
Jakarta and Buenos Aires Hedge Against Dollar with Beijing Swap Deals
Indonesia and Argentina are deepening monetary cooperation with China through expanded currency swaps and local-currency settlement, signalling a strategic shift away from US dollar dependency in trade.
The most significant development came from Shanghai, where Bank Indonesia Governor Perry Warjiyo and People’s Bank of China Governor Pan Gongsheng signed a renewed and expanded Bilateral Currency Swap Arrangement (BCSA) on 11 June 2026. The agreement, which drew immediate public praise from senior Indonesian lawmakers, extends the framework to cover Hong Kong through a parallel memorandum with the Hong Kong Monetary Authority. Viewed from Jakarta, the deal is a concrete step towards insulating bilateral trade with China—Indonesia’s largest trading partner—from the volatility of the US dollar. Deputy Speaker Sufmi Dasco Ahmad told reporters that transactions between Indonesia, mainland China and Hong Kong could now be settled directly in rupiah or renminbi, reducing reliance on the greenback.
In Buenos Aires, a similar narrative is unfolding. Central Bank of Argentina President Santiago Bausili concluded a week-long visit to Shanghai, where he not only attended a BIS-PBOC symposium alongside counterparts from Mongolia, Iceland and Hong Kong, but also advanced talks to renew Argentina’s own US$20 billion swap line with Beijing, which matures in August. Argentine officials are also exploring interoperability of payment systems, mirroring Indonesia’s push to link its QRIS standard with China’s digital yuan infrastructure. For a country battling chronic dollar shortages and triple-digit inflation, the swap line has become a critical backstop, allowing the central bank to manage external obligations without depleting scarce reserves.
These parallel moves reflect a broader reconfiguration of emerging-market defences. Indonesia is simultaneously deepening its integration into China’s Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS), with state-owned Bank Mandiri becoming a direct participant. The framework, combined with the Local Currency Transaction (LCT) mechanism, aims to slash transaction costs and bypass the correspondent banking chains that route through New York. Analysts in London note that while de-dollarisation is often overstated—the dollar remains dominant in global reserves and debt issuance—these bilateral plumbing arrangements are steadily carving out a parallel infrastructure that could, over time, erode the dollar’s transactional monopoly in specific corridors.
There are, however, cautionary voices. A separate analysis from Jakarta-based economists highlights the domestic trade-offs of rupiah stabilisation efforts. The central bank’s issuance of high-yielding rupiah securities (SRBI) has attracted portfolio inflows and supported the currency, but it risks crowding out bank lending to the productive sector. This underscores a tension inherent in the broader strategy: defending the exchange rate through financial instruments can inadvertently tighten domestic credit conditions, complicating the growth outlook even as trade settlement reforms advance.
Looking ahead, the Shanghai agreements are likely to accelerate the use of local currencies in Asian and Latin American trade. For Beijing, each new swap line and payment linkage extends the renminbi’s international reach without requiring full capital-account liberalisation. For Jakarta and Buenos Aires, the immediate prize is greater monetary autonomy and a hedge against Federal Reserve policy spillovers. Whether these bilateral frameworks can scale into a genuine alternative to dollar-centric finance remains uncertain, but the direction of travel is unmistakable.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 2 languages
Indonesia has taken a strategic step with China to strengthen the rupiah through a bilateral currency swap, reducing reliance on the US dollar. The deal is hailed as a breakthrough for national economic resilience and a move toward internationalizing the rupiah, with transactions now possible in rupiah and renminbi in Hong Kong.
Argentina's central bank chief wrapped up a visit to China with advances on renewing the $20 billion swap line, a move framed as pragmatic to bolster reserves. The talks included technical discussions on payment system interoperability, with no overt geopolitical overtones.
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