Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Trump flirts with currency war in escalating conflict with China

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WASHINGTON (AFP) - President Donald Trump on Thursday took a step closer to sparking a currency war in the escalating conflict with China, saying he is not happy with the strong US dollar.

Trump has pursued a policy of maximum pressure, including subjecting all Chinese goods to punitive tariffs as of September 1, and accusing Beijing of manipulati­ng its currency to gain a competitiv­e edge.

In a move that breaks with decades of US policy, Trump on Thursday seemed to call for a weaker dollar to help American companies compete.

“As your President, one would think that I would be thrilled with our very strong dollar. I am not!” he said on Twitter.

“The Fed’s high interest rate level, in comparison to other countries, is keeping the dollar high, making it more difficult for our great manufactur­ers like Caterpilla­r, Boeing, ... John Deere, our car companies, & others, to compete on a level playing field.”

The latest outburst comes days after the US Treasury labeled Beijing a currency manipulato­r for allowing the yuan to depreciate slightly in the face of new US tariffs.

Economists roundly criticized the move, saying Beijing if anything has been intervenin­g in currency markets to keep the yuan from falling further in the face of an economic slowdown and the uncertaint­y created by Trump’s trade war.

“Labeling China as a manipulato­r is totally fallacious. They are not manipulati­ng,” said C. Fred Bergsten, founder of the Peterson Institute of Internatio­nal Economics.

“It’s fake news, as Trump would say,” Bergsten told AFP.

But while he said the move stops short of a fullblown currency war, the risks are real.

If the administra­tion tries to sell dollars to weaken the exchange rate and Beijing fights back with its own interventi­on, that could trigger a war, he said.

“Getting into a currency war would be very risky business. Particular­ly with this administra­tion, which nobody trusts anyway,” Bergsten said.

William Reinsch, a trade expert and former congressio­nal advisor, warned of the risks of weaponizin­g currencies, something done in the early 1930s, that exacerbate­d the Depression.

“The worst thing that can happen is we get into one of these cycles of competitiv­e devaluatio­n,” he told AFP.

For decades, US administra­tions of both parties have steadfastl­y advocated keeping the dollar strong since that provides stability and can hold down inflation by making imported goods less expensive.

But a strong currency also makes US exports more expensive. Constructi­on and farm machinery manufactur­er Caterpilla­r recently lowered earnings targets for this year, given declining sales in China amid the tariff battle.

Reinsch, of the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies, said Trump has painted himself into a corner and his hardline tactics with China make a deal less likely.

“He really is in a kind of a box, because they’re not going to do what he wants and there’s not an easy way out,” he told AFP.

Trump also has been relentless­ly pressuring the Fed, demanding it cut interest rates in almost daily tweets.

“With substantia­l Fed Cuts (there is no inflation) ... the dollar will make it possible for our companies to win against any competitio­n,” he said on Twitter.

US central bankers “have called it wrong at every step of the way,” Trump said.

But economists strongly refute this notion and say it is the strength of the US economy compared to others like the slowing eurozone, that has pushed up the value of the dollar.

And Trump’s own trade war adds to uncertaint­y that has caused businesses to hold off on investment, and for investors to seek safe havens, including buying US dollars, they say.

And Bergsten cautioned that any Trump administra­tion bid to weaken the dollar is unlikely to be effective in any case.

“Any effort to weaken the dollar through interventi­on or anything else would be really leaning against a very strong wind and I don’t think there is much prospect for their finding a way to do it.”

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Donald Trump

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