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Paulson to make his currency case to China's Hu



By David Lawder
01 August 2007 @ 10:08 am ET

BEIJING - U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson brings his overtures for a faster rise in the yuan to Chinese President Hu Jintao on Wednesday, a day after the Bush administration warned that anti-China legislation in the U.S. Congress could provoke a global trade backlash.

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Paulson and other top Bush aides are trying to head off several trade-focused bills that are aimed at ratcheting up pressure on Beijing to allow the yuan to appreciate more quickly to ease trade imbalances.

"At a time when U.S. exports are growing globally, such legislation also exposes the United States to the risk of 'mirror legislation' abroad and could trigger a global cycle of protectionist legislation," Paulson, U.S. Trade Representative Susan Schwab and Commerce Secretary Carlos Gutierrez said in a joint letter to senior senators.

The letter was released after Paulson met Chinese Vice Premier Wu Yi on Tuesday and urged her to make faster and bolder currency and economic reforms.

After a closed-door meeting, Wu lectured Paulson in front of reporters on China's economic challenges, saying that the country was still too poor to pose an economic threat to anyone.

"China still has 23 million people living in poverty. China's very goal in its development is so that its 1.3 billion people can eat their fill, dress warmly and live well," Wu said. "Who could we threaten? We don't have the ability. China does not and will never threaten anyone."

Her comments went to the heart of Beijing's refusal to permit a more rapid rise in the yuan: officials fear a stronger currency could not only destroy millions of export-orientated jobs but would also make it tough for peasants who make up over 60 percent of its population to compete against cheaper food imports.

On the U.S. side, many lawmakers and manufacturing firms feel the yuan is deliberately undervalued, keeping Chinese goods cheap in U.S. stores and driving American competitors out of business.

MEETING "CONSTRUCTIVE"

In an interview with China's Xinhua news agency on Tuesday, Paulson said the meeting with Wu was "very constructive" and sought to downplay the trade tensions.

Copyright 2009 Thomson Reuters. All rights reserved.

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Comments
1.
Aug 1, 2007 1:28pm

As the meeting is going on,there is still not a result of the currency issue. I think the the US&China trade should never stop for U.S. exports growing is required and the demand in China is growing too.Demand for many US products in China are very strong,but there are few, if any, effective methods for US SMF's to access Chinese buyers and meet the demand. AC-Ali enables US businesses to list their company and product descriptions in English. AmeriChinaB2B will translate these descriptions in Chinese and put them on its China Business platform www.acb2b.cn. which attracts a large number of Chinese importers and distributors looking for American products to import to China. Welcome to AmeriChinaB2B( http://www.acb2b.com/ ) to begin your business trip of China. I believe that the meeting between BEIJING - U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and HU would be constructive then.

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