The Trump administration on Monday lifted its designation of China as a currency cheat, saying the nation has made “enforceable commitments” not to devalue the yuan and has agreed to publish exchange-rate information.
The change in the US stance was outlined in the US Treasury Department’s semiannual foreign-exchange report to Congress. The document was released two days before America and China are set to sign a phase-one trade agreement in the East Room of the White House at 11:30 a.m. in Washington, according to people familiar with the plans.
The document listed no major US
trading partner as a currency manipulator among the 20 economies it monitors
for potential manipulation. Switzerland was added to the monitoring list, while
China, Japan, Korea, Germany, Italy, Ireland, Singapore, Malaysia, and
Vietnam remained.
“China has made enforceable commitments to refrain from competitive devaluation, while promoting transparency and accountability,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in a statement released last Monday in Washington.
The Asian nation’s commitment was made as part of the first phase of a US-China trade deal, according to the 45-page report. The US and China have been negotiating since the August 5 designation on China, which came in response to what the Treasury said was Beijing’s “concrete steps to devalue its currency.”
“China has never been a currency manipulator and the US’s latest conclusion is in line with the truth and international consensus,” Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told reporters in Beijing, on Tuesday. “China will continue to deepen our currency market reform, improve our currency system and keep the rate basically stable at an equilibrium level.”
Yuan gains
Bloomberg News reported earlier Monday that the Treasury would lift the designation on China, news that sent the yuan to a the designation in August further escalated the trade war with Beijing after the country’s central bank allowed the yuan to fall in retaliation to new US tariffs.
The report urges China to
“increase public understanding” between the People’s Bank of China and the
“foreign-exchange activities of the state-owned banks, including in the
offshore RMB market.” Treasury said the PBOC “appears to have largely
refrained” from
intervention in 2019.
The report was officially due
in mid-October but was delayed as the US and China
negotiated over trade.
Designation as a currency manipulator comes with no immediate penalties
but can rattle financial markets. Currency policy has emerged as Trump’s latest
tool to rewrite global trade rules that he says have hurt American businesses
and consumers. He has made foreign-exchange policy a key piece of trade deals
with Mexico, Canada, South
Korea and China.
Treasury has also expanded the
number of countries whose currency and economic
policies are scrutinized to 20 from 12.
Countries with a current-account surplus with the US equivalent to 2 percent of gross domestic product are now eligible for the list. Other thresholds include persistent intervention in markets for a nation’s currency, and a trade surplus of at least $20 billion. Countries that meet two of the three criteria are placed on a monitoring list.
Bloomberg News
Image credits: Bloomberg