TOKYO: Japan and 12
other Asian countries will likely agree to double the amount of funds
available under a regional currency swap pact amid uncertainty over the
European debt crisis, a report said Sunday.
Japan, China, South
Korea and the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations
(ASEAN) are to agree to double the fund from the current S$120 billion
this month, Japan's Nikkei daily reported, citing unnamed sources.
The
currency swap deal, known as the Chiang Mai Initiative, is designed to
prevent a financial crisis in countries with relatively small foreign
exchange reserves by giving them a safety net against future liquidity
shortages.
Currently, up to 20 per cent of the S$120 billion in
available funds can be used without linkage to loans by the
International Monetary Fund.
The so-called ASEAN+3 countries are
also expected to agree to raise this percentage significantly to prevent
the European debt crisis from causing major damage in Asia, the Nikkei
said.
The countries are expected to reach a broad agreement on
strengthening the functions of the Chiang Mai Initiative at a meeting of
senior finance officials in Cambodia at the end of this month, it said.
The
agreement is expected to be finalised in May at a meeting of finance
ministers and central bank governors from the ASEAN+3 countries, it
said.
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