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China Shows Little Patience for U.S. Currency Pressure

Published: February 4, 2010
BEIJING — A senior Chinese official said on Thursday that China would not bow to pressure from the United States to revalue its currency, which President Obama says is kept at an artificially low level to give China an unfair advantage in selling its exports.

Mr. Ma was reacting to remarks on trade that Mr. Obama made on Wednesday when he met with Democratic senators in Washington. Mr. Obama stopped short of saying China manipulates its currency, but his words on China’s economic policies were harsh — the United States, he said, has “to make sure our goods are not artificially inflated in price and their goods are not artificially deflated in price; that puts us at a huge competitive disadvantage.”

Economists agree with that assessment. They say that the Chinese currency, the renminbi, is undervalued by 25 to 40 percent compared to the dollar and other currencies. The gap is wider than at any time since July 2005, when the Chinese government, under pressure from the Bush administration, decided to the do away with the renminbi’s peg to the dollar and allow the currency to float in a narrow band against the dollar and other currencies.

The renminbi appreciated 21 percent, but since July 2008 it has remained at the same value — today, one dollar equals about 6.83 renminbi, also called the yuan.

“Judging from the international balance of payments and the currency market’s supply and demand, the value of the renminbi is getting to a reasonable and balanced level,” Mr. Ma said on Thursday.

The sharp exchange over China’s currency is only the latest symptom of rising tensions in American relations with China. Internet censorship, hacking attacks directed at American companies, arms sales to Taiwan and the pending visit of the Dalai Lama to Washington have all cropped up in the last month as points of conflict. China is exhibiting a brash sense of confidence as its economy continues to boom while much of the world remains mired in a recession.

On economics, Chinese officials now regularly lecture their American counterparts on the need to maintain the value of the American dollar. :cheesy: China, which has more than $2.4 trillion in foreign exchange reserves, is the largest holder of American debt. On Wednesday, Xinhua, the official state news agency, .the official state news agency said Chinese economists are concerned that the American government, suffering from a record budget deficit, could print more dollars and issue more bonds, eroding the value of the dollar.

The finger-wagging from the American side is almost certain to intensify too. With mid-term elections this fall, Mr. Obama is under pressure to alleviate the high unemployment rate in the United States. Mr. Obama said last week in his State of the Union speech that he hoped to double American exports within five years.

In China, the export industry is a large employer in the coastal regions and draws hordes of migrant workers from interior provinces. Exports have slowed considerably since the global financial crisis began, and Chinese leaders and economists have been saying that domestic consumption should become a larger part of the economy.

Last year, the Chinese economy grew by 8.7 percent, surpassing the 8 percent benchmark set by the government and indicating that China was managing to push through the global recession with little damage. A large driver of the growth was domestic spending — the Chinese government announced in November 2008 a stimulus package worth $585 billion.

But the spending, along with in-flows of foreign currency through private investments and speculation, what some economists call “hot money,” is fueling inflation. The consumer price index in the fourth quarter of 2009 was 1.9 percent. Fears of an overheated economy could lead the Chinese government to revalue the renminbi later this year to help contain inflation.

In late January, Jim O’Neill, the chief economist at Goldman Sachs, told Bloomberg News that he expected the Chinese government to make a one-off revaluation of the renminbi, letting it appreciate by at least five percent before the end of 2010. He said the revaluation will happen suddenly, without any warning from Chinese leaders.

Reopening the battle with Beijing over its currency may pay political dividends for Mr. Obama at a time of double-digit unemployment and growing fears that China is stealing American jobs. But experts say the president will have even less leverage over Beijing than President George W. Bush did. Mr. Bush prodded China for years to adjust its exchange rate with little success.

China, they say, is determined to reignite its export machine after a global recession that sapped demand for Chinese goods. A cheap currency is vital to that goal. And as indicated by Mr. Ma’s statement on Thursday, China’s leaders have grown impatient with lectures on economic policy from their chief debtor, the United States.

“It will be like water off a duck’s back,” said Nicholas R. Lardy, a China expert at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. “They’re puzzled by the criticism. They think they should be praised for keeping their currency stable at a time of global turmoil.”

Criticizing China’s policy, however, is likely to worsen a relationship already frayed by irritants on both sides.

