Wages of Neoliberalism
Part II: The
US-China Trade Imbalance
By
Henry C.K. Liu
Part I: Core Contradcitions
This article appeared in AToL
on April 1, 2006
Rising US trade deficit with China has
generated much heat
but little light about unfair Chinese trade practices.
While sensationalized reports over DVD
copyright violations are highlighted by Hollywood special interests in
the
popular media to draw public attention and in the halls of Congress to
lobby
for countervailing trade legislation against China, the validity of
much of the
complaints of unfair trade does not survive reality checks with actual
macro
data. It is similar to Wal-Mart complaining about loss from shoplifting
while
raking in obscene profit from shoppers at the expense of its own
workers and
those of its suppliers overseas. Of course shoplifters deserved to be
punished,
but it is not a valid excuse for Wal-Mart’s global low-wage policy.
In 1950, the US
exported $11.4 billion of goods and services
and imported $12.7 billion, with a foreign trade total of $24.1
billion,
constituting a mere 7.3% of a GDP of $329 billion. There was no trade
with
China because of Cold War US embargo. US trade deficit for 1950 was
$1.3
billion which came to an insignificant 0.4% of GDP. It was an
amount the US could easily sustain
as WWII had left the US as the richest and most productive economy in a
war-torn world. Also, at that time the US was the world’s only creditor
nation
with a gold-backed dollar serving as a reserve currency for
international trade
as mandated by the Bretton Woods international finance architectural
regime.
The gold-backed dollar with fixed exchange rates ensured that war debts
incurred by US allies would be duly paid back without dilution. Thus
a US
trade deficit was quite necessary for restoring a world economy
severely
damaged by war. And the dollars that the surplus trading economies
received
returned to the US to pay for war debts but not to buy US assets, as
foreign
exchange and capital controls were the order of the time. The minor
payments
imbalance was paid with a transfer of gold holdings between the trading
economies. There was no foreign exchange market beyond government
exchange
windows. In that arrangement, dollar hegemony was not a serious problem
as
cross-border flow of funds were strictly controlled by all governments
and the
US was obliged to redeem dollars with gold.
Today, starting with
the end of the Cold War in 1991 which
enabled the globalization of deregulated financial markets to allow
cross-border flows of funds to be executed electronically with no
restrictions
for most economies, a huge foreign exchange market has grown to over $2
trillion of daily volume around the benchmark of a fiat dollar. The
reserve
currency status of the dollar has not been based on gold since 1971,
but only
on US geopolitical prowess which managed to force all key commodities
to be
denominated in dollars. Finance globalization since 1991 has allowed
the US to
become the world’s biggest debtor nation with the largest trade and
fiscal
deficits, financed by a fiat dollar that continues to serve as a key
reserve
currency for not only international trade, but more importantly for
international finance.
Dollar Hegemony
transforms imbalance of payments into dollar debt bubble
Dollar hegemony
emerged after 1991 to allow the US to
neutralize persistent trade and fiscal deficits that otherwise would
lead to an
imbalance of payments between it and its trading partners by erasing
the
payments imbalance from its trade deficit with a US capital account
surplus. Separate from the trade
deficit, the US fiscal deficit is financed by the Fed’s monetary easing
policies to increase the money supply, causing an asset price bubble
that can
absorb the rising debt without altering the debt/equity ratio, causing
de facto
but stealth inflation renamed as growth. This phantom growth is touted
by
neo-liberal economists as the reason why foreign investment is
attracted to US
assets. What dollar hegemony does is to transform the
dollar-denominated
payments imbalance of the US into a dollar-denominated debt bubble in
the US
economy. Holders of US debt and assets are rewarded with high nominal
returns
provided by a high growth rate reflecting rising asset price
denominated in
money that constantly loses purchasing power.
World trade is now a game in
which the US produces dollars by fiat and the rest of the world
produces things
that fiat dollars can buy. The world's interlinked economies no longer
trade to
capture a comparative advantage; they compete in exports to capture
needed
dollars to service dollar-denominated foreign debts and to accumulate
dollar
reserves to sustain the exchange value of their domestic currencies. To
prevent
speculative and manipulative attacks on their currencies, the world's
central
banks must acquire and hold dollar reserves in corresponding amounts to
their
currencies in circulation. The higher the market pressure to devalue a
particular currency, the more dollar reserves its central bank must
hold. This
creates a built-in support for a strong dollar that in turn forces the
world's
central banks to acquire and hold more dollar reserves, making it
stronger.
This phenomenon is known as dollar hegemony, which is created by the
geopolitically constructed peculiarity that critical commodities, most
notably
oil, are denominated in dollars. Everyone accepts dollars because
dollars can
buy oil. The recycling of petro-dollars is the price the US has
extracted from
oil-producing countries for US tolerance of the oil-exporting cartel
since
1973.
