U.S.-China trade talks must cover currency, U.S.
Treasury chief says
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[October 12, 2018]
By David Lawder
NUSA DUA, Indonesia (Reuters) - U.S.
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said on Friday that he told China's
central bank chief that currency issues need to be part of any further
U.S.-China trade talks and expressed his concerns about the yuan's
recent weakness.
Mnuchin also told Reuters in an interview that China needs to identify
concrete "action items" to rebalance the two countries' trade
relationship before talks to resolve their disputes can resume.
The U.S. Treasury chief and People's Bank of China Governor Yi Gang
extensively discussed currency issues on the sidelines of the
International Monetary Fund and World Bank annual meetings on the
Indonesian resort island of Bali.
"I expressed my concern about the weakness in the (yuan) currency and
that as part of any trade discussions, currency has to be part of the
discussion," Mnuchin said of the meeting.
The two senior officials talked about market fundamentals that have
driven the yuan down against the dollar, Mnuchin said, adding: "I think
we had a productive explanation from his standpoint on those issues."
Yi told an investment audience on Thursday that China's monetary policy
was on an opposite cycle to that of the U.S. Federal Reserve, which has
been raising rates amid a strong economy, people who attended the
closed-door session said.
Mnuchin's comments on China's currency come ahead of next week's
scheduled release of a hotly anticipated Treasury report on currency
manipulation, the first since a significant weakening of yuan began this
spring as trade tensions between the world's two largest economies
escalated.
The yuan <CNY=CFXS> weakened on Friday to 6.912 to the dollar as China
reported a record September trade surplus with the United States,
fanning fears of an escalation of the two countries' trade war.
The Chinese currency has depreciated by 5.6 percent against the dollar
since the start of the year.
Trade tensions in China's stock, currency markets - https://tmsnrt.rs/2PlCZGr
"NOT POLITICAL" CURRENCY REPORT
Mnuchin would not discuss the findings of the currency report and
declined comment on media reports that Treasury staff had recommended
that China not be labeled a currency manipulator.
But Mnuchin emphasized that the report is based on rigorous research and
data, and that Treasury's career staff and leadership were fully aligned
on currency issues.
"The currency report is something we report to Congress. It is done
pursuant to two separate pieces of legislation. This is not a political
document," he said.
IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde warned on Thursday against
adding currency wars to the trade conflict, saying this would hurt
global growth and "innocent bystander" countries.
Despite U.S. President Donald Trump's pledge to declare China a currency
manipulator on "day one" of his administration, the Treasury has stuck
to its three-part test for evidence of currency manipulation -- and
China has failed to qualify for such a designation.
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United States Secretary of the Treasury Steven Mnuchin speaks during
an interview with Reuters at the International Monetary Fund - World
Bank Annual Meeting 2018 in Nusa Dua, Bali, Indonesia, October 12,
2018. REUTERS/Johannes P. Christo
These include a high bilateral trade surplus with the United States, a global
current account surplus above three percent of gross domestic product and
"persistent" one-way currency market intervention to weaken or prevent a rise in
a country's currency. In the past two years, China has failed on only one
criteria, its high trade surplus with the United States.
U.S. laws mandating the report require the Treasury to enter special
negotiations with an offending country to correct their practices, a process
that could eventually lead to trade sanctions. But the Trump administration has
already hit China with tariffs on $250 billion worth of Chinese goods imports,
and has threatened duties on the remaining $267 billion.
Mnuchin declined to confirm a Wall Street Journal report that the White House
had decided to proceed with a meeting in November between U.S. President Donald
Trump and President Xi Jinping at the G20 leaders summit in Buenos Aires.
But he said re-launching trade talks would require China to commit to taking
action on structural reforms to its economy.
"It's got to be more than a signal" from China, Mnuchin said. "It has to be that
we can reach an agreement on action items that can rebalance the relationship.
We've made it clear that if they have real action items that they want to
discuss that we will listen."
If the relationship could be rebalanced, he said the U.S.-China total annual
trade relationship could grow to $1 trillion from $650 billion currently, with
$500 billion of exports from each country. That would approach the $1.2 trillion
U.S.-Canada-Mexico trade under the North American Free Trade Agreement.
PAKISTAN DEBT TRANSPARENCY
As the IMF launches talks with Pakistan over a bailout package, Mnuchin said
transparency was needed for Pakistan's debts to China and other creditors.
"I think it's pretty clear that if there is an IMF program, that we'd need to
make sure those funds are used for appropriate purposes and they're not being
used to repay China or other creditors. I would expect China to understand
that."
Regarding steep U.S. stock market declines over the past two days, Mnuchin said
these were "normal market corrections".
"I don't believe markets are efficient," he said. "So I think that when people
invest in the markets, they need to be prepared that there will be times when
markets go too far in both directions."
(Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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