Mon, Jun 01, 2009 - Page 11 News List

Geithner leaves for China visit

LOW-KEY: The US treasury secretary is likely to adopt a soft tone as he promotes the US economic recovery plans, while both sides seek to eliminate signs of discord

AP , WASHINGTON

Security tensions in Asia have flared since North Korea’s recent nuclear weapons tests and missile firings. Because China is viewed as a critical player in any successful resolution of a North Korea standoff, Geithner is expected to address the topic with Chinese leaders.

In addition to talks with Chinese President Hu Jintao (胡錦濤) and other leaders, Geithner plans a speech today at Peking University, where he studied Mandarin Chinese during two summers when he was in college.

Geithner will hold an event at a Ford Foundation program in Beijing to support the study of economics in the US. The program was started by his father when the elder ­Geithner was based in Asia as a foundation official.

That the chief US economic policymaker is going hat-in-hand to the Chinese to explain the soaring deficits shows how much has changed since Bush’s treasury secretary, Henry Paulson, met with the Chinese in 2006.

Paulson managed to arm-twist China into agreeing to a new round of economic talks aimed at prodding Beijing to move faster to let its currency, the yuan, rise in value against the dollar. Doing so would make US exports cheaper for the Chinese to buy.

But this time, Geithner is expected to adopt a softer tone even though some US lawmakers want tough penalties on China and other countries deemed to manipulate currencies to gain trade advantages.

US manufacturers see the ­undervalued yuan as the major ­culprit in the trade deficit with the Chinese, which last year hit US$266 billion, the highest recorded with one country.

The Chinese agreed in 2005 to begin letting their currency rise against the dollar, and it has risen about 20 percent. But those gains stopped last summer. China had begun to fear that a stronger yuan was reducing its export sales, already hurt by the global downturn.

Though the crisis has given Geithner a weak hand, officials said he will seek to push this bargain.

The US will work to reduce its budget deficits once the crisis ends, urge Americans to save more and shrink the trade deficits. To replace diminished US spending, the Chinese will be asked to step up spending and stop saving so much. The administration says this can be done if Beijing improves pensions and health insurance so Chinese households don’t feel pressured to save so much.

Geithner is expected to point out that US consumers already are rebuilding their retirement savings. The Chinese have pledged to redirect their economy to boost domestic growth. But many private economists question how serious China is about it.

Analysts said they expect Geithner and the Chinese to pledge to do all it takes to end the recession. Both sides know any hint of discord between the world’s largest and third-largest economies probably will unsettle financial markets.

That’s one reason analysts don’t expect the administration to press hard on currency. As a candidate, US President Barack Obama pledged to crack down on countries seen as cheating on global trade rules, but last month chose not to cite China as a currency manipulator.. That disappointed US manufacturers and labor unions.

But Frank Vargo, vice president for international affairs at the National Association of Manufacturers, said he understood the change in tone.

“They talked a tougher line during the campaign, but the world changed,” Vargo said. “It is a much more delicate time now.”

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