|
BEIJING, June 22 -- U.S. lawmakers unveiled a
legislation Tuesday giving China 90 days to revalue its currency or face an
across-the-board tariff on its exports to the United States.
 |
| US Treasury Secretary John Snow answers a
question after meeting European Economic and Monetary Affairs Commissioner
Joaquin Almunia in Brussels June 14, 2005. Snow denounced the bill by
House representatives threatening China with penalty tariff if China fails
to revalue its currency, the yuan, in 90 days. [Reuters]
| Treasury Secretary John Snow quickly denounced
the bill and others like it that threatens China with sanctions if it does not
move to a more flexible exchange rate.
"I think anything that points in the way of closing
down trade, interfering with trade, isolationism and protectionism, those are
all the wrong way to go," Snow said in an interview on Bloomberg television.
Representative Phil English of Pennsylvania, who
introduced the bill, named Currency Harmonization Initiative through
Neutralizing Action (China Act), with three other Republicans in the House of
Representatives, said the measure reflected their growing frustration over
China's practice of pegging its currency at 8.28 yuan to the dollar.
"One of the biggest burdens facing American
manufacturers is the blatant mercantilism out of China," English said. "We feel
the time has come to draw a line in the sand."
English and other lawmakers contend the currency peg
keeps the value of China's yuan at an unfairly low level, giving that country's
manufacturers a price advantage over their American competitors.
Snow said he would argue against measures to shut off
the U.S. market to Chinese goods when he and Federal Reserve Chairman Alan
Greenspan testify Thursday at a Senate Finance Committee hearing on U.S.-China
economic relations.
"At the same time, it's important that the Chinese
respond, that they play by the rules of the game, that they deal with the
intellectual property issues that they need to address, that they deal with
opening markets to us," Snow said.
Snow repeated Tuesday that China should "move to a
flexible exchange rate."
Treasury would be required to issue its first report
on the yuan 60 days, if the bill became law.
If currency manipulation is found, Treasury would
have to impose a tariff on all of China's exports to the United States within 30
days. The size of the tariff would be equal to the percentage of yuan
manipulation that is found and could be adjusted annually if China later
revalues.
The bill would require the Bush administration to
take faster action than another proposal that won the support of 67 senators
earlier this year on a procedural vote.
That legislation offered by Senator Charles Schumer,
a New York Democrat, and Sen. Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican, would
threaten China with a 27.5 percent across-the-board tariff if it did not revalue
its currency within 6 months. It also contains a provision allowing the White
House to delay that action for up to two years.
(Source: China Daily/Agencies)
|