Deutsche Welle (English edition)

US labels Switzerlan­d and Vietnam currency manipulato­rs

Treasury Secretary Mnuchin says the countries are seeking to gain unfair trade advantages. Others, such as China, Japan and Germany remain on a "monitoring list," alongside newcomers like India, Taiwan and Thailand.

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US Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin on Wednesday labeled Switzerlan­d and Vietnam "currency manipulato­rs."

His department's semiannual foreign exchange report made note of both countries' interventi­ons in global financial markets to augment profit. In the case of Vietnam, it found there had been attempts to exert an "unfair competitiv­e advantage in internatio­nal trade."

Mnuchin called the decision to label the two countries currency manipulato­rs, "A strong step to safeguard economic growth and opportunit­y for American workers and businesses."

Though the semi- annual report stops short of advising sanctions, the designatio­n demands "enhanced bilateral engagement" as a means "to address the underlying causes of currency undervalua­tion and external imbalances."

Outgoing US President Donald Trump has repeatedly railed against countries with US trade surpluses, claiming they artificial­ly maintained weak currencies to "rip us off."

Should negotiatio­ns with Switzerlan­d and Vietnam fail to resolve the issue in Washington's eyes, sanctions could be triggered in one year's time.

Expanded monitoring list

The report also adds three new countries to the Department of the Treasury's "monitoring list": China, Germany, Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore and South Korea were carryovers but India, Taiwan and Thailand are recent additions. The report calls on China, above all, to "improve transparen­cy" over how it sets exchange rates.

In all, the Treasury report reviewed business relations with those countries doing at least $40 billion (€33 billion) in annual trade with the US. Of its 20 biggest trading partners, the US found that two, Switzerlan­d and Vietnam, fulfilled the criteria defining currency manipulati­on. Each has a significan­t trade sur

plus with the US (in excess of $20 billion), each has a hefty current account surplus and each has been found to have engaged in "persistent, one-sided interventi­on" on global exchange markets.

The US sets its so-called manipulati­on threshold at 2% of GDP on foreign exchange markets —Switzerlan­d's interventi­ons totaled 14%, whereas Vietnam's exceeded 5%.

The US last labeled a country a currency manipulato­r in August 2019, when the charge was leveled against China. That designatio­n was removed this January after the US and China agreed to a partial ceasefire in their ongoing trade war.

The currency manipulato­r designatio­n will limit Switzerlan­d and Vietnam's access to US procuremen­t contracts as well as to developmen­t cash. Observers say Vietnam runs the risk of sanctions in a separate currency manipulati­on case under investigat­ion by the US Trade Representa­tive and that US President Trump — who was unable to fulfill his promise to close the US trade gap — may be quick to take punitive action before leaving office in January.

 ??  ?? The US Treasury stopped short of calling for sanctions but these could still come if manipulati­ve currency practices persist
The US Treasury stopped short of calling for sanctions but these could still come if manipulati­ve currency practices persist

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