Ironically as oil-producing
economies benefited from a suddenly rise in the price of oil
denominated in
dollars, they developed naturally a need to preserve the value of the
dollar. Thus three conditions brought
about dollar hegemony in the 1990s: 1) In 1971, President Nixon
abandoned the Bretton Woods regime and suspended the dollar's peg to
gold as US
fiscal deficits from overseas spending caused a massive drain in US
gold
holdings; 2) the denomination of oil in dollar after the 1973 Middle
East oil
crisis, followed by other key commodities and 3) the emergence of
deregulated
global financial markets starting in 1991 after the Cold War that made
cross-border flow of funds routine. A general relaxation of capital and
foreign
exchange control in the context of free-floating exchange rates made
speculative attacks on currencies regular occurrences. All central
banks have
since been forced to hold more dollar reserves than they otherwise need
to ward
off sudden speculative attacks on their currencies in financial
markets. And
dollar reserves by definition can only be invested in US assets. Thus
dollar hegemony
prevents the exporting nations from spending domestically the dollars
they earn
from the US trade deficit and forces them to finance the US capital
account
surplus, thus shipping real wealth to the US in exchange for the
privilege of
financing US debt to further develop the US economy.
The US
capital-account surplus in turn finances the US trade deficit.
Moreover,
any asset, regardless of location, that is denominated in dollars is a
US asset
in essence. When oil is denominated in dollars through US state action
and the
dollar is a fiat currency, the US essentially owns the world's oil for
free.
And the Quantity Theory of Money dictates that the more the US prints
greenbacks, the higher the price of US assets will rise. And by
neo-classical
definition, rise in asset value is not inflation as long as wages
lagged
behind. Thus a strong-dollar policy gives the US a double win while
workers
everywhere, including those in the US, are handed a double loss.
Through dollar
hegemony, the US,
unlike many Third World nations with
similar trade and
fiscal deficits, has been granted immunity from associated penalties of
payments imbalance by having its trade deficit finance its capital
account
surplus. But instead of reforming the
fundamental structure of the US economy that creates such trade and
fiscal
deficits, many in the US are seeking painless yet pointless solutions
to a
non-existent payments imbalance by engaging in irrational disputes over
the
issue of currency exchange rates of its trading partners, first Japan
and
Germany decades earlier, now China.
On
top of this monetary scam, the US wants to push the exchange rate of
the dollar
further down to erode the value of the massive dollar holdings to its
trading
partners, as the exchange rate of the dollar affects only those who
live,
operate in or visit non-dollar economies. Because the Fed can print
fiat
dollars at will under a dollar hegemonic regime, a dollar-denominated
US trade
deficit does not present a balance of payments problem for the US, as
it does
all other countries which cannot print dollars. Thus a US trade
deficit, being
not a balance of payments problem, cannot be cured through manipulation
of the
exchange rate of the dollar. The
solution has to come from reducing wage disparity between the two
trading
economies.
The Numbers behind
US-China Trade
In 2005, US foreign
trade of $3.30 trillion constituted 26%
of its $12.7 trillion GDP. Exports was
$1.27 trillion and imports was $2 trillion, resulting in a goods and
services
deficit of $726 billion (5.7% of GDP), $109 billion more than the 2004
deficit
of $618 billion. For goods alone,
exports were $893 billion and imports were $1.7 trillion, resulting in
a goods
deficit of $782 billion, $117 billion more than the 2004 deficit of
$665
billion. This meant that while the trade
deficit for goods was large and growing, the US still exported goods in
2005
valued at 192.4 billion 1950 dollars, more than 15 times its export in
1950 and
3 times its 1950 GDP. For services, exports were $379 billion and
imports were
$322 billion, resulting in a services surplus of $56 billion, $8.5
billion more
than the 2004 surplus of $48 billion. US
trade deficit with China will greatly reduce if the US lifts high-tech
export
restrictions to China.
For China, foreign
trade in 1950 was nonexistent due to US
embargo, except some memorandum trade with other socialist and
non-aligned
nations. For 2005, Chinese foreign trade
reached $1.3 trillion (81% of GDP of $1.6 trillion), with a global
trade surplus of
$102 billion (6.4% of GDP). About $100
billion of the Chinese trade surplus with the US went to pay for
Chinese trade
deficits with other countries. These figures show that trade is now a
precariously excessive portion of Chinese GDP.
And without a trade surplus with the US, China will face a global trade
deficit of about 6.25% of GDP, more than the US’s 5.7%.
China’s Addiction to
Trade
As with all
addiction, initial euphoria soon turns to agony.
Chinese per capita GDP was $1,231 for 2005 while per capita foreign
trade
volume was $1,000. Take away foreign trade, Chinese per capita GDP
would be
$231, or 63 cents a day. And that number is per capita GDP, not per
capita
income which is usually lower.
In
2005, the per capita annual income of Chinese urban residents was
10,493 yuan,
or $1,294 at official exchange rate of 8.11 yuan to a dollar. The per
capita
annual income of rural residents was 3,255 yuan, or $401. In fact, in
the rural
interior, non-trade related per capita GDP in 2005 was actually below
overall per
capita income, meaning that rural per capita income in region with no
export
trade had to be subsidized to the tune of $170 per capita, the gap
between $401
and $231, or 47 cents a day. Global poverty line is set at $2 per day,
substantially higher than China’s non-trade related per capita GDP of
63 cents
per day. Chinese policy of export-dependent growth is causing mounting
social
unrest with serious political implications which the government is just
beginning to acknowledge.
