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Joseph Stiglitz: rising yuan's value could harm China's rural areas
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Nobel Laureate Joseph E. Stiglitz, a professor from Columbia University in New York, makes a speech at the academic summit of the China Development Forum 2007 (CDF) in Beijing, on March 17, 2007. More than 100 experts from home and abroad attended the summit Saturday. (Xinhuanet/Yao Yong) Photo Gallery>>> | BEIJING, March 18 (Xinhua) -- A sharp appreciation of
China's currency will adversely effect the country's rural areas, said Nobel
Laureate Joseph E. Stiglitz at the ongoing China Development Forum being held in
Beijing.
To deal with its rocketing trade
surplus, China should levy a tax on exports rather than allowing the value of
the yuan to rise, said Stiglitz, a professor from Columbia University in New
York.
The export tax would increase central government
revenues which could be used to invest in rural areas, he added.
If the yuan is allowed to appreciate it would cause
international prices of agricultural products to decline, he said.
"When you revalue the yuan, you pay less for imports
and that means the international price of rice and the international price of
wheat goes down and that means food prices inside the country will go down."
Stiglitz says this price slashing would make it
difficult for the market alone to provide farmers with stable incomes.
"China should protect itself by making sure the
exchange rate does not appreciate rather than having to subsidize its farmers,"
said the professor.
Joseph Stiglitz was awarded the Nobel Prize in 2001
in economics for his analyses of markets. He worked with the Council of Economic
Advisers from 1993-97, during the Clinton administration.
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