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Group of 7 Says It Will Let Market Decide Currency Values | Group of 7 Says It Will Let Market Decide Currency Values |
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BRUSSELS — Seven top industrial nations, including the United States and Germany, pledged on Tuesday to let foreign exchange markets determine the value of their currencies. | |
The statement by the Group of 7 prompted relief in Japan, where policy makers have been under fire, accused of unfairly seeking to give their economy a shot in the arm by bringing down the value of the yen. The statement “properly recognizes that steps we are taking to beat deflation are not aimed at influencing currency markets,” said Taro Aso, the Japanese finance minister. | |
But a Group of 20 official said that the statement was meant to warn Japan not to manipulate its exchange rates in its efforts to lift its moribund economy, and that concerns about Japan’s policies and the prospect of competitive currency devaluation would be a chief topic at a coming Group of 20 meeting in Russia. | |
The statement and conflicting follow-ups from economic officials and finance ministries around the world caused confusion on Tuesday, with some market participants interpreting the situation as quelling fears of a so-called currency war and others interpreting it as stoking them. The yen climbed against the dollar and the euro as officials voiced their concerns about Japan’s policies. | |
In the statement, the Group of 7 nations said they would consult closely to avoid moves that could hurt stability. But they restated a commitment to market-determined exchange rates. | |
“We reaffirm that our fiscal and monetary policies have been and will remain oriented towards meeting our respective domestic objectives using domestic instruments, and that we will not target exchange rates,” the Group of 7 said in the statement, which was posted on the Web site of the Bank of England. Britain holds the rotating presidency this year. | |
Concerns had been mounting in recent weeks about the effects of an ultraloose monetary policy in Japan that has pushed the yen lower against top currencies. The yen’s weakness had also prompted talk of a so-called currency war if other parts of the world followed suit in devalution. | |
Some international economic officials have brushed off the growing accusations of unfair or competitive currency manipulation. | Some international economic officials have brushed off the growing accusations of unfair or competitive currency manipulation. |
“This increasing talk of currency wars is very much overblown,” Olivier Blanchard, the chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, said in January. “Countries have to take the right measures to get their own economies back to health.” | |
But loose monetary policy intended to increase growth often has the effect of devaluing a currency, thus making a given country’s exports more affordable and its competitors’ exports more expensive. Over the last few years, emerging market countries like Brazil have openly accused slow-growing advanced countries like the United States of unfairly pushing down the value of their currencies with their aggressive monetary policies. | |
For years, the United States has criticized export-reliant emerging economies, in particular China, over manipulating their currencies, too. | |
This week, the Obama administration said that it supported countries’ efforts to increase economic growth and lower unemployment, but not by manipulating their exchange rates. | This week, the Obama administration said that it supported countries’ efforts to increase economic growth and lower unemployment, but not by manipulating their exchange rates. |
“We support the effort to reinvigorate growth and to end inflation in Japan,” Lael Brainard, the Treasury under secretary for international affairs, said during a briefing Monday. But she emphasized that the Group of 7 had a “longstanding set of rules” committing its members to float their currencies except during rare instances of market turbulence. | |
As some officials in Japan have argued the country should push down the value of the yen, some Europeans have supported doing the same for the euro. The euro’s rise in value has become a particular concern, as it could make exports more expensive and dent growth if demand for European products falls. Those concerns prompted France to call for an exchange-rate policy. | |
On Monday, Pierre Moscovici, the French finance minister, said he wanted Europeans to present a common plan this week at the meeting of finance ministers and central bankers of the Group of 20 nations in Moscow. | |
But the head of the German Bundesbank, Jens Weidmann, said on Monday that the French initiative was a poor substitute for policy overhauls that, if adopted, would do more for growth. | |
James Kanter reported from Brussels and Annie Lowrey from Washington. | |