| US aims to address China trade deficit(AP)
 Updated: 2006-02-21 08:45
 
  The US administration's new get-tough approach with China could 
involve filing trade charges against the Asian giant over auto parts and 
copyright piracy and branding the Chinese as currency manipulators. But the 
betting is that the harder line won't have much impact, at least right away, on 
the soaring US trade deficit, which hit an all-time high of $726 billion last 
year. 
 It is that deficit that is getting a lot of attention in 
Washington, especially the one-fourth of the deficit that is accounted for by a 
single country — the $202 billion trade gap with China.
 That figure prompted howls of protest in the US Congress. Lawmakers contended it 
showed President Bush is not doing enough to counter China's "unfair" trade 
practices, which they contend have contributed to the loss of nearly 3 million 
US manufacturing jobs since mid-2000.
 Lawmakers rushed to introduce more bills to slam China with tough economic 
sanctions.
 Hoping to head that off, the administration last week unveiled its own 
get-tough strategy, a 29-page "top-to-bottom review" of trade relations between 
the two nations.
  US Trade Representative Rob Portman 
announced the creation of a new China enforcement task force in his office. He 
indicated that without progress soon in two areas of tension — high Chinese 
tariffs imposed on American auto parts and widespread copyright piracy of 
American products — the administration would probably file unfair trade cases 
against China before the World Trade Organization.
 US Treasury Secretary John Snow did his own tough talking last week, sending 
hints that the administration was considering designating China as a currency 
manipulator in a report it must make to Congress in April.
 That designation would trigger talks between the two nations and could 
ultimately lead to trade sanctions if the United States won a WTO case on the 
issue. The administration for more than a year has resisted pressure to make 
such a designation, arguing that it could make more progress with quiet 
diplomacy to nudge China to stop depressing the value of its currency in 
relationship to the U.S. dollar.
  American manufacturers claim China is manipulating its currency, 
keeping it undervalued by as much as 40 percent, to make Chinese goods cheaper 
for American consumers and US products more expensive in China.
 Sens. Charles Schumer, D-N.Y., and Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., are sponsoring 
legislation that would impose across-the-board penalty tariffs of 27.5 percent 
on Chinese goods unless the Chinese stop the practice.
  That measure is just one of a number of bills that would seek 
to impose penalty tariffs on Chinese goods, higher tariffs that would be paid 
by American consumers.
 "This would be a tax increase on low and middle-income Americans," said Dan 
Griswold, a trade expert at the Cato Institute, a Washington think tank. "They 
are the ones who are buying the shoes and clothing and toys coming from China."
 But given that this is a congressional election year, analysts said the 
pressure is likely to keep building in Congress to retaliate unless China makes 
changes in its trade policies.
 China will have several opportunities to do so in the near future, starting 
with a visit April 11 of top Chinese economic officials to Washington to discuss 
with their US counterparts ways to relieve trade tensions.
  
 
 And on 
April 24, Chinese President Hu Jintao will make his first official visit to 
Washington.
 "The Chinese would be smart to move," said Frank Vargo, vice president for 
international trade at the National Association of Manufacturers. "It would head 
off trade angst in this country and head off potentially damaging legislation."
 But even if China does act, analysts caution that the 
changes being discussed would not do much to lower China's trade deficit with 
the United States, in large part because the gap is so wide. For every $1 in 
exports the United States sold China last year, China sold the United States $6 
in goods. 
 
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