The value of the Renminbi (RMB) against the US dollar hit a new
high on Tuesday.
The central parity rate of the RMB against the US dollar was set
by the People's Bank of China at 7.9342 yuan on Tuesday. The
previous day the central parity rate was set at 7.9431 yuan to the
US dollar.
China has seen a continuous appreciation in its RMB since the
central bank raised the one-year benchmark interest rate on Aug.
19. The country's rocketing trade surplus has given the RMB a
boost.
Last month China's trade surplus hit a monthly high of 18.8
billion US dollars, with exports rising 32.8 percent to 90.77
billion US dollars.
Market observers are expecting a further widening of the daily
floating band between the RMB and the US dollar.
China set a floating band of 0.3 percent when it launched
reforms of the RMB exchange rate system last July. The floating
band allows the yuan to rise or fall 0.3 percent on the inter-bank
foreign exchange market.
On Monday, the RMB's value against the US dollar on the
inter-bank market rose 0.29 percent from the set central parity
rate.
The United States and other major trading partners have urged
China to make the yuan's exchange rate more flexible. They contend
that restrictions keep it artificially low, boosting China's
exports and contributing to its enormous trade surplus.
US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, however, has been careful
to avoid statements that appear to pressure China on the sensitive
issue of currency reform on the eve of his first official visit to
China.
"I am not looking for immediate solutions or quick fixes to any
particular economic issue," he told reporters in Singapore on
Monday when attending a meeting of the International Monetary Fund
(IMF).
Zhou Xiaochuan, Governor of the People's Bank of China who also
attended the IMF meeting there, reiterated that China will reform
its foreign exchange regime in a "gradual, effective, and
controllable" way.
When interviewed by reporters, Zhou said that China is a big
country and has to consider many aspects in its policy making.
"But the direction of China's foreign exchange regime is fixed,
there will be no turning back," said Zhou.
The IMF said last week that China is transparent in reforming
its exchange rate regime and suggested that China let market forces
determine allocations of resources more effectively.
"I want to really commend the Chinese authorities for the
transparency on this issue (exchange rate reform)," said IMF
Managing Director Rodrigo de Rato at a press conference in
Singapore.
Rato said China made the right decision last year to reform its
exchange rate regime.
The reform is not only in the interest of China's exchange rate
regime, but also in the interest of its overall economy, he
said.
(Xinhua News Agency September 19, 2006)