in global finance. China won a pledge of more influence for developing countries in the International Monetary Fund last November at a summit on the global crisis. But the United States and other governments have yet to commit to specific changes. Any world financial structure "must be broadly based, having both developing and developed countries as members," He said. China has criticised a US bill to impose tariffs on imports from countries that fail to cut emissions of gases blamed for global warming.

Copyright Associated Press, 2009

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