"More businesses may decide to accept payments in RMB if that makes them more profitable, but the concerns about exchange rate fluctuation and counterfeiting are likely to limit this,"
China's ally Cambodia considers use of yuan to lure more tourists
Reuters | 3 August 2016
Cambodia is urging businesses to accept payment in
yuan as it seeks to
attract more Chinese tourists, officials said on Wednesday, the latest sign of
tightening ties between Phnom Penh and Beijing.
Cambodia is China's closest ally in
Southeast Asia and last week handed Beijing a diplomatic victory in a dispute
over the South China Sea at a meeting of the Association of South East Asian
Nations.
China is already the second-largest
source of tourists to Cambodia after Vietnam, with nearly 1 million
arrivals a year.
Accepting the yuan is part of a
Ministry of Tourism plan to more than double the number of Chinese tourists by
2020.
"We want to target 2 million
tourists per year from 2020, so we aim to implement it now," Tith
Chantha, a secretary of state at the ministry, told Reuters.
"We want to encourage the use of
yuan."
Cambodia's economy is already
dollarised. The yuan could circulate in a similar way to dollars, Chantha said.
Cambodia is heavily dependent on
Chinese aid and investment and Prime Minister Hun Sen said on Tuesday Chinese
tourists would help drive growth.
Still, the introduction of
the yuan, also known as the renminbi (RMB), would seem to go against a
government move away from dollarisation toward use of the riel currency because
of the constraints to monetary policy due to the dollar's use.
"More businesses may
decide to accept payments in RMB if that makes them more profitable, but the concerns about exchange rate fluctuation
and counterfeiting are likely
to limit this," said Joseph
Lovell of the American Chamber of Commerce in Cambodia.
Lovell said if Chinese tourists knew
they could readily use RMB in Cambodia, it might encourage more visits.
Ho Vandy, secretary-general of the Cambodian National Tourism
Alliance, said the plan could help spur growth in tourism, but details needed
to be worked out.
"In remote areas, people
wouldn't know how to identify real or fake notes and what the exchange rate
is," Ho Vandy said.
Tith Chantha brushed off those
concerns, saying circulation of the notes would mostly be with big hotels and
travel companies.
"It won't be difficult, it will
be used like the dollar," he said
Officials at the National Bank of
Cambodia could not be reached for comment.
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