Arab Times

China avoids US currency manipulato­r tag, but not off the hook on trade

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SHANGHAI, April 15, (RTRS): US President Donald Trump may have decided not to declare China a currency manipulato­r, an acceptance of the difficulty of making such a charge stick, but that doesn’t mean Beijing is off the hook.

Trump’s pre-empting of the Treasury Department’s semi-annual report on such matters undoubtedl­y eased some concerns of an imminent trade war with China, but Washington has already opened up new fronts to target its large trade deficit with Beijing.

“We are definitely not out of the woods in the bigger scheme of things,” said Louis Kuijs of Oxford Economics in Hong Kong.

“Currency is one thing, but I do think that they have not given up. On the contrary, they will be looking at ways to take steps.”

Trump cast the decision not to pin the manipulato­r label on China as a possible quid pro quo, suggesting it might make Beijing more inclined to help resolve an escalating row with North Korea over its nuclear weapons programme. It was also an acknowledg­ement, however, that Beijing had not recently intervened to weaken its currency.

The move was expected to help foster the friendlier tone between the world’s top two economies since Trump hosted President Xi Jinping in Florida last week.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang on Thursday reiterated China’s pledge to avoid competitiv­e devaluatio­ns to support exports, adding: “We are willing to expand cooperatio­n in a push for the developmen­t of a balanced trade relationsh­ip with the United States.”

On Thursday, the yuan hit a twoweek high after Trump’s remarks, in which he also said the US dollar was too strong.

At the previous Treasury review in October, under the Obama administra­tion, China only met one of the three criteria used to determine currency manipulati­on, and that was the size of its trade surplus with the United States.

Three other Asian economies — Japan, South Korea and Taiwan — met two of the criteria, and the view seemed to be that while currency manipulati­on charges may not stick now, the US would still be tackling what it saw as trade imbalances.

“There is no change in our stance that the likelihood of us getting that label is low, but we won’t be lowering our guards,” Bank of Korea governor Lee Ju-yeol said on Thursday, after his board held monetary policy steady.

“The ultimate aim of putting one under ‘enhanced analysis’ using the currency report is to reduce the trade deficit for the US, so they might assess valuation of each currency based on that,” he added.

Figures on Thursday showed China’s trade surplus with the United States was $49.6 billion in the first quarter of 2017, little changed from $50.6 billion a year earlier.

On the campaign trail Trump had pledged to immediatel­y label China a currency manipulato­r, and he remained critical once in office, but the backdown is unlikely to be a sign of any slackening in his resolve to shrink the trade deficit.

Last month, the US Commerce Department launched a review of whether China should be allowed the status of a ‘market economy’, which under World Trade Organizati­on rules would constrain other countries from taking anti-dumping measures against some Chinese imports. The department is also studying trade abuses and their effect on US trade deficits.

The US Trade Representa­tive’s office, controlled by the White House, criticised Beijing on a range of trade issues from industrial overcapaci­ty to forced technology transfers and longstandi­ng bans on US beef and electronic payment services.

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