Lew says excess capacity
'corrosive' for China growth
Send a link to a friend
[June 06, 2016]
By David Lawder
BEIJING (Reuters) - China's excess
industrial capacity will have a "corrosive" impact on its future
growth and efficiency unless it is reduced, U.S. Treasury Secretary
Jack Lew said on Sunday, adding that it was also causing distortions
in global markets.
Lew, speaking to students in Beijing, said he hoped to make progress
on the excess capacity issue in bilateral meetings with senior
Chinese officials starting on Monday in Beijing. He noted that past
discussions had eased currency tensions between the world's two
largest economies.
"Excess capacity is not just a domestic issue in China," Lew said at
Tsinghua University. "The question of excess capacity is one that
literally has an enormous effect on global markets for things like
steel and aluminum, and we're seeing distortions in global markets
because of excess capacity."
A flood of Chinese steel into the United States has prompted the
U.S. Commerce Department to impose anti-dumping and anti-subsidy
duties on a wide-range of Chinese steel products, while U.S.
business groups have complained about new Chinese regulations they
say favor local firms.
China, which now produces more than half of the world's steel, has
criticized U.S. anti-dumping duties targeting Chinese steelmakers as
irrational and harmful to diplomatic ties. Beijing has said it needs
time to address its excess capacity problem.
Lew said excess Chinese steel capacity was causing problems for
steel-producing economies worldwide, and government subsidies were
at the root of the problem by encouraging overbuilding.
"Excess capacity ultimately is corrosive of an economy's
efficiency," Lew said. "It means you have misallocation of
resources, it means that ultimately, the only way to clear the
market is to sell things at a price that is below what the world
market price would otherwise be."
Lew credited past sessions of the annual U.S.-China Strategic and
Economic Dialogue talks with helping to reach understandings that
have made currency less of an irritant for the two countries. The
Treasury did not designate China as a currency manipulator in its
recent currency report because it found that China's recent
interventions were not problematic, he said.
[to top of second column] |
U.S. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew attends a discussion about the
U.S.-China economic relationship at Tsinghua University in Beijing,
China, June 5, 2016. REUTERS/Jason Lee
China's latest interventions have been aimed at supporting the yuan's value, not
pushing it down.
"It's fundamentally in China's interest not to have an undervalued exchange
rate," Lew said, adding that a market-driven yuan would benefit Chinese
consumers' purchasing power.
"Having a strong consumer in China is central to the future of China's growth,"
Lew added.
Lew also said he hoped to make progress on market access, including efforts to
open China's financial services and health care markets.
(Reporting by David Lawder; Writing by Ben Blanchard and Megha Rajagopalan;
Editing by Andrew Bolton)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|