Sarah Hall

Respatialising Finance


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Geography and the Global Network on Financial Geography. Through these events, I’m lucky to be supported by a wider network of financial and economic geographers that I feel very lucky to be a part of. Comments throughout the project from Karen Lai, Kean Fan Lim, Paul Langley and Adam Leaver have been incredibly helpful in refining the arguments in the book.

      “Prior to the global financial crisis RMB internationalization was already a gleam in the eye of elites in China, but it was understood that the yuan was a long way off from serving as an important international currency. The dominant position of the dollar, the emergence of the euro, and the fragility of China’s sheltered, murky domestic financial sector (in contrast with the venerable institutions and market powerhouses to be found in the West) tempered expectations about how quickly the RMB might take its place as a currency widely used in international transactions, let alone held as a reserve asset. Nevertheless, such ambitions, however distant, were clearly harboured, and as China continued its rise to great power status it was natural to assume that a greater international role for a maturing RMB would be part of that process”

      Although the future of RMB internationalisation is uncertain and has slowed since 2015, there are a number of indicators which point to marked changes in the position of the currency internationally, and by extension the role of China within the international financial system (Chey and Vic Li 2020). For example, China now holds the largest foreign currency reserves of any country. These are used to support the pegging of the renminbi (RMB) to the US dollar. These stockpiles are also used to support China’s international trade policy. Increases in Chinese holdings of US dollars raises the value of the US dollar compared with the RMB, meaning that Chinese exports become cheaper than their US counterparts. Moreover, its exchange rate policy is closely monitored internationally, often shaping the exchange rate policy of other countries (Helleiner and Kirshner 2014). Meanwhile, significant infrastructure spending arising from the Belt and Road initiative (BRI) that spans central Asia, Central Africa and Eastern Europe involves financing from state-owned banks, sovereign wealth funds such as the China Investment Corporation as well as multilateral investment funds such as the Silk Road Fund. In so doing, the BRI therefore raises important questions about how these rapidly evolving financial institutions sit alongside and potentially reshape international financial relations (on which see Lim 2010, for example).

      However, less attention has been paid to how and why financial centres beyond mainland China become enrolled within RMB internationalisation. Respatialising Finance responds to this by examining how and why London became the leading Western financial centre within the wider Chinese economic and political project of RMB internationalisation. My analysis is based on a research project dating back to 2015 that focused on the growth of wholesale Chinese finance in London’s financial district. Echoing my earlier work on financial labour markets (Hall 2009), my initial interest lay in examining the growth of elite Chinese migration into London’s financial district. However, I rapidly realised that, as with earlier rounds of financial labour market transformation in London, the growth of Chinese financiers and related professionals in London signalled a more profound and structural set of changes in terms of the place of Chinese finance in London’s financial district. This was reflected in the popular discourse of the time. For example, in October 2015, the Financial Times ran the headline ‘Chinese financial institutions grow closer to the heart of London’ (Stafford 2015). The article documented London’s rise as the first and leading western offshore centre (beyond mainland China) for financial products and markets denominated in the Chinese currency – the renminbi. The article was accompanied by a picture of the Chinese flag flying in the centre of London’s historic financial district, close to the Bank of England, with the financial offices of Canary Wharf in the background. This suggested to me that marked changes were taking place in relation to the place of Chinese finance globally, and in London in particular.