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Politics : WHO IS RUNNING FOR PRESIDENT IN 2004

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To: calgal who wrote (3052)7/6/2003 2:03:14 AM
From: calgal  Read Replies (1) of 10965
 
Business - Reuters
EU Pressures Asia to Allow Currency Rise
Sat Jul 5, 5:50 AM ET

By Jason Szep

URL:http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&ncid=1203&e=4&u=...

BALI, Indonesia (Reuters) - European finance ministers pressured Asian governments on Saturday to allow the region's tightly managed currencies to rise against the dollar, a move that may limit any damage to Europe's economy from further euro strength.

Reuters Photo

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Some Asian governments have sought to limit the impact of the falling U.S. dollar on their currencies by intervening in foreign exchange markets to maintain their export competitiveness at a time of weak global demand.

With Asia striving to keep dollar weakness at bay, much of the pressure on the dollar, caused by the huge U.S. trade deficit, has so far come via a strengthening euro.

"There has been a discussion about that," said Karin Rudebeck, State Secretary of International Affairs in Sweden's finance ministry, referring to Asian currency policy.

Rudebeck spoke to Reuters after a closed door session at an annual meeting of European and Asian finance ministers (ASEM) on the Indonesian resort island of Bali.

"The burden toward the euro has been too high in the restructuring of exchange rates globally. This has been discussed but I think there is no clear conclusion," she said.

Kim Jin-Pyo, South Korea (news - web sites)'s minister of finance and economy, told Reuters: "The European countries seem to be of the view that since the U.S. has a huge trade deficit and many countries in East Asia and in particular China has a large share of that, there should be or there could be a cautious correction of that imbalance."

GAPING DEFICIT

The issue of Asian currency policy has become an issue because of the massive U.S. current account deficit, which is close to five percent of gross domestic product. To finance this, the U.S. must attract more than $1 billion a day.

This was easy during the 1990s when a soaring stock market and high-tech boom lured foreign investors. But a stock market tumble and economic stagnation has dulled returns, slowing the inflow of investment and pushing the dollar down.

But its fall against global currencies has been uneven.

In 2003 it has fallen 9.3 percent against the euro , but just 0.6 percent against the yen , 1.1 percent against the Taiwan dollar and 0.5 percent against the Korean won . Three other Asian currencies, the Chinese yuan, the Hong Kong dollar and the Malaysian ringgit are pegged to the dollar at fixed rates.

Last week the Bank for International Settlements criticized unnamed Asian countries for opposing a rise in their currencies that would cut their current account surpluses and, by extension, help shrink the U.S. deficit.

Speculation has swirled in financial markets that China will relax its yuan policy to allow it to rise against the dollar. Such a move may help ease inflationary pressure building up in China due to strong money supply growth.

U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow and a top South Korean foreign exchange official have stirred that speculation by saying that a yuan policy change may already be under consideration.

Japanese Finance Minister Masajuro Shiokawa said on Friday he would not press the issue of a yuan revaluation during three-way talks with his counterparts from South Korea and China on the sidelines of the meeting.

Kim said one European delegate had mentioned the need for an appreciation of the yuan during Saturday's meetings.

"But other than that there was no mention about the valuation of the Chinese currency, and Korea does not have a specific suggestion on that either," he said.

Beijing has denied that it might allow the yuan to rise. China's tightly controlled yuan has been seen as a big reason why Korea and some other Asian countries have not let their currencies float free and rise against the dollar.

Economists say a rise in currencies in Asia -- the source of more than one-third of America's total trade -- would cut the U.S. current account deficit. Because the U.S. trade deficit with China was $103 billion in 2002 versus the U.S.'s $82 billion deficit with the European Union (news - web sites), analysts think a stronger yuan may do more to curb the U.S. deficit than the dollar's fall against the euro.

The weekend Bali gathering of officials from the European Union, China, Japan and other Asian nations is also expected to stress closer coordination in macro-economic policy between their regions, home to about a third of the world's population.

"European countries are entering into an integrated single market, while we have just started to strengthen our bond market. There will be talks on how to synergise these efforts," said Indonesia's chief economics minister, Dorodjatun Kuntjoro-Jakti. (Additional reporting by Yuko Yoshikawa and Arka Gde)
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