China hits back at Obama over currency criticismPublished on Thu, Feb 04, 2010 at 13:58 | Source : Reuters Updated at Thu, Feb 04, 2010 at 14:55
China dismissed on Thursday US threats it would get tough with Beijing on trade and currency to ensure American goods did not face a competitive disadvantage, saying its yuan currency was at a reasonable level. US President Barak Obama earlier said his administration was pushing China to enforce trade rules and further open their markets, adding to a range of issues weighing on relations between the world's biggest and third-biggest economies. A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman responded by saying the yuan was at a reasonable level, and that China did not deliberately pursue a trade surplus with the United States. "At the moment, looking at international balance of payments and forex market supply and demand, the level of the yuan is close to reasonable and balanced," Ma Zhaoxu told a regular news briefing, repeating China's standard line when criticised about its currency. "Accusations and pressure do not help to solve the problem," he added. US manufacturers have complained for years China's currency policies give local companies an unfair price advantage. China says exchange rate policy is an internal matter. Analysts cautioned against reading too much into Obama's comments, saying his words were as much aimed at appealing to a domestic audience as trying to put pressure on Beijing. "Even if China wants to adjust its exchange rate, it is nearly impossible for Beijing to meet the demands of the US -- this is China's own business," Li Jian, a researcher with a think-tank under China's Ministry of Commerce, told Reuters. Markets, too, were not counting on a brisk rise. "Previous tough comments on the yuan from the US administration have typically led nowhere," said a US bank dealer in Shanghai. "The market is not sure the latest comments by Obama will really lead to a tougher US stance on the yuan." Offshore one-year dollar/yuan non-deliverable forwards (NDFs) , a rough gauge of market sentiment, on Thursday implied a 2.8 percent rise in the yuan over the next 12 months, slightly less than on Wednesday. The yuan's spot exchange rate, which is tightly controlled by the central bank, was nearly flat. Obama told a meeting with Senate Democrats on Wednesday that Washington was trying "to get much tougher about enforcement of existing rules, putting constant pressure on China and other countries to open up their markets in reciprocal ways". Obama said he would not take a protectionist stance toward China, the world's third-largest economy, warning that "to close ourselves off from that market would be a mistake".
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