HR-8290-119
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 611.
Sponsored by Pete Sessions (R-TX)
What it does
This bill would amend the Bretton Woods Agreements Act to require the U.S. Secretary of the Treasury to assess whether China meets three criteria related to exchange rate transparency and currency manipulation before any vote at the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to increase China's voting power. If China fails any criterion, the Secretary would be required to instruct the U.S. representative at the IMF to vote against increasing China's voting share. The President may waive this requirement by notifying Congress that the waiver serves the national interest. The bill would expire automatically seven years after enactment.
Who benefits
U.S. manufacturers and workers in industries — such as steel, aluminum, textiles, and electronics — that compete with Chinese imports and argue they are harmed by an undervalued Chinese yuan. Domestic exporters who contend currency manipulation reduces their competitiveness in global markets. Members of Congress seeking greater legislative oversight of U.S. international financial diplomacy. Countries that compete with China for export markets and would benefit from a more level playing field. IMF member nations that favor greater transparency in exchange rate reporting.
Who is hurt
U.S. companies with significant supply chains or sales operations in China that could face diplomatic or economic retaliation. Multinational financial institutions and investors who benefit from stable U.S.-China financial relations. The executive branch, which would lose some flexibility in managing IMF diplomacy as a tool of broader foreign policy. IMF institutional effectiveness could be reduced if U.S. opposition blocks quota realignments that reflect China's actual share of the global economy. American consumers who benefit from lower-priced Chinese goods enabled by current exchange rate conditions.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that China has a documented history of managing its currency to gain trade advantages — the U.S. Treasury formally designated China a currency manipulator in 2019 — and that allowing China's IMF voting power to grow without accountability rewards that behavior. They contend that Congress has a constitutional role in overseeing U.S. participation in international financial institutions and that this bill simply ensures U.S. votes at the IMF reflect American economic interests. The seven-year sunset and presidential waiver provision, they argue, preserve enough executive flexibility while establishing a meaningful accountability mechanism.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that tying U.S. IMF votes to bilateral currency assessments politicizes a multilateral institution designed to operate on shared technical standards, potentially undermining U.S. credibility and leadership within the IMF. They contend that China's IMF quota should reflect its share of the global economy — currently the world's second largest — and that blocking quota adjustments could push China toward alternative financial institutions like the New Development Bank, reducing U.S. influence over global financial governance. Critics also note that the Treasury's currency manipulation determinations are inherently political, making the bill's criteria less objective than they appear.