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Gary Hufbauer, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, predicted that the report "will come right to the edge of calling China a manipulator, basically saying that unless China allows market forces to work and currency to be more responsive, it will be a manipulator." The administration, Hufbauer said, worries that if it directly slams China on currency, and Beijing still does not act, it will lead to a standoff, with cooperation frozen as both sides refuse to compromise. U.S.-China ties hit a low point recently, with the countries clashing over territorial disputes in the South and East China seas, human rights and longtime sore points Taiwan and Tibet. Ahead of last week's finance meetings, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner ratcheted up pressure on China to make more progress in moving toward flexible exchange rates.
China has allowed its currency to rise in value by about 2.3 percent since announcing in June that it would introduce a more flexible exchange rate. Chinese officials say their gradual effort to revalue their currency is the best approach to take. Allowing the currency to rise too rapidly, they say, would cost thousands of manufacturing jobs and destabilize the Chinese economy. The yuan has been rising to new highs almost every day in recent weeks. The reference price set by China's central bank was 6.6497 to one dollar on Friday. By late in the day, the yuan was at 6.6410, its strongest rate against the dollar since the government set up the current currency regime in 1993.
[Associated
Press;
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