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China's exporters brace for stronger yuan

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1China's exporters brace for stronger yuan Empty China's exporters brace for stronger yuan Thu Apr 15, 2010 10:49 am

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Updated Thursday, April 15, 2010 11:19 am TWN, By Allison Jackson, AFP
China's exporters brace for stronger yuan
BEIJING -- Wang Shengpei runs a factory in southern China that churns out leather boots, high heels and trainers for consumers in the United States, Europe and Southeast Asia. And he is worried.

Wang is one of thousands of manufacturers across China bracing for a change in the nation's exchange rate policy, which he fears could squeeze his already razor-thin profit margins and make it harder to compete in overseas markets.

“I hope it will not rise too fast if it has to appreciate,” said Wang, chairman of Dongguan Kuari Shoes Industrial Group based in Guangdong province, the country's manufacturing hub.

“If the yuan rises by one percent, our profit margin will fall by 0.5 percent because the prices have already been set (with customers). There will be quite a big impact on the overall industry's profit margins.”

Speculation is growing that Beijing may soon let the yuan appreciate, which will make Chinese shipments of electronics, clothes and shoes more expensive, but help boost consumer spending by reducing the cost of imported products.

Export-driven China has effectively pegged the yuan to around 6.8 to the dollar since July 2008 to support manufacturers battered by the financial crisis and preserve jobs in a sector that employs tens of millions of people.

But critics say it has given Chinese manufacturers an unfair advantage by making their exports cheaper and U.S. lawmakers have been pushing for China to be labeled a “currency manipulator” — opening the door to possible sanctions.

U.S. President Barack Obama pushed Chinese President Hu Jintao on the issue during their talks in Washington this week, saying the yuan was “undervalued,” but Beijing has repeatedly said it will not bow to foreign pressure.

The impact of a stronger currency on China's exporters has weighed heavily on policymakers who have signalled in recent weeks that a change in policy could be in the offing. The Asian nation overtook Germany in 2009 to become the world's biggest exporter after overseas shipments reached US$1.2 trillion.

China, has reportedly been testing the potential impact of a strong yuan on its labour-intensive manufacturing sector.

Initial results show that each percentage point rise in the value of the yuan erodes one percentage point in exporters' profit margins, which average between three to five percent, state media has said.

China made its currency a little more flexible in 2005, allowing the yuan to appreciate about 20 percent against the dollar. But when the global financial crisis erupted in 2008, it repegged the currency to prop up Chinese exports.

Economists say a strong yuan is essential if China wants to achieve its goal of reducing its heavy reliance on exports and boosting private consumption as a driver of the world's third-largest economy.

“Exporters will suffer from a stronger currency,” said Ben Simpfendorfer, an economist at Royal Bank of Scotland in Hong Kong.

“But currency appreciation will also force the pace of structural adjustment in the low value-added export sector, which is a necessary part of domestic rebalancing.”

The exchange rate policy has propped up poor performing exporters at the expense of the broader economy, said Patrick Chovanec, an economics professor at Tsinghua University in Beijing. “It's important to ask why exporters are currently doing well or remaining in business. Many of them can only do so because they're able to exchange the dollars they earn for yuan at the peg,” Chovanec told AFP.

“That's great for exporters but the central bank has to buy all those dollars at the peg, invest them, and neutralize the inflationary effect. That's a significant burden.”

Faced with the threat of smaller profit margins, exporters will need to raise prices and hold wages steady to cope with the stronger currency, said Wang.

But he admitted that would not be easy.

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