Snow: Trade action against China won't work   (Reuters)  Updated: 2006-01-06 15:15  
WASHINGTON - U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow urged China on Thursday 
to allow further revaluation of its currency, the yuan, saying it would help 
world economies adjust from trade and current account imbalances, but warned 
against retaliatory trade measures. 
 
 
 
 
   Treasury Secretary 
 John Snow, pictured here in 2005, warned against trade measures 
 against China in a call-in TV program on January 5, 2006. 
 [AFP] |   "The trade deficit is influenced by lots 
of things, differential growth rates, differential savings rates and investment 
rates and so on. But clearly, getting the yuan more appropriately valued will be 
helpful to the global adjustment process," he said on CSPAN television. 
But Snow defended the administration's decision not to formally cite China as 
a currency manipulator, saying U.S. pressure on Beijing has been effective and 
that Chinese policy-makers recognize further revaluation is in their national 
interest. 
 "They are putting in place mechanisms to allow their currency to have greater 
flexibility... so I think we're on the right course," Snow said. 
 If the United States tried to pressure China to adopt a more flexible 
currency through trade actions against Chinese imports, it might only result in 
corresponding measures against the United States and create market uneasiness, 
he warned. 
 U.S. manufacturers complain that, even after a modest revaluation of its yuan 
currency last July, China's currency remains seriously undervalued and that lets 
China unfairly run up steadily mounting surpluses on its trade with the United 
States. 
 "China's behavior is inviting lots of negative reaction in the Congress," 
Snow said in response to questions after an address to the U.S. Chamber of 
Commerce. 
 "They do need to clean up their act on intellectual property, they do need to 
understand that trade is a two-way street," Snow said. "We're not satisfied one 
bit on the currency issue, but it's awfully important we resist these 
protectionist pressures."   (For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)    |