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Chinese and European policymakers yesterday agreed to co-operate in preventing big exchange rate fluctuations, as the first high-level economic talks between ?Beijing and the 13-nation eurozone began.
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China¡¯s central bank said the two had expressed a willingness to ¡°take comprehensive measures to enhance structural economic adjustments, avoid big swings in currency movements and make respective contributions to an orderly adjustment of global imbalances¡±.
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While the brief statement left the nature of any action vague, it constituted progress for the Europeans in that it marked Chinese recognition of their difficulties with an ever-rising euro and an ever-expanding Chinese trade surplus.
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The statement was issued after Zhou Xiaochuan, China¡¯s central bank governor, held talks with Jean-Claude Juncker, chairman of the eurozone finance ministers¡¯ group, Joaqu¨ªn Almunia, European monetary affairs commissioner, and Jean-Claude Trichet, president of the European Central Bank.
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The Europeans were hoping to persuade their counterparts in Beijing that it would be in China¡¯s interests to rebalance its rapid economic growth from exports to domestic demand, in order to curb inflationary pressures at home and undercut protectionist sentiment in Europe.
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China¡¯s trade surplus with the EU rose 25 per cent in the first eight months of this year to €70bn ($103bn, ¡ê49bn), and some EU policymakers expect the surplus to balloon to more than double that size, generating ever louder calls from politicians for restrictions on imports.
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The EU finds itself squeezed from two sides because the euro is hitting record highs almost every week against the dollar, while also rising against the renminbi, making US exports to China cheaper than European exports.
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However, it is far from clear that the US and China would regard the weakening of the dollar and renminbi against the euro as examples of the ¡°large-scale exchange rate fluctuations¡± mentioned in the Chinese statement.
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China, which is hosting an EU-Chinese summit in Beijing today, has expressed public understanding for the eurozone¡¯s discomfort, while making it clear in private talks that it will adjust its exchange rate policies at a time and pace of its choosing
