(A modest appreciation of the yuan is probably not far off)  

Chinese Leader Firmly Defends Currency and Trade Policies
By MICHAEL WINES
New York Times
March 14, 2010

BEIJING — Premier Wen Jiabao sharply defended China’s currency and trade 
policies on Sunday against what he called foreign “finger-pointing,” charging 
instead that the developed world seeks to force unfair changes in those 
policies “just for the purposes of increasing their own exports.”

Mr. Wen’s remarks, which echoed a rebuke on Thursday by one of China’s central 
bankers, were perhaps the sharpest yet in a brewing disagreement between 
Beijing and Washington over the two nations’ economic positions.

In a more than two hour news conference at the close of China’s annual 
legislative session, Mr. Wen repeated that China will keep its currency, the 
renminbi, “basically stable” despite calls by the United States and other 
developed nations to let its value increase.

He also repeated the concerns he voiced a year ago, at China’s last legislative 
session, that the United States is failing to rebuild its own economy and 
maintain the value of the dollar. Protecting the dollar, which dropped sharply 
since the global crisis began in late 2008, is a matter of “national 
credibility” for the United States, he said.

“Any fluctuation in the value of the U.S. currency is a big concern for us,” he 
said. “I hope the United States will take concrete steps to reassure investors. 
It is not only in the interests of the investors, but also the United States 
itself.”

Chinese leaders fear that the United States’ vast budget deficits will lead to 
inflation that effectively devalues the dollar, and thus the value of China’s 
vast foreign-currency reserves. Those reserves exceeded $2.4 trillion at the 
end of 2009, with nearly $900 billion of that in dollar-denominated Treasury 
bills.

Mr. Wen’s most pointed remarks, however, were aimed at critics of China’s 
economic policies, led by the United States. Those critics accuse China of 
keeping the value of its currency artificially low, so that its exports will 
remain cheap compared to other nations’ competing products. That boosts China’s 
economy, but at the expense of other trading partners, they say.

China has pegged the renminbi to the declining value of the dollar since the 
economic crisis began in late 2008. Were it to let the market judge the 
renminbi’s value, critics say, the currency — and the cost of Chinese products 
— would rise.

In Sunday’s news conference, Mr. Wen bluntly rejected that view. Instead, in 
remarks that seemed aimed at the United States, he accused unnamed competitors 
of trying to bail out their own slumping economies by hamstringing the Chinese 
juggernaut.

“I understand some economies want to increase their exports,” he said, “but 
what I don’t understand is the practice of depreciating one’s own currency and 
attempting to force other countries to appreciate their own currencies, just 
for the purpose of increasing their own exports.”

That amounts to trade protectionism, he said, and “all countries should be 
fully alarmed by such developments.”

Some economic analysts were struck by the comments.

“I think it’s my first time hearing government officials saying that. 
Basically, Premier Wen said it’s a kind of protectionism to ask other countries 
to appreciate their currency and depreciate their own currency,” Shen Minggao, 
the chief China economist for Citibank in Hong Kong, said in a telephone 
interview. “In that sense, it’s a new understanding of currency policies.”

Mr. Wen argued that the renminbi is not unfairly valued, citing government 
calculations that suggested that, measured in real terms, China’s currency had 
actually risen in value at the height of the economic crisis.

One leading Chinese economist, Bai Chong-En of Beijing’s Tsinghua University, 
said in an interview on Sunday that for a broad range of technical reasons, he 
does not believe that the renminbi is seriously undervalued. But he also 
suggested that Western jawboning to revalue the currency is having the opposite 
effect.

“The greater the outside pressure, the more difficult it is for the Chinese 
government to raise the exchange rate, and the more difficult it is for the 
Chinese people to accept a revaluation of the Chinese currency,” he said. 
“People don’t like to be forced to change things. They have be willing to do 
it.”

In his wide-ranging news conference, which drew on both Chinese and foreign 
questioners, Mr. Wen repeated some boilerplate government positions — China is 
an underdeveloped nation that will need a century or more to reach advanced 
status, he said — and a few new ones.

Addressing a chorus of complaints by foreign investors, he said China will “put 
in place institutional arrangements to level the playing ground” for foreign 
companies in China, and promised to personally meet with foreign business 
leaders during his final years in office. Some of China’s economic stimulus 
measures, such as subsidizing purchases of new automobiles and home appliances, 
applied to products by foreign as well as domestic manufacturers, he noted.

He also said that he had been excluded from a crucial meeting of world leaders 
at last year’s Copenhagen conference on climate change, and had not 
deliberately skipped the meeting, as some at the conference charged. Mr. Wen’s 
absence from that session, which was attended by President Obama and other 
leaders, has been touted by critics as a symbol of China’s intransigence on 
climate issues at the conference, which ended without reaching many of its key 
goals.

“Why was China not notified of this meeting? So far no one has given us any 
explanation about it, and it still is a mystery,” he said.

Mr. Wen’s news conference was broadcast nationally, but in Beijing, that reply 
and several following minutes of the broadcast were abruptly cut off by what 
was described as a loss of the television 
signal._______________________________________________
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