Brainard Faces China Questions If Biden Picks Her for Treasury

Lael Brainard may face scrutiny over her dovish comments about China as a top Obama administration official if President-elect Joe Biden chooses her to be Treasury Secretary, but people familiar with her work said she took a more aggressive approach in private.

Now, as the Federal Reserve governor emerges as a leading candidate for the post, her past remarks risk painting her as weak on Beijing -- a potential vulnerability in a political climate that has become more adversarial, fueled by growing trade imbalances and President Donald Trump’s more combative approach to China.

Senators from both parties -- who would vote on her confirmation if Biden selects her -- have supported a forceful stance against China on issues ranging from trade to human rights to military expansionism.

During her time as Treasury’s undersecretary of international affairs under President Barack Obama, Brainard pushed behind-the-scenes to label China a currency manipulator, former colleagues say. Her boss at the time, then-Secretary Tim Geithner, ultimately rejected her advice, and Brainard backed the administration’s decision in public.

While at Treasury, Brainard boasted that the administration had made “measurable gains” in U.S. exports to China without “undue drama” -- comments that now strike a contrast with Trump’s tariff wars with Beijing.

“We have pursued our agenda with China in a way that creates predictability and clarity, pursuing areas of cooperation even as we press to resolve problems,” she said in a 2012 speech. Still, she noted that the U.S. would continue to urge China to “avoid persistent exchange rate misalignment, and refrain from competitive devaluation.”

As Treasury’s top diplomat from 2010 to 2013, Brainard never publicly expressed discontent with the administration’s China policy.