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Trump tweet targeting China rapidly rebutted

By Chen Weihua in Washington | China Daily | Updated: 2018-04-18 08:48
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A tweet by US President Donald Trump blaming China and Russia for currency manipulation was quickly contested on Monday.

Trump tweeted early Monday that "Russia and China are playing the Currency Devaluation game as the U.S. keeps raising interest rates. Not acceptable!"

His words came three days after the US Treasury Department's semiannual report to Congress on Friday that China and five other major US trading partners placed under monitoring-Germany, Japan, South Korea, Switzerland and India - were not manipulating their currencies.

"This tweet reflects a misunderstanding of currency issues. China's currency has appreciated significantly against the US dollar since Trump took office, which should in principle make US exports more competitive in the Chinese market," said Eswar Prasad, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and former International Monetary Fund China division chief.

Prasad told China Daily that there is little evidence that China is intervening substantially in foreign exchange markets to prevent its currency from appreciating further against the dollar.

"Invoking currency devaluation in the context of the escalating US trade dispute with China is not consistent at this stage with the facts on the ground," said Prasad, author of the recent books Gaining Currency: The Rise of the Renminbi and Dollar Trap: How the US Dollar Tightened Its Grip on Global Finance.

Nicholas Burns, a former US undersecretary of state for political affairs, described Trump's words as "the real danger and risk of Twitter diplomacy by the president when he fires off the tweet without having talked to his advisers and without having confirmed the facts".

"The Treasury report last week did not brand China a currency manipulator. Now the president does. So it makes us look a little bit unstable and unsteady," he said on CNBC on Monday.

He said any president's words are "sacrosanct" and have to have credibility. "This reduces our president's, our country's, credibility when he says things that are not accurate," said Burns, now a professor at Harvard's Kennedy School.

Trump had repeatedly accused China of currency manipulation during his 2016 presidential campaign. But three reports issued by the Treasury under Trump did not find that China had manipulated its currency.

On the contrary, the US dollar has weakened substantially in the past year against most currencies, including the renminbi.

The yuan has gained about 10 percent against the US dollar in the past 12 months and climbed in March to its strongest level since August 2015, according to Bloomberg News.

Yi Gang, governor of the People's Bank of China, the central bank, said on April 11 that China has no intention of manipulating its exchange rate to try to boost trade.

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