United States Treasury Secretary, Steven Mnuchin welcomed a weaker dollar, sending the greenback reeling and underlining concerns that U.S. President Donald Trump is stepping up his attack on China and other big trading partners.
Mnuchin, who made the remark, said it was part of Trump’s America First agenda.
He said it was seen by markets as a departure from traditional U.S. currency policy, at the World Economic Forum in Davos, where other world leaders have made swipes at what they see as U.S. protectionism.
Tough U.S. talk on trade, on the eve of Trump’s arrival at the Swiss ski resort on Thursday, contrasted sharply with a chorus of government leaders, from India and Brazil to Germany and Canada, who urged cooperation and criticized protectionism.
“Obviously a weaker dollar is good for us as it relates to trade and opportunities,” Mnuchin said at news briefing.
Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross later told CNBC that his colleague was “not advocating for a weaker dollar”, but he also struck a combative tone.
Asked if he was concerned about sparking a trade war, Ross said: ”Trade war has been in place for quite a little while, the difference is the U.S. troops are now coming to the ramparts.”
Pressed about Mnuchin’s remarks, White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said at a daily briefing in Washington: “We believe in a free-floating currency. The president has always believed in that.”
“We have … a very stable dollar, in large part due to how well the U.S. economy is doing right now,” she added.
The annual Davos gathering of world leaders, chief executives and non-governmental agencies has long embraced globalisation, free trade and liberal values.
Trump, the first sitting U.S. president to attend the forum since Bill Clinton in 2000, has questioned that world view.
He has threatened to withdraw from the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), disavowed the global climate change accord and criticized institutions such as the United Nations and NATO.
With Trump expected to address the summit on Friday, world leaders here have raised concerns about a return to greater economic protectionism.
Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni, asked what his message to Trump was, offered a defense of multilateral cooperation and warned against undermining that.
Germany’s Angela Merkel, in an address to the forum, evoked the two World Wars and questioned whether the world had learned from them.
French President Emmanuel Macron opened his well-attended speech by joking that the conference “obviously and fortunately didn’t invite anyone skeptical” about global warming.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Canada’s Justin Trudeau and Brazilian President Michel Temer have also embraced the idea of globalisation and cooperation.
Mnuchin defended Trump’s agenda.
“This is about an America First agenda. But America First does mean working with the rest of the world,” Mnuchin said.
“It just means that President Trump is looking out for American workers and American interests no different than he expects other leaders would look out for their own.”
Ross said U.S. trade actions were provoked by “inappropriate behavior on the part of our trading counterparties”. (Reuters/NAN)
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