精品处破在线播放,亚洲高清无码黄免费,欧美视频一区二区三区四区,欧美v亚洲v日韩v最新在线

Home / News Type Content Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read | Comment
US Senators Drop Bill to Impose Chinese Tariffs
Adjust font size:

Two US senators decided on Friday to drop their controversial bill to impose tariffs on Chinese imports, following a meeting with US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, who urged them to delay a vote on the bill.

 

Senators Charles Schumer (D-New York) and Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina) agreed to drop their legislation threatening to levy tariffs on imports from China if Beijing refused to revalue the yuan, claiming the currency was being "artificially depressed" to keep Chinese products cheap on world markets. However, both men said a new measure would be worked on next year to pressure China on the currency issue.

 

"It's a win for the Treasury Secretary," Nicholas Lardy, a fellow at the Institute for International Economics in Washington and an expert on China, was quoted by Bloomberg as saying.

 

Lardy also said that the Chinese government understood that Schumer's bill, which would have imposed tariffs of 27.5 percent on Chinese imports, would never become law. His claim was echoed on the other side of the Pacific as Han Meng, economist with the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences said: "Such a bill, if passed, would result in a lose-lose situation for China and the United States."

 

Strong opposition to the bill from US business circles was clear evidence that the proposal was not in the interests of the US, said Han.

 

A final death blow to the bill is that the House of Representatives?is not considering passing such legislation, a fact acknowledged by Senators Schumer and Graham.

 

China's currency, the renminbi, has appreciated almost 5 percent since its revaluation last July, when China ended its decade-long direct peg to the US dollar and switched to a managed floating exchange rate regime. Its daily benchmark, or the central parity rate for the US dollar, was 7.9087 yuan on Friday.

 

(China Daily September 30, 2006)

Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
Comment
Pet Name
Anonymous
China Archives
Related >>
- China Could Become Third Largest Export Market of US
- Proposed US Export Controls Would 'Stifle Business'
- Business Council Opposes Forced Appreciation of Renminbi
- US Treasury Secretary: US and China Prosperity Linked
- US Senators' China Tariff Proposal Condemned
Most Viewed >>
- World's longest sea-spanning bridge to open
- Yao out for season with stress fracture in left foot
- 141 seriously polluting products blacklisted
- China starts excavation for world's first 3G nuclear plant
- Irresponsible remarks on Hu Jia case opposed 
- 'The China Riddle'
- China, US agree to step up constructive,cooperative relations
- FIT World Congress: translators on track
- Christianity popular in Tang Dynasty
- Factory fire kills 15, injures 3 in Shenzhen

Product Directory
China Search
Country Search
Hot Buys