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Currency manipulation claim fans Sino-US trade fears
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-01-24 10:28 BEIJING - The China currency manipulation comment by the US Treasury Secretary-designate Timothy Geithner has sparked worries that China would face increasing pressure from US trade protectionism, Chinese economists said. "This is the first comment made by the Obama administration on Sino-US economic ties," said Cao Honghui, a researcher with the Institute of Finance under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS). It's undoubtedly a signal of more frictions on trade and currency issues between the two nations, he said.
He also said that Obama has pledged as president "to use aggressively all the diplomatic avenues open to him to seek change in China's currency practices." The US has long held that China is purposely keeping its currency, the renminbi, devalued against the dollar to help exports, which injured the interests of US enterprises. However, the Bush administration did not officially label China as a "currency manipulator" in its currency policy reports. "The Obama administration is worrying about China's reducing holdings of US treasury bonds while maintaining a trade surplus with the US," Cao said. According to China customs statistics, Sino-US trade hit US$333.74 billion last year, up 10.5 percent year on year. China's trade surplus with the US increased 4.6 percent in 2008 from a year earlier to US$170.85 billion. The growth, however, was 8.6 percentage points lower than 2007. Geithner's comment was just a "cliche", aiming to try out the Chinese government's response, said Zuo Xiaolei, senior analyst with the Beijing-based Galaxy Securities. The move was within expectation, Zuo said, as "the new Obama administration is facing serious job losses and economic recession while the Democrats have tended to trade protectionism." The US unemployment rate hit a 16-year high of 7.2 percent in December, according to the governmental statistics. The US federal budget deficit totaled US$485.2 billion in the first three months of the current fiscal year, the highest on record for a first quarter and larger than the record for a full fiscal year of US$455 billion set last year, said the US Treasury Department. "US trade protectionism has become the top concern of the international community," Zuo said, "because Obama has not mentioned being against trade protectionism during his presidential campaign and the inaugural speech, plus the persistent tendency of the Democrats." |