The International Monetary Fund called Saturday
for a flexible, non-coercive approach to monitoring exchange
rate regimes of member countries after the United States had
pressed for stepped-up intervention by the IMF.
"Dialogue and persuasion should remain key
pillars of effective surveillance," the IMF’s policy-setting
committee said here in a statement after a twice-yearly meeting.
IMF action on exchange rates, the committee
added, "should pay due regard to country circumstances," and be
characterized by even-handedness.
Earlier in the day US Treasury Secretary Henry
Paulson, in an address to the committee, re-asserted
Washington’s insistence that the IMF take a more muscular
approach to currency volatility.
"Let us be clear: exercising firm surveillance
over members’ exchange-rate policies is the core function of the
institution," he said.
"For us, reform of the IMF’s foreign-exchange
surveillance is the lynchpin on which other reforms depend, and
we look forward to action in this important area very soon."
Paulson, in language that would be repeated in
the committee statement, said IMF action should be "even-handed
and candid" and reflect current economic circumstances in a
particular country.
But the US Treasury chief also warned that "if
exchange-rate issues are not debated critically and openly at
the Fund, alternative venues and approaches will necessarily
emerge."
There have been bills introduced in the US
Congress demanding trade sanctions on China for what it is seen
as its refusal to allow its currency, the yuan, to appreciate.
US insistence on vigorous IMF action may
therefore reflect Bush administration frustration with Beijing.
The relatively weak Chinese currency, according
to the US argument, makes Chinese goods more attractive on US
markets and threatens jobs held by American workers.
But China, in a statement to the IMF released
here Saturday, said its exchange-rate regime "will be improved
in a gradual and controllable manner."
"Exchange-rate flexibility will gradually
increase, with attention paid to the value of a basket of
currencies."
The statement said that since currency reforms
in July 2005, the yuan in fact had appreciated by 7.0 percent
against the dollar as of March this year.
-AFP