U.S. finalizes rule to slap duties on countries that undervalue
currencies
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[February 04, 2020]
By Andrea Shalal
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Commerce
Department on Monday finalized a new rule to impose anti-subsidy duties
on products from countries that it has determined undervalue their
currencies against the dollar, including potentially China.
The move could provide a fresh irritant in U.S.-China trade talks just
weeks after the world's two largest economies signed a Phase 1 trade
agreement, and comes a day after Beijing accused Washington of spreading
fear about the fast-spreading coronavirus that originated in China.
In theory, the new rule would allow the Commerce Department to impose
duties on China, even though the U.S. Treasury Department recently
removed its designation of China as a currency manipulator as part of
the Phase 1 trade deal.
Commerce said it would generally rely on the Treasury's expertise in
determining undervaluation, but the two processes could come to
different conclusions since they resulted from different statutes. The
draft rule was first published in May.
It said it would only impose countervailing duties on imports of
specific products that both benefit from countervailable subsidies and
are found by the U.S. International Trade Commission to injure U.S.
industries.
The rule would not result in the application of such duties to all
imports from a given country, because not all such imports injure U.S.
industries, it said.
Commerce said the new rule was a measured response to longstanding,
bipartisan calls to use existing laws to address unfair foreign currency
practices, and was part of a broad push by the Trump administration to
crack down on trade imbalances.
"The Trump Administration is doing the right thing by confronting the
problem head-on," it said in a statement.
U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said the new rule marked another
important step intended to "level the playing field for American
businesses and workers."
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U.S. Secretary of Commerce, Wilbur Ross, speaks during an interview
in New York, U.S., December 3, 2019. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Mark Sobel, a former senior U.S. Treasury official and adviser to
the London-based OMFIF economy policy think tank, said the new rule
failed to address many of the concerns raised after the draft rules
were published in May, and would likely be inconsistent with World
Trade Organization rules.
"There is no precise way to measure currency undervaluation," he
said, adding that Commerce had no responsibility or expertise in
international monetary and currency matters. "This is a unilateral
policy which will alienate countries around the world."
The Commerce Department said it would not normally include monetary
and related credit policy in determining whether a government had
acted to reduce the exchange rate of its currency to bolster its
domestic industry.
In addition to China, the new rule also could put goods from other
countries at risk of higher tariffs, including Germany, Ireland,
Italy, Japan, Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea, Vietnam and
Switzerland.
Those countries were all on the "monitoring list" included in the
Treasury Department's semi-annual currency report, which tracks
currency market interventions, high global current account surpluses
and high bilateral trade surpluses.
The department said its proposed rule would amend the normal
countervailing duty process to include new criteria for currency
undervaluation, including a finding of government action on the
country's exchange rate.
(Reporting by Andrea Shalal; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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