The Group
of Seven countries are in fundamental agreement that the Chinese yuan should be
part of the IMF's international basket of reference currencies, but there is no
need to rush it, German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said Friday.
"There
are technical issues and not just technical ones" to sort out, Schaeuble
told a news conference concluding a meeting of G7 finance ministers and central
bank governors. "We are in full agreement on the goal, but it would not be
good to rush it," he added.
Beijing has
been pushing for its currency, the yuan or renminbi, to play a greater role in
the world financial system and be included in the basket that makes up the
International Monetary Fund's own "special drawing rights" reserve
currency.
Washington
has long claimed that the yuan was manipulated, but the IMF said on Tuesday
that the currency is "no longer undervalued".

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