India, Brazil Back U.S. Position on Yuan Before G-20 (Update2)
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By V. Ramakrishnan and Anoop Agrawal

April 21 (Bloomberg) -- Central bank governors in India and Brazil backed a stronger Chinese yuan, siding with U.S. President Barack Obama before a meeting of the Group of 20 nations this week.

Exports from China to India have grown faster than Indian shipments to its northern neighbor “and that obviously is a reflection of differences in the exchange-rate management,” Reserve Bank of India’s Duvvuri Subbarao told reporters in Mumbai yesterday. Brazil’s Henrique Meirelles told a senate hearing yesterday in Brasilia it was “absolutely critical” that China should let its currency appreciate.

Obama, who considers the yuan “undervalued,” is seeking to gain broader support from finance officials of the G20, who will discuss outlook for the global economy in Washington for three days starting April 22. Speculation that China may scrap the yuan’s peg to the dollar intensified this month after Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner delayed a report that could brand the nation a currency manipulator.

“This meeting will be the first test by the U.S. to use a multilateral forum to press China into action on its currency,” Philip Wee, a Singapore-based senior currency economist at DBS Group Holdings Ltd. wrote in a research note yesterday.

The discussions will include a range of topics including currencies and a communiqué will be released on April 23, a U.S. Treasury Department official, who declined to be identified, said yesterday. Bank Indonesia Deputy Governor Hartadi Sarwono declined to discuss his position before the meeting and the Bank of Korea also preferred not to comment when contacted yesterday.

Giving Opinions

India will give its opinion if the issue is raised in the G20 meeting, Subbarao said. “When it is discussed we will certainly give our opinion or view on the subject,” he said.

“If China revalues the yuan, it will have a positive impact on our external sector,” Subbarao said. “If some countries manage their exchange rate and keep them artificially low, the burden of adjustment falls on some countries that do not manage their exchange rate so actively.”

China has pegged its currency at about 6.83 against the dollar since July 2008, after allowing it to rise 21 percent in the previous three years. China won’t revalue until the middle of the year when it can see evidence of sustainable growth and inflation, Win Thin, a New York-based strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. said this week. Calls for revaluation will delay the process, he said.

Twelve-month non-deliverable yuan forwards traded at 6.622, reflecting bets the currency will strengthen 3.1 percent from the spot rate. The Brazilian real has gained 28 percent against the yuan in the past year, while the rupee climbed 13 percent.

India’s Imports

India imported $14.9 billion of goods in the six months to September 2009 from China, more than double the exports from the second-ranked U.S. India shipped $3.9 billion of goods to China in the same period.

“The moment the yuan finds its true value then many of India’s exports to that country will become competitive,” said Anjay Roy, economic adviser at the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry in New Delhi. “The lopsided trade balance we have now should get corrected.”

U.S. lawmakers have urged Obama to step up pressure on China, accusing officials in Beijing of keeping the currency artificially weak to gain export advantage. Chinese President Hu Jintao told Obama on April 13 in Washington that the country wouldn’t yield to “external pressure” in deciding when to adjust the yuan.

The Chinese government will decide on the valuation of its currency and is seeking a stable yuan to control speculative capital inflows, Yao Jian, spokesman for the Ministry of Commerce, told reporters April 15.

Brazil Versus China

China boosted exports to Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay, members of the Brazil-led Mercosur trade bloc, by 7.3 percent to $4.8 billion in the first eight months of 2009 from two years earlier, while Brazilian sales to its neighbors fell 18 percent to $9.6 billion during the same period.

Chinese-made products such as tires and stereo speakers are the target of 26 Brazilian anti-dumping measures, more than any other country and nearly half of all 68 in place, according to Brazil’s Trade Ministry. Soy and iron ore accounted for 66 percent of $20 billion in Brazilian sales to China last year.

“It’s absolutely critical that China appreciate its currency to ensure equilibrium in the global economy,” said Brazil’s Meirelles.

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