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The United States called on China on Friday to allow its currency to trade more flexibly as the world's biggest economic powers gathered for talks on global imbalances and a range of pressing economic concerns.
US Deputy Treasury Secretary Robert Kimmitt, in a briefing ahead of Group of 20 (G20) talks due to begin on Saturday, said the United States also needs to do its part to fix trade imbalances, saying it needed to raise savings rates.
But Kimmitt painted an otherwise upbeat picture of the US economy at a time when officials from many other countries, which depend on the United States as a vital export market, have voiced increasing concern about a possible slowdown in growth.
"Let me say this about the US economy, I think it is solid in the near and mid-term. There has been some slowdown because of the housing market but inflation is low and job creation is good," Kimmitt told reporters.
Finance ministers and central bankers from the G20 countries were due to hold talks on a wide range of economic issues, including the Chinese yuan, energy and minerals security and the need for more progress on trade liberalisation.
Kimmitt said Washington's contribution to evening global macroeconomic imbalances would be to encourage Americans to increase their savings while the government tackled its trade deficit with the rest of the world.
But China, which has allowed only a slow and limited increase in the yuan's value since Beijing unshackled the currency from the US dollar in July 2005, needed to move more swiftly, Kimmitt said.
"We believe the Chinese need to accelerate their moves on foreign exchange rates," he said. "I will be meeting with the Chinese central bank governor and I expect that issue (foreign exchange flexibility) will come up." Treasurer Peter Costello, from host country Australia, said the inflation outlook and its implications for monetary policy around the world would be a major topic for the G20, which draws together industrialised and developing countries.
"The global economy will be a key issue. Global inflation prospects will be discussed, the monetary policy response - not just in Australia but around the world - where central bankers around the world see monetary policy going," Costello told reporters.
The meeting will bring together officials from a diverse group of countries, including the United States, China, Saudi Arabia, South Africa and Indonesia.
Costello said it was natural that issues relating to the Chinese yuan would be brought up at such a meeting of finance ministers and central bankers. "But it has to be done delicately. Countries don't generally respond to lectures from other countries," Costello said.
"But in my experience these issues quite frequently come up and I'd be surprised if someone didn't raise it." While Britain is pressing for global warming issues to be discussed at the meeting, Costello said emission questions would come up in the context of energy pricing
"We won't be negotiating a Kyoto-type agreement here," Costello said. Two helicopters hovered over downtown Melbourne and streets were blocked off around the site of the meeting ahead of expected demonstrations.

Copyright Reuters, 2006

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