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Now that the recent turmoil in international markets has subsided for now
attention is returning to the sinister machinations of Beijing and its silent
war against the US economy. It is held by some -- in fact, by far too many
-- that China is using currency manipulation to deliberately deindustrialise
the US and force its manufacturers to export jobs, as evidenced by the US trade
deficit. Moreover, China is threatening to use its dollar reserves to sink
the US economy. Even without the paranoia some of the economic fallacies that
underpin these charges are common currency among the populace, including congress
which has more than its share of economic illiterates.
What is needed here is a little economic reasoning. First and foremost let
us deal with the fact that the balance of payments -- of which the current
account is a component -- is simply a record of the transactions that take
place between the people of one country and those of other countries within
a given time. When, for example, Wal-Mart orders millions of dollars worth
of clothing from Chinese textile manufacturers it does so on behalf of millions
of American consumers. It is their preferences that determine these transactions:
not the preferences of Wal-Mart executives or Chinese government officials.
Only by going into the process of international exchange can we get some idea
of what is really going on. In a free market economy based on sound monetary
principles the problems we now have with capital flows and trade deficits would
simply not appear. In such an economic environment an American who wanted to
buy a Chinese product would order the good and instruct his bank to transfer
money from his account to the Chinese trader's bank. The trade account would
debit the imported good while crediting the monetary side of the transaction.
Having acquired dollars the Chinese trader would find himself in the position
of using them to directly purchase American goods (bilateral trade) or the
goods of other countries (multilateral trade). Sooner or later the dollars
must return in the form of demand for US goods, including securities if requested.
However, once countries abandon sound money principles in favour of loose monetary
policies, then problems will definitely appear.
In today's world where fractional banking is considered a sound financial
principle the central banks allow their respective banking systems to expand
credit by creating phony deposits. And it is this credit expansion that fuels
a good part of the US current account deficit -- of which the trade account
is a component -- by raising aggregate spending in dollar terms. This encourages
the demand for foreign goods. Now if Americans bought these goods directly
the result would be a physical outflow of dollars but no debt. It would not
be long -- assuming other countries were not inflating as fast as the US --
before the dollar began to depreciate. In reality dollars do not directly exchange
for imports. The whole process basically takes place through the banking system
A loose monetary policy (credit expansion) lowers interest rates and raises
nominal incomes. Now our American consumers expand their demand for foreign
goods. American traders obtain money for the goods by borrowing from the banks
who obligingly make the loans by creating deposits in the names of the exporters.
These imports show up in the current account as debits while the exporters'
newly-created deposits are counted as credits. This is because these exporters'
deposits -- IOUs -- are seen as having been sold to them and are therefore
exports.
What has happened is that the trade account has gone into deficit -- imports
exceed exports -- while the capital account runs a surplus equal to the deficit
because the deposits now count as foreign borrowings. It must be remembered
that though the US banks created these borrowings ('empty' dollar deposits)
they are the property of foreigners who exchanged their goods for them and
who are at liberty to demand dollars at a moment's notice. It's perfectly clear
that the longer this inflationary process continues the more the foreign debt
and the trade deficit will grow. (While the CPI appears to be subdued the inflow
of cheap imports is fatuously reported as keeping inflation at bay).
So how would, for instance, Chinese exporters use these deposits? They could
buy American goods and assets, including corporate bonds, T-notes, etc. This
is precisely what has happened. It must be borne in mind, however, that the
situation is more complex than this. There is no doubt that the Chinese government
-- using the People's Bank of China -- manipulates its own currency. As a rule
a continuing rise in demand for Chinese goods by US consumers would exert an
upward pressure on the yuan and hence a downward pressure on the dollar. The
effect would be to raise the prices of Chinese goods in terms of dollars by
appreciating the yuan.
Chinese exporters receive yuan from the PBOC in exchange for their dollars.
This naturally adds to China's money supply. Additionally, it tries to maintain
its dollar-peg by offering up more yuan for US dollars, which also adds to
the money supply. This is not a costless exercise, particularly for a poor
country, as China still is. Considering the vast sums involved this intervention
in the currency market must, in my opinion, be accumulating severe imbalances.
By imbalances I also include real factors, i.e., the capital structure. What
this amounts to is that Chinese monetary and industry policy may have directed
a considerable amount of the country's manufacturing in to satisfying foreign
markets that may not be sustainable in the aftermath of a currency adjustment.
Along the same lines, an overvalued dollar may have had the opposite effect
on US manufacturing, making it overly oriented toward domestic production.
Unfortunately no amount of statistics one way or the other can at this stage
tell us if this is so or not. Moreover, there is absolutely no way of telling
what the structure of US manufacturing would have been in the absence of inflation.
As for the 'threat' of China dropping US Treasuries, so what? Such a sale would
not affect the US money supply. Any increase in interest rates because of such
sales would be temporary. T-notes do not determine the rate of interest. (US
interest rates, growth and China and The
US dollar and China's impending recession, part II)
It is the intention of this article to try and make it clear that America
is not under threat by the 21st century equivalent of the legendary Dr Fu Manchu.
The situation is far more prosaic than that, though still very dangerous. What
we are experiencing is a massive monetary disorder. Irrespective of what the
economic commentariat says, current economic problems are due to a failure
to understand the nature of inflation, money and capital. Until this situation
is reversed I fear we are just going to continue to get more of the same.
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