China's yuan-deflating days over

Hard to see Trump’s currency-manipulation cry stick

This sculpture resembling President-elect Donald Trump stands outside a shopping mall in Taiyuan, China, part of celebrations of the Chinese Year of the Rooster. During his political campaign, Trump blamed China for U.S. economic woes.
This sculpture resembling President-elect Donald Trump stands outside a shopping mall in Taiyuan, China, part of celebrations of the Chinese Year of the Rooster. During his political campaign, Trump blamed China for U.S. economic woes.

WASHINGTON -- President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to name China a currency manipulator on his first day in the White House.

There's only one problem -- it's not true anymore. China, the world's second-biggest economy behind the United States, hasn't been pushing down its currency to benefit Chinese exporters in years. And even if it were, the law targeting manipulators requires the U.S. spend a year negotiating a solution before it can retaliate.

Trump spent much of the campaign blaming China for America's economic woes. And it's true that the U.S-China trade relationship is lopsided. China sells a lot more to the United States than it buys. The resulting trade deficit in goods amounted to a staggering $289 billion through the first 10 months of 2016.

But in fact, for the past couple of years China has been intervening in markets to prop up its currency, the yuan, not push it lower.

It went a step further on Thursday, watering down the significance of the dollar and adding 11 additional currencies in a foreign-exchange basket, according to a document released by the China Foreign Exchange Trading System.

When China's yuan falls against the U.S. dollar, Chinese products become cheaper in the U.S. market, and American products become more costly in China.

So the U.S. Treasury Department monitors China for signs it is manipulating the yuan lower. The department has guidelines for putting countries on its currency blacklist. They must, for example, have spent the equivalent of 2 percent of their economic output over a year buying foreign currencies to drive those currencies up and their own currencies down.

Treasury hasn't declared China a currency manipulator since 1994.

Not much would probably happen, at least initially, if the U.S. declares China a currency manipulator.

If Treasury designates China a currency manipulator under a 2015 law, it is supposed to spend a year trying to resolve the problem through negotiations.

Should those talks fail, the U.S. can take a number of small steps in retaliation, including stopping the U.S. Overseas Private Investment Corp., a government development agency, from financing any programs in China. Trouble is, the United States already suspended those operations in China years ago -- to punish Beijing in the aftermath of the 1989 crackdown in Tiananmen Square.

So naming China a currency manipulator is mostly "just a jawboning exercise," said Amanda DeBusk, chairman of the international trade department at the law firm of Hughes Hubbard & Reed and a former Commerce Department official. "There's no immediate consequence."

For years, China pretty clearly manipulated its currency to gain an advantage over global competitors. It bought foreign currencies, the U.S. dollar in particular, to push them higher against the yuan. As it did, it accumulated vast foreign currency reserves -- nearly $4 trillion worth by mid-2014.

But now the Chinese economy is slowing, and Chinese companies and individuals have begun to invest more heavily outside the country. As their money leaves China, it puts downward pressure on the yuan.

The yuan has dropped nearly 7 percent against the dollar so far this year. The Chinese government has responded by draining its foreign exchange reserves to buy yuan, hoping to slow the currency's fall. China's reserves have dropped by $279 billion this year to $3.05 trillion.

If Beijing stepped back and let market forces determine the yuan's level, it likely would fall even faster, giving Chinese exporters even more of a competitive edge.

So the government is doing the opposite of what Trump says it's doing. Cornell University economist Eswar Prasad earlier this month called Trump's plans to name China a currency manipulator "unmoored from reality."

David Dollar, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former official at the World Bank and the U.S. Treasury Department, said, "The whole discussion is ironic. It's out of date."

Gary Hufbauer, an expert on trade law at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, notes that as president, Trump could nonetheless escalate any dispute over the currency on his own. Over the years, Congress has ceded the president broad authority to impose trade sanctions. Trump has threatened to impose a 45 percent tax, or tariff, on Chinese imports to punish it for unfair trade practices, including alleged currency manipulation.

Brookings' Dollar said China likely would bring a case to the World Trade Organization "against any protectionist measures that are a violation of U.S. commitments to the WTO," which oversees the rules of global commerce and rules on trade disputes.

Some trade analysts wonder whether Trump is using the tariff threat as a negotiating tool to win concessions from China.

Whatever the U.S. motive, China has a consistent record of retaliating against trade sanctions. When the Obama administration imposed tariffs on Chinese tire imports in 2009, for instance, China responded by imposing a tax on U.S. chicken parts.

China's Global Times newspaper, published by the ruling Communist Party's People's Daily, has already speculated that "China will take a tit-for-tat approach" if Trump's tariffs are enacted. The paper suggested that China might limit sales of Apple iPhones and Boeing jetliners in China.

"The Chinese are predictable and reliable," DeBusk said. "If they get punched, they punch back."

Business on 12/30/2016

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