Paulson to push senators to drop China-tariff bid
    By MICHAEL M. PHILLIPS and GREG HITT (WSJ)
    Updated: 2006-09-25 10:18

    http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB115893086868271278-2NbW_knsmxO7IXeper0CnOIxNrs_20060929.html?mod=regionallinks

    US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson turns this coming week from negotiating with Chinese leaders to pressing two persistent US senators to back off a bill that would levy tariffs on Chinese goods to punish Beijing for its currency policies.

    Senators Charles Schumer (D, NY) and Lindsey Graham (R, SC) appear intent on forcing a vote this coming week on legislation to impose a 27.5% tariff on China-made goods -- if Beijing doesn't allow its currency, the yuan, to rise against the dollar. On three previous occasions, the senators have been on the brink of bringing the issue to a vote, only to step back after appeals from the Bush administration, which fears the bill could ignite a trade war.

    Mr. Paulson's mission now is to convince the senators they should give the newly announced US-China economic dialogue time to work. Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R, Tenn.) sees a possible compromise: kicking the bill into a lame-duck session after the November 7 elections.

    But the senators say they are running out of patience. Unlike the previous three episodes, this time they have made a written request to Mr. Frist for a vote next week. "We've had dialogues for years and years, and we've had no movement," Senator Schumer said. "A dialogue is not good enough." A spokesman for Mr. Graham says he, too, is committed to pressing forward. The two lawmakers are to confer with Mr. Paulson early in the coming week.

    Treasury officials say Mr. Paulson is getting unprecedented access to Chinese decision makers and needs time to make those connections work. On Friday, the secretary held talks in Beijing with top leaders -- including a session in which he and President Hu Jintao spontaneously dismissed their staffs after 30 minutes of conversation and conferred in private for 20 more.

    Mr. Paulson described the Hu meeting, as well as an earlier session with Premier Wen Jiabao, as "substantive" and "unscripted." US officials said the conversations touched sensitive issues ranging from China's lack of enforcement of intellectual-property rights to concerns that Beijing is keeping the value of the yuan low to give Chinese exporters an edge.

    "I find it quite encouraging that there are very few issues -- I can't think of any -- where there were differences on the principles," Mr. Paulson said. "Where there are differences is on timing."

    Early in his trip, Mr. Paulson suggested he might not have to persuade Congress to get on board. "I know there's a short-term mentality in the world today, but I don't think many people are going to judge me by what comes out of one visit," he said. "And if they do, heaven help this country." By the time he headed home, though, the secretary had changed his tune. "It's my job to communicate with people up on the Hill," he said. "They're clients."

    A senior administration official traveling with Mr. Paulson was more blunt about the political challenge. "Any time we do anything related to China, we know that there are those groups and individuals out there who want nothing short of us coming here and taking out the baseball bat on the Chinese," the official said.

    Alarmed at the prospect of a Senate vote, the US Chamber of Commerce, the National Association of Manufacturers and the Business Roundtable are rallying opposition. Senate Finance Chairman Charles Grassley (R, Iowa) says passage is likely if the bill is brought up, in part because "China hasn't delivered on" on past promises.

    With the elections looming, concerns about China and the economy are helping to stoke voter angst. As a result, said Business Roundtable President John J. Castellani, the tariff bill is "attractive politically" to some lawmakers. "The problem is that not always does good politics make good policy," he said.

    Business lobbyists also fear some senators see the vote as a chance to send a shot across China's bow, knowing President Bush can block the measure from becoming law -- if it gets through the House, where the outlook is uncertain.

     
     

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