Manipulator
in sentence
58 examples of Manipulator in a sentence
Unlike in the past – and despite the Trump administration’s view of China as an unreformed currency
manipulator
– a weak renminbi has more costs than benefits for China.
Then the US established permanent normal trade relations with China and refused to brand its government a currency
manipulator.
The Trump administration could yet label China a currency manipulator, rebuking it for keeping its exchange rate artificially low.
Labeling China a currency
manipulator
would be the economic-policy equivalent of launching 59 cruise missiles at an isolated air base in Syria.
This calming of the diplomatic atmosphere was helped considerably by US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner delaying hisreport to Congress on whether or not China is a currency
manipulator.
To be sure, one might argue that as long as the ECB does not intervene directly by purchasing foreign-currency assets, the eurozone does not qualify as a currency
manipulator.
Zeng is a master
manipulator
who, given the chance, would run circles around the cautious Hu.
Likewise, Trump backed down on his oft-repeated promise that he would name China a currency
manipulator
as soon as he took office.
And, while a handful of “rogue traders” (and, most recently, one Libor manipulator) have ended up in prison, it would be overly optimistic to conclude that the punishment has been sufficient to transform bank culture.
In one recent tweet, he asked why he should label China a currency manipulator, when the Chinese are working with the US to rein in North Korea.
After all, he has dropped many other campaign pledges, including (fortunately) his oft-repeated vow to label China a currency
manipulator
“on day one” of his administration.
If he follows through on his promises and, say, officially labels China a currency
manipulator
or imposes higher import tariffs, the short-run consequences – including a trade war – could be serious.
Because China currently meets only the third condition, it is not a currency
manipulator
under US law (that did not stop the Trump administration from labeling the country one in August).
He is trying to slow or stop China’s growth by closing US markets to Chinese exports, restricting the sale of US technologies to Chinese companies, and declaring China a currency
manipulator.
Financial markets tumbled, US President Donald Trump’s administration formally labeled China a currency manipulator, and fears of a new currency war spread like wildfire.
By immediately declaring China a currency manipulator, the US succeeded only in hardening positions on both sides.
Yet Trump’s fraud claims could be part of a psychological strategy, deftly executed by a master
manipulator.
The sudden decision to label China a currency manipulator, despite it not meeting the criteria, is yet another case of Trump heedlessly running roughshod over established norms, professional expertise, the long-term credibility of US institutions, and even the plain meaning of the law.
The real significance of the US decision to label China a currency manipulator, therefore, is that it represents a further escalation of the two countries’ avoidable trade war.
If the renminbi comes under devaluation pressure and the People’s Bank of China does not intervene to stabilize its value against the US dollar – as it should not – the US may label China as a currency
manipulator.
But that hasn’t stopped President Donald Trump’s administration from (mis)labeling China a currency
manipulator.
A country is considered to be a currency
manipulator
if its monetary authority intervenes to engineer a devaluation, in order to boost the global competitiveness of its exports.
Yet, even if China’s interventions are designed to curb depreciation, the Trump administration may nonetheless use them to justify the currency
manipulator
designation.
While investors were still digesting the full significance of this event, US President Donald Trump’s administration startled the market by labeling China a “currency manipulator.”
The designation is absurd, to say the least, because China doesn’t meet the US government’s own criteria for being a currency
manipulator.
In the event, the US declared China a currency
manipulator
anyway, only to remove the designation as a part of the “phase one” trade deal agreed in January.
The first potential shock stems from the Sino-American trade and currency war, which escalated earlier this month when US President Donald Trump’s administration threatened additional tariffs on Chinese exports, and formally labeled China a currency
manipulator.
As to the receiver and manipulator, they were very simple.
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