Trump administration says no U.S. trading
partners manipulate currency
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[April 17, 2017]
By David Lawder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President
Donald Trump's administration declined to name any major trading partner
as a currency manipulator in a highly anticipated report on Friday,
backing away from a key Trump campaign promise to slap such a label on
China.
The semi-annual U.S. Treasury currency report did, however, keep China
on a currency "monitoring list" despite a lower global current account
surplus, citing China's unusually large, bilateral trade surplus with
the United States.
Five other trading partners who were on last October's monitoring list -
Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Germany and Switzerland - also remain on the
list, ensuring that the Treasury would apply extra scrutiny to their
foreign exchange and economic policies.
The Treasury report recognized what many analysts have said over the
past year, namely that China has recently intervened in foreign exchange
markets to prop up the value of its yuan currency, not push it lower to
make Chinese exports cheaper.
Foreign exchange experts told Reuters last week that a manipulator label
was unlikely for Beijing.
Trump, who on the campaign trail blamed China for "stealing" U.S. jobs
and prosperity by cheapening its currency, repeatedly promised to label
the country as a currency manipulator on "day one" of a Trump
administration - a move that would require special negotiations and
could lead to punitive duties and other action.
The report did call out China's past efforts to hold down the yuan's
value, saying this created a long-term "distortion" in the global
trading system that "imposed significant and long-lasting hardship on
American workers and companies."
The Treasury also warned that it will scrutinize China's trade and
currency practices very closely and called for faster opening of China's
economy to U.S. goods and services and a shift away from exports to more
domestic consumption.
"China will need to demonstrate that its lack of intervention to resist
appreciation over the last three years represents a durable policy shift
by letting the RMB (yuan) rise with market forces once appreciation
pressures resume," the report said.
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The report shows the Trump administration is taking an approach to
foreign exchange based on data rather than politics, said Nathan
Sheets, a former U.S. Treasury under secretary for international
affairs during the Obama administration.
"This isn't the report that Donald Trump had in mind on Nov. 8,"
said Sheets, who is now with the Peterson Institute for
International Economics in Washington. "But it lays out legitimate
complaints. It's a clear statement to the Chinese that they need
progress."
The Treasury did not alter its three major thresholds for
identifying currency manipulation put in place last year by the
Obama administration: a bilateral trade surplus with the United
States of $20 billion or more; a global current account surplus of
more than 3 percent of gross domestic product, and persistent
foreign exchange purchases equal to 2 percent of GDP over 12 months.
No countries were determined to have met all three of these
criteria, but Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Germany and Switzerland
all met two of them.
The Treasury warned Japan against resuming currency interventions,
saying that these "should be reserved only to very exceptional
circumstances with appropriate prior consultations, consistent with
Japan’s G-7 and G-20 commitments."
(Reporting by David Lawder; editing by Bill Rigby, G Crosse)
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