In two weeks, Mr. Obama is expected to meet with the Dalai Lama, the Tibetan spiritual leader, over the objections of the Chinese, who condemn him as a subversive. The administration forged ahead with sales of weapons to Taiwan, drawing an angry blast from Beijing, which regards Taiwan as a breakaway province. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton criticized China for censoring the Internet, in the wake of Google’s allegations about hacking.

For its part, the United States is frustrated that the Chinese will not back tougher sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program. And China has resisted American initiatives on climate change policy, turning the recent climate meeting in Copenhagen into a diplomatic drama.

The administration has struggled to prevent the ill will from any single issue from contaminating the broader relationship. “We can’t pick the timing of when an issue becomes important,” said a senior official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the delicacy of the matter.

Exchange rates are an arcane subject, harder to explain than a meeting with the Dalai Lama. But they influence easy-to-understand issues like the competitiveness of American exports and job security.

“The currency issue has the potential to become a very hot political issue,” said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, who worked on China policy in the Clinton White House. “We’re in significant danger of hitting a very rough patch in trade relations, in the latter part of this year.”

Edward Wong reported from Beijing, and Mark Landler from Washington

China Shows Little Patience for U.S. Currency Pressure - NYTimes.com
 
China has showed our patience for US over 30 years since our economy boosting. And there is no change of US, it is time to change our foriegn policy.
 
With recent diplomatic issues...
Ignoring US demands is expected.
 
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What a lie the nytime has told the world.
Renminbi has increased in value actually within the last year. Look at how much other currencies decreased in value against the USD including your indian rupee. It is the american who don't want their dollar to rise and is to be blamed for all these mess.
 
What a lie the nytime has told the world.
Renminbi has increased in value actually within the last year. Look at how much other currencies decreased in value against the USD including your indian rupee. It is the american who don't want their dollar to rise and is to be blamed for all these mess.

I partially agree with you. Paul Krugman gets hysterical just about everything and anything these days, although clearly some are more grave than others.

Beware of financial capitalism, there is no doubt about that. The so-called "free floating" of currency is like "free sex" - there is no such thing.

It's not the RMB's rise that's in question, but the rate and magnitude of rise.
 
to be honest, i like the reality version of G2, 2 group that confronting with each other,much much much more than the G2 proposed by Oblackma:chilli:

@topic
when "freedom" is being defeated by "control", US call for changes from his counterpart. Is this what "change" means in Oblackma's election campaign:woot:
 
We must sell all our US debts back to US before we revalue "Renminbi".
China, please don't buy any US debts in the future!
 
We must sell all our US debts back to US before we revalue "Renminbi".
China, please don't buy any US debts in the future!

Stax,

Official Chinese holdings of Treasuries amount to less than 7 percent of U.S. Treasury debt. That's a lot of money, unfortunately, but it's hardly enough to do much damage to US Economy.

China's ownership of US debt is actually a sign of dependence on US, rather than the other way around. The Chinese have no choice but to buy U.S. bonds, because America is the only market sound enough and big enough to park their excess funds. Since China's currency is tightly controlled, they can't spend those dollars on their own economy. They invest even more in the U.S. economy, thus funneling billions of dollars US spends on Chinese goods right back to US.
 
We must sell all our US debts back to US before we revalue "Renminbi".
China, please don't buy any US debts in the future!

中国成了大头...不想買也得買...
 
Stax,

Official Chinese holdings of Treasuries amount to less than 7 percent of U.S. Treasury debt. That's a lot of money, unfortunately, but it's hardly enough to do much damage to US Economy.

China's ownership of US debt is actually a sign of dependence on US, rather than the other way around. The Chinese have no choice but to buy U.S. bonds, because America is the only market sound enough and big enough to park their excess funds. Since China's currency is tightly controlled, they can't spend those dollars on their own economy. They invest even more in the U.S. economy, thus funneling billions of dollars US spends on Chinese goods right back to US.

its not so much the percentage as is the effect of dumping all that money, remember the stock market can be down by speculations, one large dump leads to other people selling leads to freefall unless someone can come up with 1000 billion to recuse the market in a span of a few days, even then it may not work, look at the great depression it started out with massive selling then some bankers got together and bought a bunch of stock to restore confidence but in the end it didnt work.
 

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