U.S. Treasury currency report on trade partners delayed,
Taiwan central bank sources say
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[April 27, 2020] By
Liang-sa Loh
TAIPEI (Reuters) - The U.S. Treasury's
latest semi-annual report on trade practices of its major trading
partners which was due this month has been delayed due to the
coronavirus pandemic, two sources with direct knowledge at Taiwan's
central bank told Reuters.
The report, which decides whether or not to designate trading partners
as currency manipulators, is normally released every October and April.
The one in October was only released in January this year due to
on-going China-U.S. trade talks.
The sources at Taiwan's central bank told Reuters that the U.S. Treasury
had informed them that the report would be delayed.
"The U.S. said that because of the epidemic, it will be postponed," said
one source, speaking on condition of anonymity, adding a new date had
not been confirmed.
The second source told Reuters that they did not know whether the U.S.
Treasury had informed other U.S. trading partners about this delay.
Taiwan's central bank declined to comment. The U.S. Treasury did not
immediately respond to a request for comment outside of normal business
hours in Washington.
Taiwan was last labelled a currency manipulator by the United States in
December 1992 and was later put on the U.S. Treasury monitoring list in
2016 and 2017.
The Treasury's January report said that Taiwan, along with Thailand,
were close to triggering thresholds to be added to the currency
monitoring list.
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A woman runs on a nearly
empty street in the coronavirus outbreak near the Treasury
Department in Washington, U.S. March 30, 2020. REUTERS/Jonathan
Ernst
Two sources told Reuters in November that Taiwan's central bank and Ministry of
Economic Affairs had set up a group to coordinate stepped up purchases of U.S.
goods, as its seeks to reduce its trade surplus and head off being labelled a
currency manipulator.
In the January report, the Treasury dropped its designation of China as a
currency manipulator days before top officials of the world's two largest
economies were due to sign a preliminary trade agreement to ease an 18-month-old
tariff war.
Taiwan's 2019 trade surplus with the United States hit $23 billion, exceeding a
threshold of $20 billion - one of the criteria Washington uses for putting trade
partner nations on the monitoring list.
Taiwan's current account surplus was 10.5% of GDP last year, which also matches
another criteria in which it could be labelled a currency manipulator, as the
threshold is 2%.
(Reporting by Liang-sa Loh; Writing by Ben Blanchard; Editing by Jacqueline
Wong)
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