US per capita GDP in
2005 was $43,000 while per capita
foreign trade was $11,196. Take away
foreign trade, US per capita GDP would still be $31,804. Serious
trade friction is unavoidable among all
trading nations. But the macro data show the US as not greatly
disadvantaged by
trade with China.
US per capita trade
deficit with China in 2005 was $685 or
1.6% of per capita GDP while Chinese per capita trade surplus with the
US was
$155 or 12.2% of per capita GDP. But Chinese global trade surplus was
only $102
billion, putting per capita trade surplus at $78.5 or 6% of per capita
GDP. Furthermore, upwards of 70% of
Chinese export is traded by foreign companies, leaving the per capita
trade
surplus in 2005 at around $22.5 net for China. Obviously, China is much
more
trade dependent than the US and it does not take much analysis to see
that the
US commands much more market power in trade negotiation with China.
With widening
income disparity in China, the majority of the population would have
income
substantially lower than the average per capita GDP. China’s overall
Gini Index
officially increased from 0.35 in 1990 to 0.45 in 2005, with zero being
complete equality. Before 1978, China
was the most equal society in the world. An unofficial survey put the
Gini
index at 0.6 for 2005. According
to the World Bank, the number of people living in
poverty in China has declined from 480 million in 1981 to 88 million in
2002, but
in 2003, poverty rose again for the first time since 1978, as the ill
effects
of excessive export became statistically discernable. The Chinese
press (China Daily) reports that as of March 2006, more than 23 million
people in the rural regions do not have enough food and clothing
for a decent life. Some 40 million low-income rural residents have
annual income of between 683 yuan ($84 or 23 cents per day), the
nation's official poverty line, and 944 yuan ($116 or 32 cents per
day), the nation's low-income line. Together some 64 million
Chinese citizens need help from the government's poverty alleviation
campaign. And this is with a trade surplus of $102 in 2005.
The faultiness of GDP
as a
gauge for growth is plainly displayed in China where double digit GDP
growth from trade has
given China a booming economy on paper but one with widening income
disparity
that keeps the majority in poverty, irreversible environmental
deterioration, rising
moral apathy, systemic official corruption and spreading social unrest.
Caina Daily reports that in the past five years, rural residents lifted
out out poverty numbered only 1.1 million eash year. In 2003
people in poverty increased by 800,000. Aproximately 14.6 million rose
above the poverty line, but 15.4 million others fell below the poverty
line by harsh natural conditions and disasters. It
is
hardly a picture that fits the world’s second largest creditor nation.
And as of the end of February 2006, China's foreign exchange reserves
reached $853.7 billion, overtaking Japan ($850 billion) as the world's
largest. That was $656 per capita or 53.6% of per capita GDP. For the
average Chinese rural resident whose annual income is only $401, he had
lent 164% of his annual income to the US while he lives on less that $2
per day. Dollar
hegemony has not done better for the US where the Gini index for 2005
was 0.41. A Gini index above 0.4 is considered socially destabilizing
and
economically inefficient.
The Cold War was won
with neo-liberal trade
The Cold War was a
political/military confrontation with an
economic dimension. Underneath the
militarization of the peace was also an economic contest between the
two
superpowers, each providing aid to the less-developed allies within its
own
ideological block. There was little economic contact between the two
separate
and hostile blocks. Within each block, economic relations were
conducted mostly
through foreign aid. The name of the game during the Cold War was
economic
development, not trade.
Neo-liberals now
regularly assert that socialism lost the
Cold War to capitalism because freedom prevailed. Yet the issue was not
that
simple or clear cut. It is true that governments that championed
socialism, by
being forced into a garrison state mentality by hostile external
forces, became
its own worse enemy by depriving basic freedom to its citizens. But the
assault
on civil liberty during the McCarthy era did not bring down the US
government
and there was not much democracy in many US allies all through the Cold
War.
And one and a half decades later, the former socialist economies, from
Russia
to Poland, do not seem to fare better under market capitalism. China is
an
exception only because it hangs on to basic socialist commitments which
the US
is trying its best to dismantle.
The real Cold War
was fought on the economic front between
two drastically unequal adversaries. The socialist camp started out
with much
lower level of development and a much high level of poverty as a
historical legacy
of having been victims of century-long imperialist exploitation.
Furthermore,
the socialist camp did not have the benefit of a rich and powerful
economy
acting as the engine of growth, as the US, leader of the capitalistic
camp, was
the only country undamaged by WWII. The socialist camp at first
registered
impressive growth both before and after WWII but began to lose momentum
when
the USSR was drawn into trade with the capitalist camp in order to
finance the
Cold War arms race. The USSR led the socialist block to refuse Marshall
Plan
aid. COMECON (Council for Mutual Economic Assistance) was founded in
1949 to
create an economic bloc that endured until 1991. The word “trade”
was not mentioned in COMECON
documents.
