Nobel Price Laureate Robert A. Mundell,
also known as the father of the Euro, reaffirmed on Monday
his position that China should maintain its currency exchange
policy despite pressure from Western countries for China
to appreciate the yuan.
Maintaining China's currency stable is important
not only to China, but also to other parts of the world,
Professor Mundell told the Nobel Laureates Beijing Forum
2005.
The three-day forum, which concludes Wednesday,
drew the participation of Edward Prescott, John F. Nash,
Robert W. Fogel, James A. Mirrlees, Vermon L. Smith and
Clive W. J. Granger, and other noted overseas economists.
A possible move to appreciate or float the
Chinese currency would bring disastrous consequences to
China, including delaying the convertibility of the Chinese
currency, or the Chinese yuan, cutting down on the inflow
of foreign direct investment, slowing down its economic
growth, worsening unemployment and the fiscal situation,
and destabilizing Southeast Asian countries, said Mundell.
It would also affect China's capability
of honoring the commitment it made upon its entry into the
World Trade Organization and be bad for Hong Kong, he said.
He said China possesses increasing comparative
advantages in the manufacturing sector, which require the
redistribution of world production, resulting in what he
described as China's competitive shock to the world economy.
"It is not a monetary issue and cannot be addressed
by monetary measures," he said.
He said the claim made by a Japanese deputy finance minister
three years ago that China exports deflation to the world
is groundless.
He quoted Alan Greenspan, chairman of the
US Federal Reserve, as saying earlier this month that the
reevaluation of Chinese currency will not improve the US
trade deficit.
Mundell also said it did not go along with
the usual practice of the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
to apply pressure to appreciate a currency, as the yuan
is currently not convertible.
"Never before, in the whole history
of the IMF, has a country with inconvertible currency appreciated
its currency," he said.
Mundell, who was awarded the Nobel Prize
in economics in 1999, said a fixed Chinese currency exchange
rate in the past decade brought China rapid economic growth
and stable price levels.
He dismissed the claim that his position
on the Chinese currency rate has been influenced by his
love of China. He has been given a permanent residence permit
in Beijing.
Mundell said he has advocated a fixed exchange
rate for the Chinese currency against the US dollar since
1994 as long as the US dollar is stable, although the appreciation
of the US dollar in 1997 caused deflation in China.
He lashed out at the bid by some countries
to pressure China on its currency exchange issue, saying
some Asian and European countries had called on China to
devalue its currency after the Asian Financial Crisis in
late 1990s, which China rejected. Subsequently, facts proved
it right.
On measures needed to maintain a stable
currency, he urged China to cut down its huge foreign exchange
reserve, which has exceeded 600 billion US dollars, by encouraging
Chinese firms to invest abroad and gradually raising the
wages of its workers.
China should also explain its monetary policies
to the international community, he said.
The issue of the Chinese currency exchange
rate has attracted worldwide attention recently as some
countries, including the United States and members of the
European Union, have been claiming that the yuan is too
low, giving Chinese exporters a trade advantage.
Last week, the People's Bank of China, or the central bank,
reiterated in a report that China will keep its currency
" basically stable at a rational equilibrium"
while improving the regime that determines the yuan's exchange
rate.
The report acknowledged that China's monetary
policy is being challenged severely by the trade surplus
and rapid growth of foreign currency reserves in the first
quarter of the year.
As China still implements foreign exchange
controls, a trade surplus will usually lead to the amassment
of official foreign currency reserves, which added as much
as 49.4 billion US dollars in the first three months, bringing
the total to 659.1 billion dollars.
The central bank report promised to further
deepen the reform on foreign exchange management and promote
the balance of international payments.
The central bank already put forward a
series of policies aiming to facilitate the use of foreign
currencies by domestic enterprises and individuals in the
past year.
..Source:
Xinhua