Japan official urges caution over Trump's complaint on strong dollar

Reuters  |  BUENOS AIRES 

By Scott Squires

The U.S. dollar fell the most in three weeks on Friday against a basket of six major currencies after Trump complained again about the greenback's strength and about Federal Reserve interest rate rises.

The also lamented the strength of the dollar and accused the and of manipulating their currencies.

Trump is not trying to influence currency markets, Treasury has said, reiterating that a strong U.S. dollar reflects a strong U.S. economy and is in the United States' long-term interest.

"This time, the targets are and the But the content of criticism is the same so we need to be careful," the Japanese told reporters on the sidelines of a meeting in the capital.

"If necessary, we may need to remind the about our past discussions on monetary policy" that is not targeting currencies but domestic policy objectives, he added.

The has pursued an aggressive monetary stimulus to achieve its elusive 2 percent inflation target. Despite five years of massive money printing, inflation has struggled to accelerate but the yen has steadily weakened.

That could make vulnerable to criticism of being a currency manipulator as it remains on the U.S. Treasury's monitoring list.

is the primary target, however, as accounts for the "bulk of the U.S. trade deficit", Japanese told reporters on the sidelines of the meeting of and central

Rising trade tension has fuelled Japan's concerns over currency volatility, which could prompt an appreciation in the safe-haven yen and threaten its export-reliant economy.

Aso underscored the need to boost global growth through free and fair trade, saying no country would benefit from pursuing inward-looking policy through protectionist measures.

"Excessive current account imbalances should be resolved through multilateral, not bilateral, framework," Aso added.

"The matter should be dealt with through macroeconomic policy and structural reform by rebalancing savings and investments, instead of imposing tariffs."

Aso voiced concerns at the that acceleration of monetary policy normalisation in advanced economies could weaken emerging market currencies and cause capital outflows from countries such as China.

At the meeting, Japan asked China for clarification of its yuan currency policy, seeking factors behind its depreciation.

(Reporting by in Buenos Aires; Writing by in Tokyo; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, July 22 2018. 09:16 IST