The Marshall Plan
grew out of the Truman Doctrine, proclaimed in
1947, stressing the moralistic duty of the United States to combat
communist
regimes worldwide. The Marshall Plan spent US$13 billion out of a 1947
GDP of
$244 billion or 5.4%. This translates to
$625 billion in 2004 dollars (using relative share of GDP), roughly the
same amount as the US trade deficit
in 2004. The mission was to help Europe recover economically from WWII
to keep
it from communism. The money actually did not all come out of the US
government’s budget, but out of US sovereign credit. The most
significant aspect
of the Marshall Plan was US government guarantee to US investors in
Europe to
exchange their profits denominated in weak European currencies back
into dollars
at guaranteed fixed rates, backed by gold at $35 an ounce.
The Marshall Plan
concretized the Bretton Woods regime of using the US
dollar
as the world’s reserved currency at fixed exchange rates. The Marshall
Plan
enabled international trade to resume and laid the foundation for
dollar
hegemony to emerge half a century later, after the dollar was taken off
gold by
President Richard Nixon in 1971 and the Bretton Wood regime of
restricting
cross-border flow of funds was relaxed in 1979 with Britain lifting
capital control and finally fully dismantled in 1991. While the
Marshall Plan did help the
German economy recover, it was not entirely a selfless gift from the
victor to
the vanquished. It was more a Trojan horse for monetary conquest. It
condemned
Germany’s economy to the status of a dependent satellite of the US
economy from
which it has yet to free itself fully.
The
Marshall Plan lent Europe the equivalent of $624 billion in 2004
dollars.
Japan's foreign-exchange reserves alone were $830 billion at the end of
September 2004. In other words, Japan was lending more to the United
States in
2004 than the Marshall Plan lent to Europe in 1947. And Japan did not
get any benefits, because the loan is denominated in dollars that the
US can
print at will, and dollars are useless in Japan unless reconverted to
yen,
which because of dollar hegemony Japan is not in a position to do
without
reducing the yen money supply, causing the Japanese economy to contract
and the
yen exchange rate to rise, thus hurting Japanese export
competitiveness. Thus dollar
hegemony has gone beyond the “too big to fail” syndrome. It has
created a world of willing slaves to
defend the dollar out of fear that without a strong dollar, tomorrow’s
food may
not be available.
What the Cold War
proved was the thesis of Friedrich List
(1789-1846), as expounded in his Das Nationale System
der Politischen
Ökonomie
(1841), translated as The
National System of Political Economy, that once a nation
(or a block of
nations) falls behind economically in the trade arena, it cannot catch
up
through trade alone without government intervention.
List’s German
Historical School is distinctly different in
outlook from the British classical economics of Ricardo and Mill.
It argues that economic behavior and thus
laws of economics are contingent upon their historical, social and
institutional context. When a nation is forced to adopt the national
opinion of
another nation with different historical conditions as natural laws of
international economics, it will always be the victim of such laws.
Such views
have been validated by the experience of post-war Japan and Germany
which had
to pay the price of being client states of the US in exchange for
trickled-down
prosperity. For the socialist camp, trading with the capitalist camp
was the
strategic error that caused it to expose itself unprotected to a game
it could
not win and that it would lose from the outset and never catch up. In
that
sense, neo-liberals are on target in claiming that free trade promotes
capitalistic democracy, but they are dishonest in claiming that free
trade is a
win-win game for all participants. International free trade is only
good for
the hegemon, as domestic free trade is good for the monopolist.
Socialism works only if development is not
preempted by external trade. The World
Trade Organization is a regime designed to favor the capitalist
hegemon. The
current anti-WTO movements around the world are early signs of a
grass-root
realization of this truism.
In the US, List’s
views evolved into institutional economics
which subscribes to the notion that government policies are central to
promoting development, not market forces. List had been inspired by the
views
of Alexander Hamilton in the early days of the US as a nation.
The US Supreme Court under Chief Justice John
Marshal in McCulloch
v. Maryland
(1819) established the principles that
the federal government possesses broad “implied powers” to pass laws
and
conduct policies, programs and measures, and that the states cannot
interfere
with any federal agency. Marshall ruled
that the Union and its government were created by the people, not by
the
states, and that the Federal Government is fully sovereign and “supreme
in its
own sphere of action” as long as it is not explicitly prohibited by the
Constitution. Marshall’s opinion was one of the most significant
decisions in
the history of the US constitutional law. It gave constitutional
grounds for a
broad interpretation of the powers of the federal government. The case
became
the legal cornerstone of subsequent expansions of federal power and by
extension US global power centuries later.
Hamilton’s idea of
sovereign credit through the
establishment of a national bank, as opposed to a central bank, was to
protect by
government measures the weak infant industries in a young US nation to
oppose
Adam Smith's laissez-faire doctrine as promoted by advocates of
19th-century
British globalization for the advancement of British imperialist
interests
(See: BANKING
BUNKUM Part 3a: The US experience). Later,
after the war of 1812, Henry Clay’s
American System argued for the establishment of the Second Bank of the
US,
protective tariffs and Federal appropriations through the use of
sovereign
credit for “internal development” such as infrastructure.
