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Japan tells Geithner Tokyo supports strong dollar
Posted: 11 November 2009 0024 hrs

  US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner (L) meets his Japanese counterpart Hirohisa Fujii in Tokyo.
 
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TOKYO: Japan's finance minister told visiting US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner on Tuesday that Tokyo supported Washington's strong dollar policy, during talks on the global economy.

"A strong dollar policy is correct," Japanese Finance Minister Hirohisa Fujii said he had told Geithner.

The current weakness of the greenback reflects US economic conditions, Fujii told reporters.

He also briefed Geithner on plans by Japan's new centre-left government to stimulate domestic demand to boost the export-dependent economy.

US officials ritually express their backing for a "strong dollar" but have done nothing to arrest its slide, which many see as necessary to reduce the big US trade deficit and support struggling American exporters.

The dollar has plunged about 15 percent against a basket of six other major currencies from a peak earlier this year as investors chase higher yields outside of the United States.

The dollar's weakness against the yen has taken a heavy toll on Japanese exporters.

Geithner arrived in Japan on Tuesday for a two-day stop on his way to a meeting of finance chiefs from member nations of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum on Thursday in Singapore.

The talks will follow a weekend G20 meeting in Scotland where financial ministers discussed ways to support a fragile global economic recovery, although a split emerged over a British proposal to tax financial transactions.

The APEC finance chiefs are expected to pledge to maintain stimulus spending efforts for now, according to a draft communique obtained by AFP on Tuesday.

"We agree that the solution is not to rush to fiscal tightening, especially while credit markets are still recovering," the draft text said.

Fujii, a 77-year-old former bureaucrat who has railed against wasteful public spending and signalled tolerance for a strong yen, was appointed finance minister in September by the new centre-left Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama.

He skipped the Scotland meeting at the weekend and is also expected to miss the APEC gathering to concentrate on domestic political affairs. - AFP/de

 


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