China reaffirms policy on stable yuan

    (Reuters)
    Updated: 2007-06-21 13:48

    China's deputy central bank chief on Thursday fended off U.S. pressure for a faster rise in the yuan, saying Beijing would stick to its two-year-old policy of gradual appreciation.

    Wu Xiaoling, deputy governor of the People's Bank of China, was speaking a day after U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson called the yuan clearly undervalued and said it did not reflect the reality of China's breakneck economic growth.


    Wu Xiaoling, a deputy governor of the People's Bank of China urged investors on Wednesday to keep faith in China's turbulent share market. [File photo]
    "We will keep a normal floating range for the yuan and keep the rate basically stable at a reasonable level, according to market conditions both at home and abroad based on market supply and demand and with reference to a basket of currencies," Wu told a forum.

    The yuan has risen a further 6.4 percent since it was revalued by 2.1 percent against the dollar in July 2005 and untethered from a dollar peg to float within managed bands.

    The yuan traded on Wednesday at its highest level against the dollar since the revaluation, but it eased slightly on Thursday.

    Related readings:
     China opposes IMF rule on exchange rate
    Central Bank: Large forex fluctuations harmful
    China not a manipulator, US Congress is
    US pass on China currency stirs Senate action

    U.S. lawmakers say the currency remains seriously undervalued, thus handing a big price advantage to Chinese manufactured goods at the expense of American jobs.

    But Wu said a stronger exchange rate was no panacea. She cited the examples of Germany and Japan, which both retained big trade surpluses despite powerful rises in their currencies.

    Those countries balanced their external accounts by exporting capital, she noted, adding: "Therefore the Chinese government hopes its companies can go out under the capital account."

    Beijing was developing a currency regime driven by supply and demand, but outsiders had to realize that China's economic problems were structural and could not be boiled down to its exchange rate.

    And with a population of 1.3 billion, China could not rush the required deep-seated changes.

    "Therefore the outside world should be patient and believe in the determination of the Chinese government to carry out reforms in a market-oriented direction," Wu said.

    Lessons from Asia's crisis

    Wu was speaking at a conference on the lessons to be learned from the 1997/98 Asian financial crisis, when China won kudos for not devaluing the yuan after a speculative attack toppled the Thai baht and several other regional currencies.


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