China will need up to three years to achieve a trade balance and
the surplus will be brought down by means other than currency
adjustments, the central bank's chief has said.
"We reckon China may need two to three years to achieve a
balance in international trade" after a mix of measures were
introduced, Zhou
Xiaochuan, governor of the People's Bank of China (PBOC), said
in a speech delivered on March 20 but published on the bank's
website yesterday.
The expectation is based on a combination of measures China has
started to apply, including expanding domestic demand, lowering the
savings rate, opening up the market, floating the exchange rate and
increasing imports.
But even if China rebalances its global trade, the United States
might still incur large deficits and it would still be very
difficult to achieve a bilateral trade balance, the governor said.
"So the ball is not in China's court."
Ahead of President Hu
Jintao's visit to Washington, pressure is building over the
yuan's value and the United States' stated US$202-billion trade
deficit last year with China.
US Senators Charles Schumer and Lindsey Graham will decide this
week whether to seek a vote on a bill that would impose tariffs on
Chinese imports unless the yuan is allowed to strengthen more
rapidly.
"Some US economists assume that the exchange rate is the key to
fixing the trade imbalance However, such assumptions failed in
statistical tests by using the trade data and the real effective
exchange rate recorded in China over the years," Zhou said.
There are also complaints in China that the United States has
been slow in taking concrete measures to reduce its budget and
current account deficits; and improve the savings rate, Zhou
pointed out.
The governor said joint efforts are needed to address the
Sino-US trade imbalance.
PBOC spokesman Li Chao said in an interview, also posted on the
bank's website yesterday, that China would further improve the
yuan's exchange rate mechanism and develop the foreign exchange
market.
China allowed the renminbi to appreciate by 2.1 percent against
the US dollar to 8.11 and linked it to a basket of foreign
currencies instead of only the greenback on July 21 last year.
Market forces will be key to gradually let the currency move
freely and China doesn't plan one-off adjustments of the yuan's
value in the future, Li reiterated.
Instead of another revaluation, the government will allow demand
for the yuan and changes in the value of other currencies play a
bigger role in setting its value, Li said.
(China Daily March 29, 2006)