HR-692-119
Received in the Senate and Read twice and referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations.
Sponsored by Daniel Meuser (R-PA)
What it does
This bill would require the Secretary of the Treasury to instruct the U.S. Executive Director at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to use the U.S. vote and voice to advocate for greater transparency in China's exchange rate policies, stronger IMF surveillance of China's currency practices, and consideration of China's compliance record when evaluating its voting share at the IMF. The bill would automatically expire either 30 days after China is certified as substantially compliant with IMF exchange rate obligations, or after 7 years, whichever comes first.
Who benefits
U.S. manufacturers and workers in industries that compete with Chinese imports, who may benefit if greater transparency reveals and deters currency undervaluation. U.S. exporters whose goods compete in global markets affected by exchange rate imbalances. Other IMF member nations that have called for greater Chinese monetary transparency. Domestic financial institutions and investors who would gain clearer information about Chinese currency markets. Economists and researchers who study international monetary policy.
Who is hurt
Chinese government and state-owned enterprises that currently benefit from opacity in currency management. U.S. financial firms with significant operations in China that could face diplomatic friction. Multinational companies with complex supply chains tied to Chinese currency stability who prefer predictability over scrutiny. U.S. importers and retailers of Chinese goods who benefit from current pricing structures. IMF institutional staff who may face increased political pressure in their surveillance role.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the U.S. Treasury's own 2022 report found China to be "an outlier among major economies" in its lack of exchange rate transparency, complicating the ability of the U.S. and IMF to assess whether China is manipulating its currency. They contend that directing the U.S. IMF representative to advocate for transparency is a measured, multilateral approach that works within existing international institutions and China's own IMF treaty commitments under Articles IV and VIII, rather than imposing unilateral sanctions.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that this bill is largely symbolic — it directs advocacy, not binding action — and that the IMF already has surveillance authority under Article IV that China has resisted for years, meaning U.S. advocacy alone is unlikely to change Chinese behavior. They contend that tying China's IMF voting share to its compliance record could be seen as weaponizing a multilateral institution for bilateral political purposes, potentially undermining U.S. credibility with other IMF members and provoking retaliatory diplomatic friction that harms broader economic negotiations.