Quantcast
Last updated on February 12, 2012 at 11:46 EST

Senators to delay vote on China currency bill

November 16, 2005

By Doug Palmer

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The chief sponsors of a Senate bill
threatening China with a 27.5 percent tariff on its exports to
the United States said on Wednesday they would delay a promised
vote on the bill until March 31 at the latest.

Sen. Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat, said he and Sen.
Lindsey Graham, a South Carolina Republican, were hopeful that
President George W. Bush’s visit to China later this week would
prompt China to take positive steps to revalue its currency.

“Sen. Graham and I do not think it would be appropriate to
vote on this bill while the president is there, so we have
agreed to delay the vote,” Schumer said.

The two senators are authors of a bill threatening China
with a 27.5 percent tariff on its exports to the United States
if it does not significantly raise the value of its currency.

The legislation is driven by frustration with the U.S.
trade deficit with China, which hit a record $162 billion in
2004 and is expected to exceed $200 billion this year.

“We hope and pray that the Chinese will move. We don’t want
to dictate anything to the Chinese. We don’t want to tell them
how quickly they should move or to what degree, but we do need
to see some more movement on something that just about everyone
agrees ought to happen,” Schumer said.

Schumer and Graham unexpectedly won a procedural vote 67-33
on their bill early this year.

They agreed in June to put off a promised vote on the bill
after a meeting with U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow and
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan convinced them China
was about to act on currency reform.

As part of the deal, Senate leaders promised the two
senators another vote opportunity by the end of 2005.

In July, China ended a policy of pegging the yuan at 8.28
to the dollar, revaluing it by 2.1 percent and moving to a
managed float with reference to a basket of currencies. It has
since risen only slightly, frustrating many U.S. lawmakers who
expected more from the July action.

In a speech in Kyoto, Japan, on Wednesday, Bush urged China
to liberalize its currency, open its domestic market to U.S.
exports and create a “level playing field” for trade.

However, the Bush administration has opposed the
Schumer-Graham bill. Snow and Greenspan again met with the
senators this month on the legislation.

The new agreement allows the senators to have a vote on its
bill when Congress returns in December from the U.S.
Thanksgiving holiday break.

The two senators can also decide to delay a vote until “no
later than March 31, 2006, if we determine that China is making
additional progress on the currency issue,” Schumer said.

Graham said he was “guardedly optimistic” that Bush’s visit
to China would prompt further action on the yuan.

How Beijing handles the currency issue will be a “defining
moment” in U.S.-China relations, Graham said.


Source: reuters