BEIJING - China on Monday said it has no
intention to spur exports through competitive devaluation of its currency,
rejecting the United States' accusations of manipulating the exchange rate of
the yuan.
"The yuan's exchange rate is mainly determined by market supply and demand," Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Geng Shuang said at a press briefing
"The yuan's exchange rate is mainly determined by market supply and demand," Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Geng Shuang said at a press briefing. "It floats in both ways, which means there are ups and downs."
READ MORE: China sets yuan midpoint at weakest in a year
Currently, the good fundamentals of China's economy provide strong
support for the exchange rate of the yuan to remain generally stable.
US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said last week the United States was
monitoring the recent weakness in China's currency yuan and would review whether
it had been manipulated.
"As for the United States willfully igniting a
trade war, China remains resolute and clear in its stance that it does not want
a trade war, but is not afraid of and will fight one when necessary," Geng said.
The US has threatened to impose tariffs on goods imported from China worth more than US$500 billion.
"Threats and intimidation will
never work on China. We are capable of and confident in safeguarding the
interests of the Chinese people," said the spokesperson.
He also said,
"we advise the United States to remain calm and handle and solve related issues
with a rational attitude."
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