China is doing its best to move toward a freely traded currency, a central 
bank official said, appealing for understanding from two US senators who are 
threatening trade sanctions unless the yuan's value rises. 
 
 
   Wu Xiaoling, 
 vice governor of the People's Bank of China [newsphoto/file] 
  | 
``They should understand that China is doing 
its best,'' Wu Xiaoling, vice governor of the People's Bank of China, told 
reporters in Beijing Saturday ahead of next week's visit by senators Lindsey 
Graham and Charles Schumer. ``China's economic restructuring needs a process.'' 
Graham, a Republican from South Carolina, and Schumer, a Democrat from New 
York, are sponsoring legislation that would impose tariffs on Chinese imports 
unless the yuan is allowed to strengthen. The senators will meet Chinese 
officials in Beijing and Shanghai before deciding whether to proceed with a vote 
on their bill by March 31. 
The yuan this 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. China is under pressure to let the yuan trade more freely 
before the U.S. Treasury's semiannual report on global currency manipulation and 
President Hu Jintao's visit to the U.S. next month. 
The yuan's ``flexibility is increasing gradually,'' Wu said in a speech to a 
banking conference today. The central bank will improve the exchange-rate 
mechanism `` actively and progressively'' and ``allow market supply and demand 
to play a fundamental role in forming the exchange rate.'' 
Wen's Pledge 
U.S. lawmakers and manufacturers accuse China of keeping the yuan's value 
artificially low to spur exports. China's trade surplus tripled to a record $102 
billion last year, helping to drive economic growth of 9.9 percent, the fastest 
among the world's major economies. 
`A flexible exchange rate will help to improve the international balance of 
payments, but large-scale fluctuations will harm the stable development of the 
economy,'' Wu said. She said the central bank isn't concerned about U.S. 
pressure for faster progress toward a freely traded currency. 
China on July 21 reset the yuan's value at 8.11 to the dollar, a 2.1 percent 
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 percent against the dollar 
either side of a daily rate announced by the central bank. 
Trading Band 
The yuan, a denomination of China's currency, the renminbi, rose 0.1 percent 
to 8.0313 against the dollar at 3:30 p.m. in Shanghai Friday, bringing its gain 
for the week to 0.2 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It has 
gained almost 1 percent since the revaluation. 
The yuan's daily fluctuation exceeded 0.1 percent for the first time on March 
15, a day after Premier Wen said China will ``add more flexibility to the 
exchange rate's trading band.'' 
Wu said the central bank is studying introducing interest- rate futures and 
more foreign-exchange derivatives to give companies and financial institutions 
tools to hedge against a more volatile exchange rate. 
The central bank will also ``release reasonable demand'' in the 
foreign-exchange market while ``controlling abnormal foreign- exchange supply,'' 
she said.