While WWII
catapulted the US into superpower status within
half a decade, the cost of the Cold War, which lasted four decades, led
the US
into a Pyrrhic victory built on recurring cycles of fiscal deficits.
Before the
globalization of financial markets in the 1990s, fiscal deficits
produced only
one penalty: domestic inflation. Keynesian deficit financing turned out
to be
effective in smoothing out the cursed business cycle. And with
foreign trade merely a minor factor,
there was no foreign exchange rate implication as long as the dollar
was on a
gold standard and the US held most of the world’s gold stock. The US
was indeed
hit by domestic inflation by the 1960 and the effect on the US economy
was
stimulant enough for government economists in the Kennedy
administration to
conclude that with the “New Economy” the US could afford guns and
butter
simultaneously, and even send a man to the moon, by putting up with a
little
inflation.
But because the
dollar was the trade reserve currency and
much of the US fiscal deficit was being spent overseas in the Korean
and Vietnam
Wars and in funding the cost of NATO in Europe and US bases in Japan,
South
Korea and other US allies in Asia and the Pacific, the Middle East and
South
America, a great deal of dollars flowed overseas, putting a drain of
the
stockpile of gold the US was holding in Fort Knox. Enough gold left the
US
vault at Fort Knox to go into foreign vaults in the same building that
President Johnson was unable to fund his Great Society programs while
trapped
in the Vietnam quagmire in the late 1960s. By May 1971, official dollar
holdings stood at $18.5 billion, while US
gold reserves had fallen to under $10 billion at the $35 per ounce rate.
In early August
1971, the British and French began converting some of
their dollars into gold at the US Treasury. Some $800 million were
exchanged over the course of a couple of days and further conversions
seemed inevitable. Losing confidence in the ability of the US to uphold the
convertibility of the dollar into gold, the British asked the US
on August 13 to guarantee their dollar holdings at the prevailing
dollar-sterling parity. A run on the dollar
was imminent. But
the Nixon administration, facing rising unemployment and an upcoming
election, was unwilling to devote monetary policy to a defense of the
gold standard, to impose the kind of "conditionalities" that IMF
routinely imposed on debtor nations in the 1990s.
On August 15, 1971,
President Nixon was forced to take the
dollar off the gold standard to stop the outflow of gold into foreign
accounts,
and imposed a 10% import tariff which was removed by year end with a
devaluation of the dollar by 2.25% from the exchange rate fixed by the
Bretton
Woods regime. Two years later, the 1973 Mid East crisis gave OPEC an
opening to
raise the price of oil ten folds from $3 to $30 a barrel. The US
accepted the new oil price regime by
forcing the oil producing nations to denominate oil in dollars.
It was not difficult to convince the oil
exporting governments as most of them did not have large enough
economies to
absorb all the sudden wealth, and at the time the dollar was still the
world’s
most stable currency and the US was politically more stable than any
other
country, and it was immune to terrorism.
The excess
petro-dollars went to finance Third World
borrowing at a higher rate of interest than in the US, to be repaid by
dollars
earned by exports. Such loans were considered safe because as Chairman
of
Citibank, Walter Wriston, famously pronounced: “Countries don’t go
bankrupt.” Citibank became the world’s
largest bank through aggressive international lending. This was the
beginning
of dollar hegemony in which the dollars, a fiat currency that only the
US can
print at will, was accepted as a trade reserve currency because most
commodities, led by oil, are denominated in dollars. But dollar
hegemony did
not emerge full blown until the emergence, after the end of the Cold
War in
1991, of de-regulated global financial markets that allow massive
cross-border
flow of funds which the Bretton Woods regime had restricted. The
breakdown of the Bretton Woods regime’s
restriction of cross-border flow of funds in 1991 was more important
for
facilitating dollar hegemony than moving the dollar off gold standard
in 1971.
With dollar
hegemony, the US central bank, the Federal
Reserve, transforms itself from a guardian of the value of the nation’s
money
and a lender of last resort, to become a ubiquitous virtual money
machine that
starts printing at the earliest data of a slowing economy. Since
1987, the Fed under Alan Greenspan has
led all the world’s central banks in an orgy of liquidity injection.
The US,
under Robert Rubin as Treasury Secretary, former bond trader at Goldman
Sachs,
discovered that all its has to do to make money is to print more
dollars; and
world trade has since become a game in which the US make dollars by
fiat and its
trading partners make things that fiat dollars can buy, from oil to
garments,
to television set and automobiles. The
US kept its defense industries and research and outsourced old-economy
manufacturing first to Japan and Germany, and garments and low-tech
products to
Asia and Mexico. Most importantly, the
US essentially created and ran a new finance sector with junk bonds and
other
structured finance products that other advanced economies did not catch
on
until a decade later. The US moved into finance capitalism with dollar
hegemony
while its trading partners were stuck in industrial capitalism.
