Multiple U.S. trade partners risk 'manipulator' label in Yellen's first
currency report
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[April 16, 2021] By
David Lawder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Taiwan and Thailand
risk joining Vietnam and Switzerland in running afoul of U.S. currency
manipulation triggers in Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen's first foreign
exchange report, expected this week, but whether she applies that label
is unclear.
The Biden administration has sought to engage more constructively with
trading partners and allies, and currency experts say that Yellen could
veer from the aggressive approach applied by the Trump administration in
the currency report, taking into account the trade and capital flow
distortions of the coronavirus pandemic and reviewing the structure of
the report.
"I think the Yellen Treasury would be inclined to take a more flexible
approach," said Matthew Goodman, a former U.S. Treasury official now
with the Center for Strategic and International Studies. He added,
however, that Yellen's hands are "tied somewhat" by the criteria applied
to deciding whether a trading partner manipulates its currency.
Yellen also has challenges in softening Washington's position, facing
pressure from labor unions and Democrats in Congress to maintain a tough
stance on currency manipulation.
Trading partners are labeled manipulators if they meet specific criteria
- a more than $20 billion bilateral trade surplus with the United
States, foreign currency intervention exceeding 2% of gross domestic
product and a global current account surplus exceeding 2% of GDP - which
led the Trump Administration to label Switzerland and Vietnam as
currency manipulators in December.
U.S. law requires the Treasury to seek negotiations with manipulators to
bring them back below the thresholds, with specified remedies including
denying them access to U.S. government procurement contracts and
development finance.
The report is expected to signal how strictly Yellen interprets the
criteria, or whether she reverses tightening moves by her predecessor,
Steven Mnuchin, who reduced the current account threshold to 2% of GDP
from 3%, ensnaring more countries.
Mnuchin designated https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-trade-china-currency/u-s-designates-china-as-currency-manipulator-for-first-time-in-decades-idUSKCN1UV2BK
China a currency manipulator in August 2019 at the height of U.S.-China
trade tensions, even though Beijing met just one of the criteria. The
label was dropped https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-trade-china/u-s-treasury-drops-china-currency-manipulator-label-ahead-of-trade-deal-signing-idUSKBN1ZC2FV
five months later when the two countries reached a trade deal, drawing
broad criticism that the Trump administration had politicized the
report.
Foreign exchange analysts say that Taiwan, with a current account
surplus of 14% in 2020, a record $30 billion trade surplus with the
United States and net foreign exchange purchases of nearly 6% of GDP, is
firmly in Treasury's crosshairs during this cycle, even though the
Taiwan dollar remains near 23-year highs.
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An electronic board shows currency exchange rates in Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil March 9, 2021. REUTERS/Ricardo Moraes/File Photo
Vietnam, Thailand and Singapore are in similar straits, analysts say. BBH
analyst Win Thin also sees Malaysia and South Korea at risk.
Although the Swiss National Bank appears to have sold off a tiny portion of its
nearly $1 trillion foreign currency pile to show goodwill to the U.S. Treasury,
"that won't be enough to get off the list," said Credit Suisse economist Maxime
Botteron.
The Treasury declined to comment on the contents of the forthcoming currency
report, as did the SNB.
For Vietnam, the designation has bigger consequences, as the U.S. Trade
Representative's office has an active investigation on Hanoi's currency
practices that could lead to U.S. tariffs on imports from Vietnam.
A number of countries are expected to remain or appear on the "monitoring list,"
BBH's Thin says, among them China, Germany, Japan, Italy, India, Singapore,
Ireland and Mexico.
HAWKISH PLEDGE
Yellen told U.S. senators at her January confirmation hearing she would fight
for market-determined exchange rates.
But she has currency hawks in Congress - both Democrats and Republicans -
watching over her shoulder. Senate Banking Committee Chairman Sherrod Brown, an
Ohio Democrat, plans to introduce legislation on Thursday that would make it
easier for the Commerce Department to treat currency manipulation as unfair
subsidies in trade cases.
"When other countries engage in unfair trade practices, including currency
manipulation, Ohio workers pay the price," Brown said in a statement to Reuters.
Taiwan's case is more complicated by geopolitical pressures, including
heightened military tensions with China, and the island's position as a major
exporter of semiconductors that are needed to help ease a supply shortage for
U.S. manufacturers.
Mark Sobel, another former Treasury official, said the latter is among complex
issues that do not fit with a mechanical application of the currency manipulator
criteria.
"Treasury has to... inject more nuance into its thinking, not only about the
countries, but also about the implications of U.S. policy for these countries,"
said Sobel, now with the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum
think tank.
(Reporting by David Lawder; Additional reporting by John Revill in Zurich;
editing by Megan Davies and Dan Grebler)
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