Chinese economic researchers are urging more imports from the
United States as part of efforts to stave off a potential trade war
with the country's major trading partner and largest export
market.
They said taking positive steps to narrow the widening US-China
trade gap would be "a reasonable way" to ease mounting pressure for
a yuan appreciation.
The strategic call came amid a high-profile move by a bipartisan
group of US senators last week to introduce legislation that would
impose an across-the-board 27.5 percent tariff on US imports of
Chinese products.
The bill aims to pressure China to revalue its currency
following Beijing's rejection of calls for speedy revaluation.
Professor Hai Wen, deputy director of the China Center for
Economic Research at Peking University,
said some US legislators have been leading the American demand for
a stronger yuan, partially out of political considerations.
"With the US presidential elections approaching, they are very
likely to keep placing the yuan issue at the forefront of the
political agenda," the professor said.
But he cautioned that China cannot turn a deaf ear to US demands
despite its determination to defend the stability of the yuan.
"The American demand (for a yuan revaluation) is, after all, a
reflection of interests of some domestic groups such as the
manufacturers," Hai said.
US manufacturers claim that the country lost 2.6 million
manufacturing jobs since March 2001, in part because of an unfair
price advantage enjoyed by Chinese exporters because of an
"undervalued" yuan.
The Chinese side, however, insists that the price advantage is
mainly based on cheap labor costs and not an undervalued
currency.
Professor Hai stressed that allowing the yuan to rise would not
necessarily solve American economic problems; and it would be much
wiser to directly reduce the growing US trade deficit with
China.
"The Chinese side can make more efforts to find a solution by
increasing imports from the United States rather than reducing
Chinese exports," he noted.
The US trade deficit with China jumped 13.5 percent to a record
US$11.34 billion in July from US$9.99 billion in June while imports
from China totaled US$13.4 billion in July, a monthly high.
With the US trade deficit vis-a-vis China last year amounting to
US$103 billion - the biggest deficit America had with any single
country - the yuan's narrow trading range against the greenback of
8.28 has been blamed for the yawning trade gap.
Because the yuan revaluation issue boils down to a trade dispute
between Beijing and Washington, China should take substantial steps
to curb the growing deficit, according to Professor Chen Yulu,
vice-president of the School of Finance at Renmin University of
China.
The professor said whether the Chinese Government can manage to
quickly solve the trade deficit problem will, to a large degree,
affect Washington's attitude towards the yuan issue.
Despite heavy domestic political pressure, the George W. Bush
administration has so far acted cautiously in not pressing too hard
for Beijing to alter the yuan policy.
While winding up a two-day China visit this month, US Treasury
Secretary John Snow even said he was encouraged by the country's
pledge to move towards a more flexible currency regime.
At the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum earlier, Snow
reportedly said Washington would not impose retaliatory tariffs on
Chinese goods because the country was important trade partner of
the United States.
But trade experts widely believe the Bush administration may
depart from its current moderation and toughen its stance ahead of
the 2004 presidential elections.
(China Daily September 16, 2003)