The Flaw Logic of
Currency Revaluation
The logic of
revaluing the yuan, or any currency, as a means
of balancing trade with the US is flawed. This is particularly true if
prices
are denominated in the currency of the consumer economy, as the dollar
is. It
was ironic that US Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers in the late
1990s
repeatedly lectured Japan not to substitute sound balanced
macro-economic
policy with exchange rate or interest rate policies because the US did
exactly
that with the Plaza Accord in 1985 and with its strong dollar policy
after the
1997 Asian financial crisis. Robert Mundell, 1999 Nobel laureate in
economics,
observed while attending a conference in Beijing in 2005 that never
before in
history has there been a case where international monetary authorities
tried to
pressure a country with a not-freely-convertible currency to appreciate
its
currency. He said China should not appreciate or devalue the yuan in
the foreseeable
future. “Appreciation or floating of the renminbi [RMB] would involve a
major
change in China's international monetary policy and have important
consequences
for growth and stability in China and the stability of Asia,” Mundell
said.
A trade deficit
reflects the structural deficiency embedded
in the country’s trade, monetary and exchange rate policies. In 1975,
the US
had a trade surplus of $12.4 billion. By 1987, the US incurred a trade
deficit
of $153.3 billion which was widely but mistakenly attributed to an
overvalued
dollar. The effects of the 1985 Plaza Accord to devalue the dollar by
negotiation shrank the trade gap temporarily but a lower dollar enabled
the US
economy to grow faster than those of its trading partners and by 1991
the US trade
deficit began rising again as finance globalization allowed the trade
deficit
dollar to return to reinvest in US assets. Trade began to be linked
with
international finance. With the development of deregulated global
financial
market, the world financial architecture began to operate under the
rules of
dollar hegemony. The growth in the US was concentrated mostly in the
deregulated financial sector where the US was unquestionably the leader
in
innovation. The growing capital account
surplus made the growing trade deficit benign as the balance of
payments
problem was transformed into a US debt bubble. The 1997 financial
crisis in
Asia sent local currencies plummeting, making their Asian goods
drastically
cheaper. Yet China was the only Asian nation that did not devalue its
currency.
By 1997, the US trade deficit hit $110 billion, and heading
higher. But net capital inflow to the US
after July 1997 reached over $100 billion at 7.2% of GDP. The 2004 $666
billion
trade deficit was equal to $784 billion in 1997 dollars, more the seven
folds
what it was in 1997. Surely that
geometric increase was more than a foreign exchange problem.
The White
House Council of Economic Advisors reports that in 2004 the US
registered the
world’s largest net capital inflow at $668 billion (70% of world total)
while
Japan had the largest net capital outflow at $172 billion, followed by
Germany
at $104 billion, then China at $69 billion than Russia at $60 and then
Saudi
Arabia at $52 billion. In 1995, developing
Asian countries
had net inflows of $42 billion, but had net outflows of $93 billion in
2004.
China had $2 billion of net capital outflows in 1995, $21 billion of
net
outflows in 2000, and $69 billion in net outflows in 2004.
In 1995, developing
and emerging market countries as a whole
received $84 billion in net capital inflows. A sudden reversal of
capital flows
to Indonesia, Korea, Malaysia, Philippines and Thailand from a net
inflow of $93
billion in 1996 to a net outflow of $ 12 billion in 1997, i.e. a swing
of $105
billion, or 11% of their pre-crisis GDP. In 2000, they experienced $91
billion
in net outflows. In 2004, they experienced $367 billion in net
outflows. While
these countries remained net recipients of foreign direct investment
(FDI)
inflows, they became large net purchasers of foreign reserve assets
made
primarily by their central banks. This
represents a capital outflow because the dollar inflows had to be
absorbed by
domestic debt to be invested abroad rather than within these countries.
The value
of global foreign reserves, held primarily by central banks, rose from
roughly
$1.5 trillion to $3.9 trillion between 1995 and 2004, a 160% increase
in a
period when the value of global GDP increased by roughly 40%. Global
reserves
increased by more than $1.3 trillion in 2002-04 alone. Three countries
accounted for nearly 60% of this reserve increase: Japan, China, and
South
Korea.
With
$69 billion in net outflows, China was the world’s third largest net
capital
exporter in 2004. While China receives substantial foreign investment,
it
experiences even larger capital outflows due to foreign reserve
accumulation by
its central bank that results from its foreign exchange regime. Foreign
direct
investment (FDI) into China in 2004, totaled more than $153 billion in
new
agreements, up by one-third over 2003. Utilized FDI (the amount
actually
invested during the year) also surged to a record high of almost $61
billion,
rising 13.3% over 2003. As China’s
reserves have risen in recent years, its capital account balance has
moved
toward larger deficits and its current account toward larger surpluses.
In
2004, China’s current account surplus was equivalent to 4% of GDP.
China’s
current account surplus is likely to have exceeded 6% of GDP in 2005. At
the end of September 2005 it was $769 billion, with $58
billion added in the third quarter. China’s reserves
have increased due
to its rising current account surpluses, net private capital inflows,
and
tightly managed pegged exchange rate system. To maintain this peg,
China’s
central bank has purchased large amounts of foreign currency assets in
recent
years. Even after modifying its exchange rate peg in July of 2005,
linking the renminbi
to a basket of currencies rather than the dollar alone, China’s foreign
reserves have continued to rise, reaching over $800 billion by the end
of 2005
and may rise to $900-$1000 billion by the end of 2006. Between 2000 and
2005,
China’s foreign reserves increased by more than $600 billion. But this
is not
surplus national wealth, but a reflection of deficiency in social
security
funding caused by market reform.
