China restates yuan to rise gradually (Reuters) Updated: 2005-12-13 08:20
China on Monday poured cold water on speculation that its bulging trade
surplus could trigger a dramatic shift in currency policy, restating instead
that the yuan is likely to keep rising only gradually.
The German magazine WirtschaftsWoche reported on December 2 that China was
preparing to revalue the yuan by 7.2 percent against the dollar on January 1.
Talk that something was afoot was further fueled the next day when finance
ministers from the Group of Seven industrial countries urged China to make good
on its commitment to a more flexible currency to help correct global economic
imbalances.
But asked about a possible revaluation or a widening in the yuan's trading
band, central bank chief Zhou Xiaochuan told reporters: "There is no such thing.
It's nonsense."
China revalued the yuan, also known as the renminbi, by 2.1 percent against
the dollar on July 21 and swapped an 11-year-old dollar peg for a managed float
that lets the currency rise or fall by 0.3 percent a day against the dollar.
In practice, the yuan has since edged up just 0.4 percent against the dollar
-- much to the irritation of some U.S. law-makers, who charge Beijing with
deliberately holding down the currency to give its exporters a competitive edge.
Chinese policy makers are conscious of the friction that the trade surplus is
generating and are striving to reduce the economy's reliance on exports and
related investments.
The trade surplus tripled to more than $90 billion in the first 11 months of
the year, and an influential official said that reducing the surplus should be
one of Beijing's economic priorities next year.
To that end, the authorities will boost imports of raw materials and
high-technology goods while strengthening consumption, Liu He, a vice head
within a policy-setting division of the central government, told an economic
forum.
China is also paving the way for a more flexible yuan by developing hedging
instruments that banks and companies need to deal with increased currency risk.
But Yu Yongding, an adviser to the central bank, said it was not clear how
much currency policy could do to reduce the surplus.
"If we are optimistic about China's economy, we cannot deny the premise that
the renminbi will gradually appreciate. But how it appreciates and to what
extent, and where the equilibrium exchange rate is, are very difficult questions
to answer," Yu, a prominent academic who sits on the central bank's monetary
policy committee, told the same forum.
Yu, for one, is optimistic about the outlook for the economy, which grew 9.5
percent in 2003 and 2004 and will come close to that mark once again this year.
"At the start of 2005, some people were predicting a slowdown in growth. That
proved wrong. I want to make a bet that China will maintain economic growth
around 9 percent in 2006," Yu said.
In most countries, such a long period of strong growth would have ignited
inflation by now. But in China, gluts stemming from overinvestment in many
industries is keeping a lid on prices.
Wu Jinglian, an economist with the Development Research Center, a think-tank
under the State Council, said the failure to rein in capital spending had been
the biggest flaw in executing the current five-year economic plan, which ends
this year.
Wu said the solution was for China to change its very development model by
letting the market, not the authorities, have more influence over the allocation
of capital: "There are some fields where the government should keep its hands
off."
Data from the National Bureau of Statistics underscored that inflation
remains tame. Consumer prices in November rose 1.3 percent from a year earlier,
up from 1.2 percent in October but below market forecasts of a 1.5 percent
increase.
While the cost of food and services rose, the price of cars and other
consumer goods that are in abundant supply fell.
"We still see strong service price inflation but some risks of core consumer
goods price deflation," said Ben Simpfendorfer, a strategist with Royal Bank of
Scotland in Hong Kong.
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