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| China's central bank chief Zhou Xiaochuan
listens during a discussion at the International Monetary Conference in
Beijing June 7, 2005. [Reuters/file] | BEIJING,
June 27 (Bloomberg)-- China's central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan said it's too
soon to drop the decade-old yuan peg and that he has no plans to discuss the
currency's link to the U.S. dollar at a weekend meeting of the world's central
bankers in Basel, Switzerland.
"The time is not ripe yet" to scrap the link that
pegs the yuan at about 8.3 to the U.S. dollar, Zhou said in an interview in
Basel, where the Bank for International Settlements is holding a two-day
meeting. "Premier Wen has already said enough on the subject. I don't have
anything to add."
The U.S. and Europe have been pressing China to
loosen the yuan's link and allow the currency to rise, to help shrink a record
$60.6 billion U.S. monthly trade deficit and boost growth among the 12 nations
sharing the euro. China has pledged to move toward a more flexible exchange rate
policy, without giving a timeframe.
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| Japan's Finance Minister Sadakazu Tanigaki,
left, shakes hands with his Chinese counterpart Jin Renqing in the Chinese
port city of Tianjin on Saturday June 25, 2005. Tanigaki is in China to
attend a meeting of Asian and European financial leaders that begins on
Sunday. [AP] | Zhou and Finance Minister Jin
Renqing are among Chinese officials who have said global pressure on China to
revalue the yuan and speculation that the yuan will appreciate will make it
harder for the government to make a change.
Premier Wen Jiabao said May 16 that China "won't
bow to foreign pressure" and the valuation of the yuan "is the sovereign right
of China."
European Union finance ministers are shying away from
publicly pressing their Chinese counterparts to let the yuan appreciate,
according to EU officials at a meeting of the finance ministers from the EU and
Asia in Tianjin, China.
Unfair Advantage
The yuan may be a topic of discussion when Chinese
Finance Minister Jin meets with his Japanese counterpart Sadakazu Tanigaki at a
meeting of Asian and European finance ministers in Tianjin, China today.
Tanigaki said yesterday that China should make its "own judgment" on how to
handle the issue.
U.S. lawmakers and manufacturers complain that the
peg gives Chinese exporters an unfair trade advantage, and contributed to the
loss of 1.1 million factory jobs in the past three years.
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said earlier
this week that a revaluation of the Chinese currency would simply "redirect
trade" within Asia and "have limited consequences for overall U.S. imports as
well as U.S. exports that compete with Chinese products."
China's trade surplus rose to about 4.5 percent of
its economy last year from 1.5 percent in 2001. The U.S. trade deficit with
China reached an unprecedented $162 billion in 2004, and the broader current
account deficit ballooned to a record 5.6 percent of the U.S. economy.
(From China Daily) |