Neo-liberals
argue that with a stronger currency, the global purchasing power of
China’s
currency would rise, raising its income in global terms and consumption
share,
and thus reducing its rate of domestic saving. Yet under current terms
of
international trade, a higher exchange rate translates directly into a
lower
domestic wage scale for any economy heavily dependent on export,
further
reducing domestic consumption. China’s social
security funding deficiency is being mistaken as a high saving
rate. Rising domestic demand through higher wages
is essential for China’s future growth. But dollar hegemony makes it
impossible
for China to move in this direction by siphoning domestic savings into
useless
foreign reserves.
The Causal Dispute
over Current and Capital Accounts
There is sharp
disagreement among economists about the causal relationship
between current account and capital account. It is an
idle dispute about where a circle starts. Market bears tends to see
changes in
the capital account as following passively changes in the current
account.
Market bulls tend to see causation
running from the capital account to the current
account, confident that the US could run a huge trade deficit without
any
collapse in the foreign exchange value of the dollar because foreigners
have no
choice but to sell their domestic currencies to buy US assets,
supplying
dollars for the US to buy foreign goods. The problem arises when many
in the US
are no longer happy with further selling of US assets to foreigners, or
loss of
jobs to outsourcing. But if the US
capital account surplus shrinks, the
current account deficit will reemerge as a classic balance of payments
problem.
Most US journalists, and almost all politicians, line up
with the dollar bears in fixating on the trade deficit rather than on
the
capital surplus. And they blame that deficit on China as the newest
scapegoat
that carries a great deal of residual hostility from Cold War days and
even
from century-old racial prejudice. According to the China-bashers, the
US is a
victim of Chinese mercantilism, notwithstanding that mercantilism
involve the
quest for gold, not fiat currencies. As they tell it, China has kept
its
currency, the yuan, undervalued to promote export-led growth. To prove
this
assertion they point to China’s rapid buildup of foreign exchange
reserves,
which are really loans to the US to balance its trade deficits, not
withstanding the fact that the exchange rate has been in effect for
over a
decade, that China withstood temptation to devalue the yuan after the
1997
Asian Financial Crisis and that fixed exchange rates was a US idea at
Bretton
Woods when the US was a creditor nation.
Furthermore,
US current account deficit represents 1.6%
of global GDP, while current account surplus for all the countries in
emerging
Asia without Japan accounts for only 0.5% of global GDP. Oil-exporting
countries also account for a surplus of 0.5% of global GDP. Japan's
surplus is
almost as large, 0.4% of global GDP. To correct the trade imbalances,
if that's
the game, would require much more than a revaluation of the Chinese
yuan.
The rapid rise in reserves accumulation was due only
in
part to trade, with the bigger contribution came from capital
transactions,
accounting for 29% of China’s foreign reserve growth. Currency
speculating hot money accounted for 37%, betting that
the yuan will be revalued upward to please irrational demands from
Washington.
Hedge funds engage in “carry trade” to borrow low-interest yen to buy
dollars
to send to China, accumulating Chinese sovereign debt denominated in
yuan and
contributing to the pileup of dollars in the PBoC, the central bank.
The
political intervention by Washington in Chinese monetary policy over
rising
Chinese reserves is driving an increase in dollar holdings by China.
Of course $800
billion of foreign reserves is no small number. But it is not
anywhere big enough to fund what the US wants China to do to further
open up
its financial market. Because China cannot print dollars, it must keep
enough
dollars on hand, at
least $500 billion, to meet routine
foreign transaction needs, given the size of the
Chinese economy, its money supply and the import needs of its export
sector. A
wholesale opening of China's financial sector as demanded by the US
would
require China to cure the massive non-performing loan problem in the
Chinese
banking system as defined by the Bank of International Settlement
(BIS). This
is a structural problem that arose from shifting by a regime of
national
banking to central banking. This task is ultimately going to cost
upwards of $1
trillion.
(See: China: Banking on Bank Reform)
Making the yuan freely convertible will require
upwards
of $500 billion to ward off speculation. Add it all up, and China needs
foreign
reserves on the scale of $2 trillion to implement financial
liberalization. It
is less than half way there and will not reach the necessary target if
current
US policy on China prevails.
The US trade deficit
finances the US capital account surplus
in the form of foreign (Chinese) purchase of US Treasuries with dollars
that
the Chinese central bank purchased from China’s export sector with
Chinese
sovereign debt denominated in RMB. What China earns is a meager
commission on
the foreign profit from Chinese export trade. And because of tax
preference
granted to foreign capital and export earnings, China’s
foreign-financed export
sector has managed to externalize its social and environmental costs to
the
domestic sector. Such negative externalities are about to come due soon.
