Leaders meeting focuses on yuan, growth (Reuters/chinadaily.com.cn) Updated: 2005-11-30 08:55
The need to cut China's huge balance of payments surplus to fend off U.S.
pressure for a stronger yuan is probably high on the agenda of a key meeting of
Chinese leaders that began on Tuesday, economists and government sources said.
President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao are expected to attend the annual
Central Economic Work Conference, which will set the course of policy for 2006.
The closed-door meeting usually lasts 3 days.
A man lays out
various denominations of the Chinese yuan, in Beijing.
[AFP] |
"The currency has to be on the agenda and there's bound to be a greater
emphasis on resolving the balance of payments problem," said a senior economist
at the State Information Center, a top government think-tank in Beijing.
The meeting opened a day after the U.S. Treasury declined to name China a
currency manipulator, despite the demands of many U.S. law-makers, but served
notice that it would keep pressing Beijing to let its currency rise in value.
The yuan did in fact rise on Tuesday to 8.0796 to the dollar, the highest
level since it was revalued on July 21 by 2.1 percent to 8.11 and allowed to
float within a managed range.
But the yuan's total appreciation against the dollar since July is still only
0.38 percent, prompting criticism in the U.S. Congress that the currency is
being artificially held down given China's billowing external surpluses.
China's current account surplus, one of the counterparts of America's huge
current account deficit, rose ninefold in the first half of 2005 from a year
earlier, topping 8 percent of gross domestic product.
Beijing is trying to reduce the surplus by pressing ahead with gradual
currency reforms, which will let supply and demand play a greater role, and by
spurring consumption.
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