Beijing turns to currency to cool inflation

BEIJING—Surging inflation that helped trigger protests in Shanghai is prompting China’s leaders to turn to a tool they long resisted: speeding up the rise of the country’s tightly controlled currency.

Rising prices are a political threat to China’s communist leaders and they have declared taming inflation their priority.

But they suffered a setback in March, when a double-digit jump in food costs pushed inflation to a 32-month high of 5.4 percent. That was despite four interest rate hikes since October, curbs on bank lending and government orders to producers to hold down price increases.

How fast to let the yuan gain is a high-stakes balancing act. A stronger yuan could help ease inflation by making oil and other imports cheaper.

But Beijing also worries that a rising yuan might hurt exports and lead to job losses and unrest, so any gains will likely still be too small for Washington and other critics that say an undervalued yuan is swelling China’s trade surplus.

“Policymakers have sent a clear message that currency appreciation will be used as a tool to counter imported inflation” due to near-record global prices for oil and other commodities, said Credit Agricole CIB economist Dariusz Kowalczyk.

At a Cabinet meeting this month, Premier Wen Jiabao said the government would “increase the flexibility of the yuan’s exchange rate” to ease price pressures, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.

Wen, China’s top economic official, gave no details or a target for the yuan’s value. But such a promise from a senior leader is rare and reflected rising official urgency, especially after Beijing has rebuffed demands by Washington and others to ease currency controls.

In March, Wen had publicly rejected a rapid rise in the yuan, saying at a news conference Beijing had to consider the impact on Chinese companies and jobs.

On Friday, the central bank set the yuan’s exchange rate at 6.49 to the US dollar — its highest official level since a currency revaluation in 2005.

Economists blame China’s inflation on the dual pressures of consumer demand that is outstripping food supplies and a bank lending boom they say Beijing allowed to run too long after it helped the country rebound quickly from the 2008 global crisis.

Attempts at price controls, subsidies for the poor and orders to local leaders to guarantee adequate vegetable supplies have had mixed results.

In Shanghai, self-employed drivers who are being squeezed by higher living costs erupted in frustration at a rise in state-set fuel prices and new fees charged by warehouse owners and at China’s busiest port.

Hundreds of drivers halted work for three days starting April 20, disrupting cargo shipments. Some freight companies suspended business for fear of being attacked by protesters. Officials responded by lowering some fees.

“Living costs are higher but freight rates are the same, so truckers or company owners earn less,” said Xie Qiang, owner of a Shanghai trucking company.

Similar pressures last year ignited a wave of strikes across China by factory workers whose wages were frozen after the 2008 crisis and faced rising living costs. Japanese automakers and some other facilities were temporarily idled.

Beijing usually prohibits strikes but went along with last year’s demands, possibly to put more money in workers’ pockets as part of sweeping efforts to reduce reliance on exports by promoting consumer spending.

The government has clamped down on lending but analysts say it will be months before the effects of that and other curbs are felt. They say inflation should climb further through at least midyear before easing.

Beijing also is struggling to control an overheated economy that expanded by a rapid 9.7 percent in the first quarter of this year, barely slowing from the previous quarter despite Beijing’s efforts to steer growth to a sustainable level after 2010’s double-digit gains.

The World Bank is forecasting 9.3 percent growth this year, well above the 8 percent target announced by Wen in March.

“That growth is being generated by the same policies that are fueling inflation. So what looks like a great number applies to a very stressful economic situation,” said Patrick Chovanec, an associate professor at Tsinghua University’s School of Economics and Management in Beijing.

Beijing broke the yuan’s direct link to the dollar in 2005 and allowed the currency to rise gradually after that.

It was frozen again following the 2008 crisis to help Chinese exporters compete abroad after a plunge in global demand wiped out millions of factory jobs. Beijing promised more flexibility again last June but the US government says gains since then have been too small.

Analysts say even a faster rise for the yuan will be gradual — perhaps a 5 percent gain against the dollar this year instead of the 3 percent previously forecast. The yuan has risen about 1.5 percent this year, after gaining 3.6 percent in 2010.

“It wouldn’t be a major move,” said Kowalczyk. “It will not placate the US government, but at least it will go some way to showing that China is listening.”

US manufacturers say the yuan is undervalued by up to 40 percent, giving China’s exporters an unfair price advantage and hurting foreign competitors. Some American lawmakers want punitive tariffs on Chinese imports to force Beijing to take action.

Beijing also has resorted to the blunt tool of freezing prices of electricity and some other basic goods, but that is starting to backfire.

In the southeast, export regions are suffering power shortages that force factories to suspend production every other day. Power companies are squeezed between low state-set rates and high gas and coal prices, so they have avoided adding more generating capacity despite double-digit annual increases in demand.

“At the moment it is not very attractive to build an electricity plant in China and some regions have a shortage of electricity,” said Louis Kuijs, a World Bank economist in Beijing. “At some point these administrative prices must be raised.”

Chinese leaders have ordered local authorities to ensure adequate supplies of vegetables in markets and to pay subsidies to poor families.

In a possible effort to deflect criticism, it has imposed fines on retailers who it said cheated shoppers by overstating the size of price cuts on discounted items.

“I think you should have confidence in the Chinese government’s capability in managing vegetable prices well,” said a deputy commerce minister, Fu Ziying, at a news conference this week. He gave no time frame for when inflation might subside.

Associated Press writer Gillian Wong and AP researcher Fu Ting contributed to this report.

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