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China's central bank set the midpoint exchange rate at 7.0211 on Monday, the third consecutive trading day that Beijing has set a rate weaker than 7 to the US dollar. Photo: AFP

China pledges not to devalue yuan exchange rate after US currency manipulator designation

  • The yuan was allowed to weaken beyond the key threshold of 7 to the US dollar last week for the first time in 11 years, drawing an unexpected response from Washington
  • Foreign exchange administration chief calls currency manipulator decision last week by US President Donald Trump ‘a ridiculous case in global finance history’
Currency war

China will neither devalue the yuan nor change the way it manages the Chinese currency exchange rate after the United States designated it as a currency manipulator last week, according to China’s foreign exchange administration chief.

The US Treasury officially designated China as a currency manipulator on Monday after Beijing allowed the yuan to weaken beyond the key threshold of 7 to the US dollar after having defended that level for more than a decade.

But China will stick to its “managed floating exchange rate system” and keep the Chinese currency’s exchange rate “basically stable” despite Washington’s accusations that Beijing was manipulating the currency’s value for its own benefit, Pan Gongsheng, a vice-governor with the People’s Bank of China and the head of China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange, wrote in an article published on Monday.

“China is a big responsible country. We adopted a responsible approach during the Asian financial crisis [in 1998] and the global financial crisis [in 2008],” Pan noted. “We will not engage in a competitive devaluation and won’t use the exchange rate as a tool to handle international trade disputes”.

China's central bank set the midpoint exchange rate at 7.0211 on Monday, the third consecutive trading day that Beijing has set a rate weaker than 7 to the US dollar. Onshore yuan was traded at 7.0584 against the US dollar, while the offshore yuan price in Hong Kong weakened beyond 7.1 on Monday afternoon.

The onshore yuan has declined 1.7 per cent to 7.0592 against the US dollar and the offshore yuan has dropped 1.8 per cent to 7.1012 since US President Donald Trump said he would impose a further 10 per cent of tariff on US$300 billion of Chinese imports on August 2.
The decision by Trump to label China a currency manipulator caught the Chinese government off guard, with officials in Beijing, state media and economists joining together in a chorus blasting the move.

Pan said Washington’s decision was “part of the US strategy to start and to escalate trade disputes with China” and will be remembered as “a ridiculous case in global finance history”.

We will not engage in a competitive devaluation and won’t use the exchange rate as a tool to handle international trade disputes
Pan Gongsheng

“Although the yuan exchange rate is subject to the impact of external factors, such as trade disputes, we expect no disorderly depreciation down the road,” Pan said.

He added that China will not restrict “normal” foreign exchange use by companies and individuals under the nation’s current account, and will push forward the opening of the capital account, he said.

An International Monetary Fund report issued on Friday gave no support for Trump’s assertion that China is manipulating its currency for an unfair trade advantage, saying the yuan exchange rate was generally in line with the country’s economic fundamentals.

It is still unknown whether the US side will use the currency manipulator designation to justify higher tariffs on Chinese products or to exert additional pressure on Beijing to make concession in negotiations to end the 13-month trade war.

On Saturday, Trump tweeted that “China wants to make a deal so badly. Thousands of companies are leaving because of the Tariffs, they must stem the flow”.

In China, economists have started to talk about the start of a financial war between China and the US, based on the currency manipulator designation.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: China ‘will not devalue yuan’ after US claims
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