Oct. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Group of 20 finance chiefs sought to calm trade 
frictions that threaten the world economy by pledging to avoid weakening their 
currencies to boost exports and to let markets increasingly set 
foreign-exchange values. 
 
 The G-20 agreed to “move towards more market-determined exchange-rate systems 
that reflect underlying economic fundamentals and refrain from competitive 
devaluation of currencies,” finance ministers and central bankers said after 
talks yesterday in Gyeongju, South Korea. U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. 
Geithner and Chinese Vice-Premier Wang Qishan may continue the debate today 
when they meet in Qingdao, China, for previously unscheduled talks. 
 
 It was the first time the finance officials made a joint stance on exchange 
rates as they tried to end concern that nations from the U.S. to China are 
relying on cheap currencies to spur growth, risking a protectionist backlash. 
The policy makers delayed further debate over a U.S. proposal for current 
account targets until next month’s Seoul summit of leaders, while agreeing the 
gaps should be made more sustainable. 
 
 “The terms of the currency policy are so vague and broad that they can be 
interpreted into different meanings by each country as well as market players,” 
said Oh Suk Tae, an economist at SC First Bank Korea Ltd. in Seoul. “I’m not 
sure whether the currency war is over. We need to see actions in line with the 
verbal vows.” 
 
 Recycle 
 
 The finance officials previously avoided joint statements on currencies for 
fear of alienating China. The communique still recycles language used at 
previous G-20 leaders’ summits in London and Toronto and falls short of the 
currency accords of the 1980s. 
 
 The group also called the economic recovery “fragile and uneven.” Seeking to 
increase the influence of emerging nations in running of the International 
Monetary Fund, it endorsed what IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn 
called the “biggest reform ever” of its governance. 
 
 Europe will surrender two seats on the lender’s 24-member executive board and 
a majority of countries will shift more than 6 percent of so-called quotas to 
under-represented countries. Quotas determine voting rights, financial 
commitment and access to aid. 
 
 Dollar’s Slide 
 
 The policy makers met as China’s restraint of the yuan and the U.S. dollar’s 
recent slide force trade partners including South Korea and Brazil to temper 
gains in their own floating currencies to remain competitive. The dollar has 
dropped as the Federal Reserve mulls easing monetary policy to lift growth. 
 
 The currency on Oct. 22 completed its first weekly advance since early 
September against a basket of currencies, according to IntercontinentalExchange 
Inc.’s Dollar Index, rising 0.6 percent. Yuan forwards dropped the most in 22 
months on the same day amid speculation China will rely more heavily on 
interest- rate hikes to damp inflation after raising its benchmark for the 
first time since 2007. 
 
 China should open its markets and Fed Chairman Ben S. Bernanke heard 
“criticism” of its current policy stance from within the G-20, German Economy 
Minister Rainer Bruederle said. 
 
 “It’s the wrong way to try to prevent or solve problems by adding more 
liquidity,” Bruederle said. “Excessive, permanent money creation in my opinion 
is an indirect manipulation of an exchange rate.” 
 
 Combating Deflation 
 
 European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet said combating deflation 
risks “was also a contribution to global prosperity.” 
 
 To dilute the focus of such meetings on currencies and make a revaluation of 
the yuan more palatable to China, Geithner suggested countries set goals for 
their current account surpluses or deficits. While South Korea and Canada were 
among those to back the initiative, it was challenged by major exporters 
Germany and Japan. 
 
 The group will “pursue the full range of policies conducive to reducing 
excessive imbalances and maintaining current account imbalances at sustainable 
levels,” the statement said. The IMF will deepen its monitoring of currencies 
and persistently large trade gaps. 
 
 The G-20 members will flesh out details by the Seoul forum, a U.S. official 
said. Although Japanese Finance Minister Yoshihiko Noda said Geithner wanted a 
4 percent cap on trade imbalances, the official said the U.S. doesn’t expect a 
fixed target and may instead push for a range with an eye on having sustainable 
trade positions by 2015. 
 
 Balanced Growth 
 
 “We need to work to achieve more balance in the pattern of global growth,” 
said Geithner. “This requires a shift in growth strategies by countries that 
have traditionally run large trade and current account surpluses, away from 
export dependence and toward stronger domestic demand led growth.” 
 
 Bundesbank President Axel Weber, who also attended the talks, said Germany 
shouldn’t be blamed for having a current- account surplus. 
 
 A current account is the broadest measure of trade because it includes 
investment and transfer income, and it would be hard to achieve any correction 
in one without a currency shifting. Saudi Arabia, Germany, Russia and China all 
run surpluses larger than 4 percent of gross domestic product, while Turkey and 
South Africa have deficits bigger than that, according to the IMF. 
 
 The G-20 has long attempted to narrow such imbalances and pivot the world 
economy away from its reliance on excess U.S. demand and Chinese savings after 
those fault lines helped trigger the credit crisis. Limiting talks to foreign 
exchange is too inflexible for nations with trade surpluses and refocusing them 
on current accounts would allow tools other than currencies to be used, 
officials said. 
 
 Yuan’s Rise 
 
 Even as it runs a trade surplus and builds currency reserves, China has curbed 
the yuan’s rise to about 2 percent since a June pledge to introduce more 
flexibility, arguing anything other than a gradual appreciation would cause 
social and economic disruption. At the same time, the Fed has sent the dollar 
tumbling by leaning toward the purchase of more assets to tackle unemployment 
near a 26-year high and weak inflation. 
 
 Caught in the middle, emerging markets are embracing capital controls or 
intervening themselves to stay competitive with China and slow the inflow of 
speculative cash. South Korea is discussing several measures including a bank 
tax or levy on financial transactions, and Brazil last week raised taxes on 
foreign capital for the second time this month. 
 
 Advanced economies agreed to be “vigilant against excess volatility and 
disorderly movements in exchange rates,” the G- 20 statement said. Geithner 
said the U.S. backs a “strong dollar” and recognizes its global responsibility 
to support it. 
 
 Trading Edge 
 
 The G-20’s statement will encourage Asian nations to allow their exchange 
rates to rise without having to worry they will end up doing so alone and lose 
a trading edge, said Douglas Borthwick, head of foreign-exchange trading at 
Stamford, Connecticut-based Faros Trading. He said the yuan may climb to 6.60 
per dollar in November from 6.66 at the end of last week and predicted the 
dollar will drop against the euro and yen. 
 
 For all the complaints it faces, China let the yuan gain the most versus the 
dollar since 2005 in September and by more than 20 percent in the last five 
years. The Bloomberg-JPMorgan Chase & Co. Asia Currency Index is up about 3 
percent since August. 
 
 “China and its neighbors see the need to strengthen their currencies,” said 
Borthwick, whose firm executes currency transactions on behalf of hedge funds 
and institutional clients. “Going forward they will all move together and allow 
their currencies to strengthen, over time resulting in a more balanced 
economy.” 
 
 To contact the reporters on this story: Simon Kennedy in Gyeongju, South Korea 
at [email protected] 
 
 To contact the editor responsible for this story: John Fraher at 
[email protected] 

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