CHINA / National

Central Banker: Rely less on dollar
(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-06-28 10:00

Trade surplus

Asian central banks have amassed about $2.8 trillion in foreign exchange stockpiles.

Wu was cited by the paper as saying that Asian countries needed to hold large amounts of foreign exchange reserves to allow them to deal with liquidity crises because they could not be assured of timely help from the international community.

The newspaper also cited Wu as saying a stronger yuan alone could not correct China's large trade surplus with the United States.

The Sino-U.S. trade gap was the result of global resource allocation by multinational companies and needed to be addressed through the combined efforts of the United States and Asian countries, she said.

"Such trade imbalances cannot be resolved simply by adjusting the exchange rate. It should be mainly resolved by adjusting the economic structure," Wu was quoted as saying.

China faces pressure, especially from the United States, to allow a faster rise for the yuan.

Beijing revalued the yuan by 2.1 percent and scrapped a dollar peg for a managed float last July, but the currency has strengthened only 1.3 percent since.

China has pledged to allow greater flexibility for the yuan over time, but has stressed that it needs to be careful about the implications that could have for employment and the country's financial system.


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