Geithner in China for talks amid currency tensions
The Associated Press, Beijing | Sun, 10/24/2010 4:04 PM
U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner held
hastily arranged talks Sunday with a top Chinese finance official
amid currency tensions after a weekend pledge by finance leaders to
rebalance the global economy.
The governments said Geithner and Vice Premier Wang Qishan
exchanged views on U.S.-Chinese economic relations at an airport in
the eastern city of Qingdao but no details were released. They said
the two also discussed preparations for a Nov. 11-12 meeting of
leaders of the Group of 20 major economies.
Beijing faces mounting pressure from U.S. lawmakers to ease
cotrols they say hold down its yuan currency, boosting China's
trade surplus and costing American jobs. Legislation passed Sept. 30
by the U.S. House of Representatives would allow Washington to
sanction governments that manipulate their currency for trade
advantage. The Senate is due to take up the measure afterNovember
elections.
Plans for the Geithner-Wang meeting were announced Saturday as
G-20 finance officials and central bankers wrapped up their meeting
in Gyeongju, South Korea. It suggested the two sides decided
higher-level contact was required after Geithner was in Gyeongju
with China's finance ministe Xie Xuren, and other officials.
The G-20 officials pledged Saturday to avoid currency
manipulation.
"Countries with significantly undervalued exchange rates
committed to move towards more market-determined exchange-rate
systems that reflect economic fundamentals, as China is now doing,"
Geithner told reporters Saturday.
Sunday's meeting was the second impromptu meeting between
Geithner and Wang after the two held talks at the Beijing airport in
April as the Treasury secretary flew home from India amid a similar
spike in tensions over the yuan.
Beijing promised a more flexible exchange rate in June but the
yuan rose by only about 2 percent against the dollar in the
following three months. Its appreciation has speeded up since House
passage of the currency bill, suggesting Beijing is trying to defuse
pressure on the Senate to approve it.
On Oct. 15, Geithner's department delayed issuing a report
required by Congress about which countries are manipulating their
currencies. Instead, officials praised the recent appreciation of
the yuan but said it needed to continue. They said the currency
report would not be issued until after the G-20 talks.
The G-20 finance ministers and central bankers promised to avoid
debilitating currency devaluations and reduce trade and financial
imbalances and to give China and other major developing countries a
bigger role in managing the global economy.
"If we're going to be able to continue to expand opportunities
for trade and preserve an open trading system, then we need to work
to achieve more balance in the pattern of global growth," Geithner
said Saturday.