China Blocks Bid to Revalue Its Currency
China Blocks Bid to Revalue Its Currency
Jason Sandefur
Despite a request from U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow, China declined to revalue its currency, leaving the yuan pegged to the U.S. dollar at an exchange rate of 8.28 yuan to 1 dollar. Many U.S. manufacturers say China�s artificially low currency encourages cheap exports, a practice that has contributed to the loss of millions of domestic manufacturing jobs since 2001, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer. Chinese officials hinted they might loosen exchange-rate controls in the future, but would not specify a date.
Critics say a cheaper yuan is key to China�s $103 billion trade surplus. However, a large portion of Chinese exports come from U.S. companies with manufacturing operations in China.
Some Chinese officials say the loss of U.S. manufacturing jobs is due to wage disparity between the two countries, not currency valuations.
The Bush administration recently called for China to revise its currency practices in a bid to shore up the President�s reelection campaign with a strong economic message. The White House also announced the creation of a new position, assistant secretary of commerce for manufacturing and services, to give manufacturing a stronger voice in Washington and help put Americans back to work. The Washington Post said unemployment could hurt Bush�s bid for reelection.
Manufacturing has been hardest hit by the recession, accounting for 2.5 million of the 2.7 million jobs lost since Bush took office. The President also faces criticism for imposing three-year tariffs on imported steel, a move the World Trade Organization says violated global trade practices. The White House has appealed the ruling, but some advisors have recommended the President repeal some of the steel tariffs, a decision that could come later this month. Fastener manufacturers and other steel users have been hurt by higher steel prices. �2003 FastenerNews.com
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