The Mercury News

Trump won’t label China a currency manipulato­r

- By Ana Swanson

President Donald Trump on Wednesday said he would not label China a currency manipulato­r, contradict­ing one of the biggest economic promises he made on the campaign trail.

Trump told the Wall Street Journal that he had changed his mind because China is not currently manipulati­ng his currency, adding that he hoped to enlist China’s help on containing the nuclear threat from North Korea.

Trump also indicated that he might be open to keeping Janet Yellen as Federal Reserve chair after her term expires.

“I like her, I respect her ... It’s very early,” he said when asking about her reappointm­ent.

Trump was highly critical of Yellen during the campaign.

He accused her of keeping interest rates low to benefit the Obama administra­tion and said she should be ashamed of herself. But Yellen has a reputation for being slow to raise interest rates, and Trump had also professed his preference for low interest rates in the past.

“I do like a low-interest rate policy, I must be honest with you,” he told the Journal, when asked about Yellen.

The president is also “very close” to naming a vice chair and filling another open seat that governs community banking on the Federal Reserve Board, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said during the interview.

In the interview, Trump also inveighed against the strong U.S. dollar, saying that the strength of the currency stemmed partially from people’s confidence in him, but that it was also hurting the economy.

“It’s very, very hard to compete when you have a strong dollar and other countries are devaluing their currency,” he said.

Eswar Prasad, a professor of internatio­nal trade at Cornell University, said it was striking that a sitting president would comment so directly on the value of the dollar.

“It could also be taken as an implicit threat to other countries that if the dollar stays strong and if U.S. bilateral trade imbalances with its major trading balances stay high or continue to expand, that he will take some sort of action,” Prasad said.

The judgment on currency manipulati­on was scheduled to be released in a semiannual report from the Treasury Department that is due this week.

China defies internatio­nal trade rules in some respects, economists say, but devaluing its currency is not currently one of them.

While China suppressed the value of its currency for years to make its products cheaper abroad and boost its exports, for the last several years it has been intervenin­g in currency markets to prop the yuan up, which actually benefits American exporters.

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