Central bank officials have reaffirmed China's position of gradually moving 
towards a freely traded currency, responding to two US senators who are 
threatening trade sanctions unless the yuan's value rises. 
Wu Xiaoling, a deputy governor of the People's Bank of China, said on 
Saturday that China was doing its best and that it would trust market forces to 
gradually let the currency move more freely.
"There will be no wide fluctuation of foreign exchange rates, because it may 
harm the steady development of the country's economy," Wu said. 
"The yuan's flexibility is increasing gradually and we will allow market 
supply and demand to play a fundamental role in forming the exchange rate."
US senators Charles Schumer and Lindsey Graham will head to Beijing this week 
to hear first-hand about what China is doing about its currency, before making a 
final decision on a bill threatening the country with a 27.5 per cent import 
tariff. 
The senators will meet Chinese officials in Beijing and Shanghai before 
deciding whether to proceed with a vote on their bill by March 31.
Previously, central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan had claimed that China would 
not bow to pressure from the US to bring forward its timetable for yuan 
flexibility, according to a Bloomberg report on March 11. 
The yuan last week had its biggest weekly gain against the dollar since the 
government scrapped a decade-old peg in July after Premier Wen Jiabao promised 
more flexibility. It has gained almost 1 per cent since the revaluation.
China is also under pressure to let the yuan trade more freely before the US 
Treasury's semi-annual report on global currency manipulation and President Hu 
Jintao's visit to the US next month.
Wu pointed out that there would be no link between President Hu's visit and 
the change of China's policy on the yuan's value.
"We will trust market means," she said. "I want the public to pay more 
attention to the development of Chinese enterprises rather than the slight rise 
and fall of the daily exchange rate."
Wu made the comments at a financial forum held in Beijing on Saturday. 
The deputy governor said in a speech that China is in a continuous effort to 
reduce the imbalances in external payments and make adjustments to its foreign 
exchange policy of relaxed inflows combined with strict outflows. 
She said this was the source of excessive increases in foreign exchange 
reserves. 
Wu said that China would continue to promote overseas investment as an 
effective way to balance its currencies. 
Chinese companies spent more than US$6 billion abroad in 2005 as the 
government encouraged firms to "go forth" in search of natural resources and 
markets.
"China will also introduce more advanced financial products including forward 
interest rate agreements and currency derivatives to hedge the risks that it may 
encounter in a freer interest and exchange rate market," Wu said.
Another major job in the central bank's 2006 schedule, according to Wu, is to 
continue strengthening its efforts to reduce the yuan's excessive liquidity in 
the banking system, caused by an abundant foreign currency reserve. 
On July 21 last year, China reset the yuan's value at 8.11 to the dollar, a 
2.1 per cent appreciation from the pegged level where it had been held since 
1995, and linked its value to a basket of currencies including the euro and yen. 
Under the system, the yuan is allowed to rise or fall 0.3 per cent against the 
dollar either side of a daily rate announced by the central bank.
US lawmakers and manufacturers have accused China of keeping the yuan's value 
artificially low to spur exports. China's trade surplus tripled to a record 
US$102 billion last year, helping to drive economic growth of 9.9 per cent.
(China Daily 03/20/2006 page3)