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WORKING PAPER 07-5
A (Lack of) Progress Report on China's Exchange Rate Policies
by Morris Goldstein, Peterson Institute for International Economics
China has failed to deal decisively with its rising external imbalance and the growing undervaluation of its currency, and it has not honored its obligations on exchange rate policies as a member of the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The United States and the IMF have hardly covered themselves with glory either on solving these problems. The priority for China should be to deliver right away a meaningful "down payment" of a 10 to 15 appreciation of the renminbi from its current level. Bolder exchange rate action should be accompanied by an expansion and redirection of government expenditure toward weaknesses in China's social safety net—that is, toward health, education, and pensions—and thus reduce the incentives for high precautionary saving. For its part, the United States needs to clarify and strengthen its message on what it wants China to do on exchange rate policy while simultaneously demonstrating its willingness to make a larger contribution toward reducing global payments imbalances. The US Treasury should make clear to China that if it fails to drastically reduce its large-scale, one-way intervention in the exchange market, it will be labeled a "currency manipulator" in the Treasury's June 2007 report on exchange rates to the US Congress. Finally, the IMF should return to its roots by taking up in earnest the role that its founders set out for it as the global umpire for exchange rate policies. The multilateral consultation process, launched with much fanfare by IMF management in April 2006, is no substitute for that umpire role.
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RELATED LINKS
Testimony: Correcting the Chinese Exchange Rate: An Action Plan March 24, 2010
Policy Brief 10-15: Estimates of Fundamental Equilibrium Exchange Rates, May 2010 June 2010
Op-ed: New Imbalances Will Threaten Global Recovery June 10, 2010
Book: Future of China's Exchange Rate Policy, The July 2009
Book: Debating China's Exchange Rate Policy April 2008
Article: The Dollar and the Deficits: How Washington Can Prevent the Next Crisis November 2009
Policy Brief 09-21: The Future of the Dollar September 2009
Policy Brief 09-20: Why SDRs Could Rival the Dollar September 2009
Book: Accountability and Oversight of US Exchange Rate Policy June 2008
Book: China's Rise: Challenges and Opportunities (hardcover) September 2008
Op-ed: China's Currency Needs to Rise Further July 22, 2008
Speech: Is China a Currency “Manipulator”? January 28, 2009
Working Paper 08-2: Currency Undervaluation and Sovereign Wealth Funds: A New Role for the World Trade Organization January 2008
Policy Brief 07-8: The Case for Exchange Rate Flexibility in Oil-Exporting Economies November 2007
Testimony: The Dollar and the Renminbi May 23, 2007
Testimony: The Chinese Exchange Rate and the US Economy January 31, 2007
Policy Brief 07-4: Global Imbalances: Time for Action March 2007
Op-ed: When the Dollar Bill Comes Due April 27, 2005
Policy Brief 05-1: A Currency Basket for East Asia, Not Just China August 2005
Working Paper 04-1: Adjusting China's Exchange Rate Policies June 2004
Book: Inflation Targeting in the World Economy October 2003