Chinese yuan gives US dollar a run for its money as African trade embraces other currencies

When you land at the Kenneth Kaunda International Airport in Lusaka, one of the billboards welcoming you to the Zambian capital advertises the services of the Bank of China (BOC).

There are not many countries in Africa where the Chinese government-owned financial institution offers fully fledged banking services in renminbi (RMB), the official Chinese currency.

Apart from Zambia, BOC has a branch in Johannesburg, South Africa, and it also has a representative office in Kenya's capital, Nairobi.

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But it was in the southern nation of Zambia where BOC established its first African subsidiary, allowing customers to make deposits in and even withdraw Chinese yuan. Branches in both Lusaka and Kitwe, a mining town in the country's northern Copperbelt region, serve the growing number of Chinese mining firms and immigrants.

Recently, the lender also announced that its Zambian division would help boost the use of the yuan for trade as part of China's efforts to promote the Chinese currency in Africa.

BOC vice-president Lin Jingzhen visited Zambia in December. In a meeting with President Hakainde Hichilema, he promised to use the lender's global reach to facilitate economic and trade ties using the Chinese currency - not only with Zambia, but other African nations as well.

"Actually, Bank of China is a local clearing bank and we will earnestly act upon our responsibility and leverage on our role in Zambia to support other African countries to provide holistic products and services related to RMB and to promote the use of RMB in bilateral trade and economic activities," Lin said during his visit to Lusaka.

Lin's trip followed Hichilema's state visit to China in September, when the two countries agreed to trade more using their own currencies.

A joint statement following a meeting between Chinese President Xi Jinping and Hichilema said the two nations would "create a favourable policy environment for promoting settlements in local currencies and support a greater role of the Chinese renminbi settlement bank in Zambia".

Zambia is Africa's second-largest copper producer, most of it exported to China, the world's largest consumer of the metal. But financial woes hit Zambia in 2020 when it defaulted on foreign debt.

China helped strike a deal last June to restructure US$6.3 billion in Zambian loans. About US$4.1 billion of this is owed to China, the country's largest bilateral lender.