Trump complains again of currency manipulation before Xi dinner
"The currency manipulation from some countries is so intense, so bad,” Trump said.

The day before Donald Trump sat down to negotiate with China, the US President reminded the world of one key economic complaint: currency manipulation.
Early on Friday in Buenos Aires, Trump signed what he called a “model” trade agreement with the presidents of Mexico and Canada. He said the new North American deal “dramatically raised standards for combating unfair trade practices confronting massive subsidies for state owned enterprises and currency manipulation that hurt workers in all three of our countries.”
“The currency manipulation from some countries is so intense, so bad,” Trump said at the signing, without naming China specifically.
Trump has repeatedly criticized China as a currency manipulator in tweets. But Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has refrained from officially designating the nation as a manipulator. In October he issued a report declaring that the US is “closely watching” Beijing for its lack of currency transparency amid a depreciation of the yuan. Treasury’s semi-annual report was seen as a final warning shot at China.
The trade conflict between the world’s two largest economies has seen the onshore yuan slump about 6 per cent against the greenback this year, raising speculation that China has deliberately weakened its currency and drawing Trump’s ire. A weaker yuan lessens the impact of US tariffs on Chinese exporters.
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