Trump accuses China of 'manipulating' its currency
- Published
Donald Trump has again accused China of manipulating its currency to combat US tariffs.
The accusation, made in an interview with Reuters, echoes claims the US President made during his 2016 campaign and repeated last month.
Mr Trump also criticised the head of the US Federal Reserve for raising interest rates, prompting the dollar to fall back.
The US and China will hold talks in Washington this week on trade.
Many doubt that the discussions, which involve lower-level officials, will be successful in defusing the tensions.
Mr Trump told Reuters he did not expect much from the meeting, which follows failed negotiations this spring.
He also said he had "no time-frame" in mind to bring the clash between the economic giants to a close.
Analysts have already voiced fears that the trade war between the US and China could become a currency war as well.
Trade war in progress
In July, the two countries imposed a first round of tit-for-tat tariffs affecting trade worth $34bn (£26.5bn).
The US plans to impose import duties on a further $16bn in Chinese trade on 23 August. China has promised to retaliate in kind.
The administration is also preparing additional tariffs on $200bn worth of Chinese goods, which are the subject of hearings in Washington this week.
This month, the administration announced that Mr Trump had asked his staff to consider taxes of 25%, instead of the 10% initially proposed.
At the time, officials disputed the notion that the higher tax was a response to the decline in the value of the yuan, but the president's comments to Reuters undermine that claim.
"I think China's manipulating their currency, absolutely," Mr Trump told Reuters.
During his campaign for president, Mr Trump also called China a currency manipulator but last year, after assuming office, he retracted those comments.
What is currency manipulation?
Mr Trump has not only accused China, but also the EU of currency manipulation.
A country can intentionally undervalue its currency by selling its own currency to drive down its value, making its exports cheaper and more competitive.
Currency manipulation is difficult to prove. Some analysts argue that China has acted to weaken its currency, largely by purchasing US government debt, in order to make its exports cheaper for American consumers.
But others take a different view. Former US Treasury official Mark Sobel says Mr Trump is far off the mark, external, suggesting the depreciation of the Chinese yuan is down to the strength of the US dollar, rather than Chinese market manipulation.
In April, the US Treasury department issued a report saying no US trading partner was manipulating its currency.
China's currency has shed almost 10% of its value against the dollar since the trade dispute started to intensify in April - a decline that has blunted the effect of the tariffs by making China's goods cheaper.
Mr Trump said he held the US Federal Reserve responsible for some of the currency shifts, noting that it has acted more quickly than other central banks to remove stimulus policies.
"We're negotiating very powerfully and strongly with other nations. We're going to win. But during this period of time, I should be given some help by the Fed. The other countries are accommodated," he told Reuters.
In addition to China, he said, "I think the euro is being manipulated also."
'Not thrilled'
President Trump also again criticised the Federal Reserve for raising interest rates.
The US central bank, which is led by Mr Trump's appointee Jerome Powell, has raised interest rates twice this year and is expected to do so again.
The Fed has said the economy is strong enough to handle higher rates, which are intended to prevent uncontrolled price inflation. Analysts also link the rates to a stronger dollar.
Mr Trump is worried that the higher cost of borrowing will slow the economy.
"I'm not thrilled with his raising of interest rates, no. I'm not thrilled," he told Reuters, repeating a criticism which he has made before.
- Published12 July 2018
- Published12 April 2017