Business | Economy
China will not let exchange rate surge on growing foreign pressure
Japan's loose monetary policy in 1980s inflated an asset price bubble
Beijing: China will not repeat Japan's mistake of the 1980s and let its exchange rate surge in response to foreign pressure, Li Daokui, an adviser to the People's Bank of China, said Sunday.
The yen rose sharply after Japan and other leading economies sealed the Plaza Accord in 1985 to bring about an orderly decline in the dollar to reduce a bulging US current account deficit.
As money poured into Japan to chase the yen higher, loose monetary policy inflated an asset price bubble that burst at the start of the 1990s, ushering in two decades of economic stagnation and a battle against deflation.
Policymakers and researchers in China are acutely aware of Japan's experience.
"China will not go down the path Japan took and give in to foreign pressure on the issue of the yuan's exchange rate," Li said.
US snubbed
"The US should pay much more attention to its own problems. What has the US done while we have been reducing our trade surplus?" Li said.
Li, an economics professor at Tsinghua University in Beijing, said arm-twisting from abroad over the yuan was only beginning.
"External pressure for China to appreciate the yuan is going to increase in the next several years," Li told a forum.
But he said the exchange rate was only one of many tools China could deploy to adjust the structure of its economy and reduce its external payments surplus. For instance, as a large country, China's scope to boost domestic demand was vast.
"So it is no longer necessary for China to achieve trade balance only by appreciating the yuan," he said.
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