China Daily Global Edition (USA)

US again declines to say China cheats with currency

- By CHEN WEIHUA in Washington chenweihua@ chinadaily­usa.com

Amid growing trade tension between China and the United States, the administra­tion of President Donald Trump has again declined to label China a currency manipulato­r.

The US Treasury Department, in its semiannual report to Congress, found none of the six major US trading partners placed under monitoring — China, Germany, Japan, South Korea, Switzerlan­d and India — was manipulati­ng its currency. India is new to the Treasury list.

“We will continue to monitor and combat unfair currency practices, while encouragin­g policies and reforms to address large trade imbalances,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in a statement on Friday.

It was the third such Treasury report issued by the Trump administra­tion since taking office 15 months ago. None of the reports labeled China a currency manipulato­r, unlike Trump’s rhetoric on the campaign trail for the 2016 election when he repeatedly bashed China as a currency manipulato­r.

The Treasury report, titled Macroecono­mic and Foreign Exchange Policies of Major Trading Partners of the United States, said China has an “extremely large and persistent” bilateral trade surplus with the US, with a goods trade surplus standing at $375 billion in 2017. But it noted that China runs a trade deficit with many other economies.

China’s current account surplus expanded in nominal terms to $96 billion, or 1.4 percent of the GDP, in the second half of 2017 from $90 billion, or 1.5 percent, in the second half of 2016. “But it remains significan­tly below its 2007 half year peak over 10 percent of GDP,” the Treasury report said.

The last time the US Treasury labeled a country as a currency manipulato­r was in 1994, when China was named. The Treasury report also noted that since the beginning of 2018, China’s yuan has continued to strengthen against the dollar, up by 3.7 percent at the end of March.

Speculatio­n was rife last week that China might depreciate the yuan in case the Trump administra­tion imposes punitive Section 301 tariffs on some $150 billion of imports from China following an investigat­ion into China’s intellectu­al property policies and practices.

Yi Gang, governor of the People’s Bank of China, the central bank, said on March 11 that China had no intention of manipulati­ng its exchange rate to try to boost trade.

Yi is expected to be in Washington in the coming days for the 2018 IMF/World Bank Annual Spring Meeting.

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