In recent years, the solid footprint on the road to opening up has made China's financial industry more and more "international". In 20 16, the international monetary fund (IMF) included RMB in the SDR currency basket; In 20 17, the European Central Bank increased RMB foreign exchange reserves equivalent to 500 million euros; In 20 18, China A shares will officially enter the Morgan Stanley Capital International Index. China is growing into an "anchor of stability" in the international financial market.
Zhu Min, president of Tsinghua University National Institute of Finance and former vice president of IMF, said that in the past two years, the spillover effects of China's financial opening policy and market fluctuations have increased, and the international financial markets unanimously believe that China's status is gradually improving and its role is expanding. "China's economy and finance have increasingly become the main force of international finance and played a positive role in the development of international finance."