With a stronger yuan
against the dollar, Chinese sovereign
debt denominated in yuan will buy more dollars from China's export
sector which
means each yuan will buy more US Treasuries. This will reverse the
historical interest
rate disparity between the yuan and the dollar and cause a halt to the
carry
trade of borrowing low-rate dollars to invest in high-rate yuan asset
and stop
the flow of dollars to the PBoC to buy more US Treasuries. So
revaluation of
the yuan will not help the US.
The danger for the
dollar is not that China might sell US Treasuries of which
China is already too big a holder to sell without suffering substantial
net loss
in the market. The danger is that US sovereign debt rating is now
dependent on
the credit rating or soundness of Chinese sovereign debt. If the
Chinese
economy hits a stone wall, as it will when the US debt bubble bursts
and
Chinese export to the US falls drastically, Chinese sovereign debt will
lose
credit rating, causing yuan interest rates to rise, causing more hot
money into
China, causing the PBoC to buy more US Treasuries, forcing dollar
interest
rates to fall and more hot money to rush into China, turning the
process into a
financial tornado that will make the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis look
like a
harmless April shower. This happened to
Japan, but with foreign trade constituting only 18% of GDP in 2003,
Japan was
able to contain the deflation domestically. Still the impact of
protracted
Japanese deflation on the global economy was substantial. With
China where foreign trade hovers above
81% of GDP, with an economy already highly concentrated on the coastal
regions and
unbalanced with little breadth and depth, a financial crisis will
transmit
beyond its borders quickly. This is the
real danger for dollar hegemony.
Surging capital
inflows can be a double-edged sword,
inflicting unwelcome and destabilizing side effects, including a
tendency for the
local currency to gain in value above market fundamentals, undermining
export
competitiveness, and give rise to inflation. Capital inflows cause a
buildup of
foreign exchange reserves held by the central bank, releasing local
currency to
expand the domestic monetary base without a corresponding increase in
production, causing too much money chasing after too few goods, the
classic
cause of inflation. This create an undesirable situation of the
currency being
worth more externally and being worth less internally, setting a
perfect
opportunity for attack on the currency by hedge funds. This is
the situation facing China today and
the problem will turn into a crisis as soon as the yuan becomes freely
convertible.
Under dollar
hegemony, capital flow is mainly denominated in
dollars. Despite all the talk about the euro as an alternative reserve
currency, the euro is still just a derivative currency of the dollar,
like all
other currencies. To ease the combined threat of external currency
appreciation
and domestic inflation, central banks must implement what is known as
the
“sterilization” of capital flows. In a successful sterilization
operation, the
domestic component of the monetary base (bank reserves plus currency)
must be
reduced to offset the reserve (dollar) inflow, at least temporarily.
For
situation of external currency depreciation and domestic deflation,
such as
Japan experience, the reverse needs to be done. In theory, this can be
achieved
in several ways, such as by encouraging private investment overseas,
but this
option appears to have been blocked by US protectionism. Another
way is to allow foreigners to borrow local
currency from the local market, but this would invite currency attacks
from
unruly hedge funds. The classical form of sterilization under dollar
hegemony,
however, has been through the use of open market operations, that is,
buying or
selling US Treasury bills and other dollar-denominated instruments to
adjust
the domestic component of the monetary base. The problem is that, in
practice,
such sterilization can be difficult to execute and sometimes even
self-defeating, as an apparently successful operation may raise or
lower domestic
interest rates and stimulate even greater undesirable dollar capital
inflows or
outflows.
The ability to
sterilize has an inverse relationship with
the degree of international capital mobility. If capital is highly
mobile,
attempts at sterilization will prove futile, because they can be
rapidly
overwhelmed by renewed inflows, particularly if the Fed continues to
issue more
dollars by lowering Fed funds rates. Because of dollar hegemony, the US
is the
only country that needs no sterilizations as all inflow and outflows
are in
dollars. While sterilization may be useful temporarily for non-dollar
economies,
it cannot work for long if the capital inflows persist, because
sterilization
can deal only with the effect rather than the underlying cause of
shocks to the
system. The same is true with exchange
rate manipulation.
Also, the scope for
classical open market operations may be
severely restricted by the availability of financial instruments,
particularly in developing
countries, including China, which are unlikely to have well-developed
financial
markets. Issuing a large stock of securities
in an attempt to mop up the inflowing liquidity places a heavy
debt-service
burden on the government or central bank. It can lead to deterioration
in the
fiscal or quasi-fiscal balance, such as state-owned enterprises.
For a central bank, operating losses can
occur when the funds it raises are invested in foreign assets, which
earn
prevailing dollar interest rates often lower than rates the central
bank must
pay on the bills it has sold. Large-scale losses can even lead to the
need for
a recapitalization of the central bank or defaults. In a worst-case
scenario,
the building up of a central bank or Treasury balance sheet may also
expose it
to greater credit risks, making the whole system more vulnerable to a
sudden
reversal in capital flows. This is more likely where much of the
capital inflow
is in the form of short-term portfolio investment, known as hot money,
which
can be reversed much more quickly and easily than foreign direct
investment.
Next: China’s
Internal Debt Problem |