Interest rate gap helps manage currency (China Daily) Updated: 2006-02-13 10:39
The enlarging interest-rate gap between China and the U.S. helps keep the
yuan stable, and serves against world pressures for China's currency to further
appreciate.
The rising gap also provides favorable conditions for China
to adjust exchange-rate and economic policies, the Bloomberg quoted a central
bank official as saying.
The difference in key interest rates between the two countries is more than
300 basis points and growing, Yi Gang, assistant governor of the People' Bank of
China, told an economic seminar in Beijing. He referred to the yield on China's
one-year treasury bill of about 1.8 percent, compared to the gain of one-year
U.S. dollar bill of 5 percent. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.
The interest-rate gap, which has been expanding since early 2005 and is
likely to widen further, has helped curb foreign currency inflows to China by
deterring speculators seeking to profit from betting on yuan appreciation, Yi
said.
``This is providing favorable conditions for China to adjust its
exchange-rate policy and manage its macro-economic policies,'' Yi said.
The yuan has gained 0.7 percent since China revalued the currency on July 21
last year and ended a decade-old peg to the dollar. U.S. Senators Charles
Schumer, a New York Democrat, and Lindsey Graham, a Florida Republican, are
threatening to seek tariffs on Chinese imports unless the currency is allowed to
gain more rapidly. Adjusting the yuan isn't the answer to trade disputes, said
Yi.
Central bank officials have repeated that the interest rate gap between the
two countries favors a stable yuan several times in recent months, said Song
Guoqing, economic professor at Peking University's China Economic Research
Center.
Yi's comments ``indicate that the central bank may be willing to allow the
yuan to appreciate by 2 to 3 percent this year,'' Song said at the seminar,
according to the Bloomberg report.
Song estimated that the yuan may appreciate to 7.94 to the U.S. dollar by the
end of 2006. The yuan last closed at 8.0505 to the U.S. dollar on China's
interbank foreign exchange market.
China's high domestic savings ratio compared with that of the U.S. is an
example of a fundamental factor that cannot be addressed by changing the yuan’s
exchange rate, Yi said.
Adjusting the yuan exchange rate would have only a limited effect in reducing
the high savings ratio by spurring domestic demand and encouraging imports, he
said.
Lawmakers and manufacturers in the U.S. and Europe say an undervalued
currency gives Chinese exporters an unfair advantage by making their goods
cheaper abroad. China's trade surplus widened to a record $102 billion last
year, helping drive a 9.9 percent expansion in the world's fastest-growing major
economy. The U.S. trade deficit with China ballooned 25 percent to $201.6
billion last year, a U.S. Commerce Department report said on Friday.
Exports account for about 40 percent of China's $2.3 trillion economy, which
last year overtook France and the U.K. to become the world’s 4th-largest.
The yuan failed to jump last month when the central bank reduced its
influence by allowing 13 banks including Citigroup and HSBC Holdings to start
acting as market makers in the currency.
China on July 21 reset the yuan's value at 8.11 to the dollar, a 2.1 percent
appreciation from the pegged level where it had been held since 1995, and
started managing its value against a basket of currencies including the euro and
yen.
China’s economy may expand 9.8 percent this year as investment in factories,
roads and construction increases 27 percent, Peking University's Song said.
China's 2006 trade surplus may be little changed at last year’s $101 billion, he
said.
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