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BEIJING, June 30 -- The world must adapt to Asia's
rising superpowers China and India and avoid imposing tariffs to protect their
economies, a World Bank official said on Wednesday.
Trade restrictions such as the temporary tariffs imposed by the United States on Chinese textiles were outdated
forms of protection, said Peter Stephens, the World Bank's regional
communications manager for East Asia and the Pacific Region.
"The world still thinks of China as an issue that
needs to be managed," he said at a briefing in Singapore.
"Attempting to manage the world's fastest growing
economy and the country with the world's biggest population is preposterous.
It's delusional."
The comments came a day after the World Bank's
director for China, David Dollar, said Beijing's exchange rate policy that keeps
the yuan valued between 8.276 and 8.28 per dollar was a "legitimate choice" and
not a manipulation of the yuan currency.
The World Bank has said China's exports have climbed
at a 20 to 30 percent annual clip, well ahead of world trade growth rates of
just 6 to 8 percent.
Clothing and textiles were the biggest contributors
to a swing in China's trade balance to a surplus of $21 billion in the first
four months of 2005 from a deficit of $11 billion a year earlier.
"In the face of rising exports, imposing tariffs and
restrictions on trade is the worst response," Stephens said. "It is unfair and
it is bad policy."
"LEGITIMATE CHOICE"
The European Union has also considered imposing
tariffs to curb textile imports from China but came to a deal with Beijing
earlier this month to limit growth in the shipments of some goods.
EU figures show imports of Chinese T-shirts rose 187
percent in the year through the first quarter of 2005.
Stephens said tariffs might slow China textile
imports, but would only push jobs to other parts of Asia like Cambodia and
Vietnam or other regions like Latin America or Africa.
He said the world needed to make real progress in
boosting multilateral trade.
The row over textiles has added fuel to a debate over
the value of the yuan, which has been held in its current range for a decade.
U.S. lawmakers and manufacturers argue the exchange
rate policy gives China's exporters an unfair advantage in world markets.
The U.S. Treasury Department last month warned that
China risked being branded a manipulative trading partner if it did not take
significant action on its currency in the next few months.
But the World Bank has said China's cautious stance
was a "legitimate choice."
On Tuesday, Dollar said he disagreed with criticism
that China was manipulating its exchange rate.
Stephens said the world needed to adapt and stop
viewing China and India as emerging economies.
"It is done. They have emerged," he said. "They are
now in a position where they are going to get bigger, more influential and more
powerful."
(Source: China Daily/Agencies) |