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US Treasury Dept. Efforts Move Exchange Rate by 67%! Melamine in the Pet Food, Trade Talks and More

All the news that fits, we print:

"The People’s Bank of China said in a statement posted on its Web site that it would allow the currency, known as the yuan or renminbi, to rise or fall up to 0.5 percent in each day’s trading. The current daily limit is 0.3 percent."

WOW!

***

UPDATE (May 19, 2007): Here we go again!

"There was hope that broader cooperation was on the way, but a lot has changed in a few months. On the American side, with Democrats in control of Congress and a presidential campaign gearing up, there's a growing impatience with the pace of economic reform in China and a slew of anti-Chinese trade bills pending."

Does Miss Cha mean that under the Republicans progress could have been made?

"In recent months, official rhetoric on U.S.-China trade has grown increasingly hostile."

Rhetoric is an empty tide that ebbs and flows between China and the U.S. For all the hot air, the Americans have been entirely unwilling or incapable of acting. As I have written for years, empty American threats prove worthless in the face of Chinese political administrators who are just as canny and talented (or stupid incompetent, as the case may be). The money continues to roll in. How can the Chinese be expected to step in and stop it?

Now, however, ammunition has passed up to the front lines. The melamine-in-the-pet-food scandal (see my post and podcast) has already galvanized the American consumer to avoid Chinese food products, and the FDA's response appears to be earnest. Will an American negotiator in a position of substantial authority make the link between the food impurities case and the trade war at large?

UPDATE (May 20, 2007): This morning's Washington Post picks up on this thread. The strong language of this front-page piece made me stutter for a second - I thought it was an editorial!

For years, U.S. inspection records show, China has flooded the United States with foods unfit for human consumption. And for years, FDA inspectors have simply returned to Chinese importers the small portion of those products they caught -- many of which turned up at U.S. borders again, making a second or third attempt at entry.
Now the confluence of two events -- the highly publicized contamination of U.S. chicken, pork and fish with tainted Chinese pet food ingredients and this week's resumption of high-level economic and trade talks with China -- has activists and members of Congress demanding that the United States tell China it is fed up.

Chinese food imports are a serious public health concern. Some have begun to see the extraordinary value of the pet food scandal in the context of trade negotiations. Let us hope the American negotiators are hammering away at it with the clobberingest mallet they can find.

UPDATE (May 21, 2007): Bloomberg:

``Paulson, as somebody who understood China, was trying to reach a conciliatory approach,'' says Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, an economics professor at Columbia University in New York. ``The question is, has the political pressure taken away his freedom to move?''

With respect to Mr. Stiglitz, that is not the question. Rather, it is the validity of conciliation in negotiation. Conciliation is ineffective with Chinese, unless paired with its subtle black sheep twin brother, Threat.

And neither can be made of straw -- they will both go up in flame. As we've written in the past, one hand must caress while the other is held ready to strike.

Comments (3)

Two things that are amazing about the melamine incident: First, that it had not happened previously, and second, that more has not been said about the apparent abdication of responsibility by the American importer(s). The press keeps talking about China and the FDA, but we lawyers keep wondering about liability for the importers. All I can say is that Americans importing anything from China had better be really careful next time around because saying, "I didn't know" is not going to cut it. I predict there will be a case soon where someone gets hurt and seeks punitive damages against the US company that didn't do any real quality control or testing.

Bob [TypeKey Profile Page]:

I can't help but be reminded of two little grapes that brought down a totalitarian regime in Chile.

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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on May 18, 2007 8:13 PM.

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