August 09, 2007
China’s "Nuclear Option" Is Real
By Paul Craig Roberts
Twenty-four hours after
I
reported China’s
announcement that China, not the Federal Reserve,
controls US interest rates by its decision to purchase,
hold, or dump US Treasury bonds, the news of the
announcement appeared in sanitized and unthreatening
form in a few US news sources.
The Washington Post
found an
economics professor at the University of Wisconsin
to provide reassurances that it was "not really a
credible threat" that China would intervene in
currency or bond markets in any way that could hurt the
dollar’s value or raise US interest rates, because China
would hurt its own pocketbook by such actions.
US Treasury Secretary
Henry Paulson, just back from Beijing, where he gave
China orders to raise the value of the Chinese yuan
"without delay," dismissed the Chinese
announcement as "frankly absurd." [Another
Shot in Currency Fight Chinese Threaten Divestment
, by Krissah Williams, August 9, 2007]
Both the professor and
the Treasury Secretary are greatly mistaken.
First, understand that
the announcement was not made by a minister or vice
minister of the government. The Chinese government is
inclined to have important announcements come from
research organizations that work closely with the
government. This announcement came from two such
organizations. A high official of the Development
Research Center, an organization with cabinet rank, let
it be known that US financial stability was too
dependent on China’s financing of US red ink for the US
to be giving China orders. An official at the Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences pointed out that the reserve
currency status of the US dollar was dependent on
China’s good will as America’s lender.
What the two officials
said is completely true. It is something that some of us
have known for a long time. What is different is that
China publicly called attention to Washington’s
dependence on China’s good will. By doing so, China
signaled that it was not going to be bullied or pushed
around.
The Chinese made no
threats. To the contrary, one of the officials said,
"China doesn’t want any undesirable phenomenon in the
global financial order." The Chinese message is
different. The message is that Washington does not have
hegemony over Chinese policy, and if matters go from
push to shove, Washington can expect financial turmoil.
Paulson can talk tough,
but the Treasury has no foreign currencies with which to
redeem its debt. The way the Treasury pays off the bonds
that come due is by selling new bonds, a hard sell in a
falling market deserted by the largest buyer.
Paulson found solace in
his observation that the large Chinese holdings of US
Treasuries comprise only "one day’s trading volume in
Treasuries." This is a meaningless comparison. If
the supply suddenly doubled, does Paulson think the
price of Treasuries would not fall and the interest rate
not rise? If Paulson believes that US interest rates are
independent of China’s purchases and holdings of
Treasuries, Bush had better quickly find himself a new
Treasury Secretary.
Now let’s examine the
University of Wisconsin economist’s opinion that China
cannot exercise its power because it would result in
losses on its dollar holdings. It is true that if China
were to bring any significant percentage of its holdings
to market, or even cease to purchase new Treasury
issues, the prices of bonds would decline, and China’s
remaining holdings would be worth less. The question,
however, is whether this is of any consequence to China,
and, if it is, whether this cost is greater or lesser
than avoiding the cost that Washington is seeking to
impose on China.
American economists make
a mistake in their reasoning when they assume that China
needs large reserves of foreign exchange. China does not
need foreign exchange reserves for the usual reasons of
supporting its currency’s value and paying its trade
bills. China does not allow its currency to be traded in
currency markets. Indeed, there is not enough yuan
available to trade. Speculators, betting on the eventual
rise of the yuan’s value, are trying to capture future
gains by trading "virtual yuan." The other reason
is that China does not have foreign trade deficits, and
does not need reserves in other currencies with which to
pay its bills. Indeed, if China had creditors, the
creditors would be pleased to be paid in yuan as the
currency is thought to be undervalued.
Despite China’s support
of the Treasury bond market, China’s large holdings of
dollar-denominated financial instruments have been
depreciating for some time as the dollar declines
against other traded currencies, because people and
central banks in other countries are either reducing
their dollar holdings or ceasing to add to them. China’s
dollar holdings reflect the creditor status China
acquired when US corporations offshored their production
to China. Reportedly, 70% of the goods on Wal-Mart’s
shelves are made in China. China has gained technology
and business knowhow from the US firms that have moved
their plants to China. China has large coastal cities,
choked with economic activity and traffic, that make
America’s large cities look like country towns. China
has raised about 300 million of its population into
higher living standards, and is now focusing on
developing a massive internal market some 4 to 5 times
more populous than America’s.
The notion that China
cannot exercise its power without losing its US markets
is wrong. American consumers are as dependent on imports
of manufactured goods from China as they are on imported
oil. In addition, the profits of US brand name companies
are dependent on the sale to Americans of the products
that they make in China. The US cannot, in retaliation,
block the import of goods and services from China
without delivering a knock-out punch to US companies and
US consumers. China has many markets and can afford to
lose the US market easier than the US can afford to lose
the American brand names on Wal-Mart’s shelves that are
made in China. Indeed, the US is even dependent on China
for advanced technology products. If truth be known, so
much US production has been moved to China that many
items on which consumers depend are no longer produced
in America.
Now let’s consider the
cost to China of dumping dollars or Treasuries compared
to the cost that the US is trying to impose on China. If
the latter is higher than the former, it pays China to
exercise the "nuclear option" and dump the
dollar.
The US wants China to
revalue the yuan, that is, to make the dollar value of
the yuan higher. Instead of a dollar being worth 8 yuan,
for example, Washington wants the dollar to be worth
only 5.5 yuan. Washington thinks that this would cause
US exports to China to increase, as they would be
cheaper for the Chinese, and for Chinese exports to the
US to decline, as they would be more expensive. This
would end, Washington thinks, the large trade deficit
that the US has with China.
This way of thinking
dates from pre-offshoring days. In former times,
domestic and foreign-owned companies would compete for
one another’s markets, and a country with a lower valued
currency might gain an advantage. Today, however, about
half of the so-called US imports from China are the
offshored production of US companies for their American
markets. The US companies produce in China, not because
of the exchange rate, but because labor, regulatory, and
harassment costs are so much lower in China. Moreover,
many US firms have simply moved to China, and the cost
of abandoning their new Chinese facilities and moving
production back to the US would be very high.
When all these costs are
considered, it is unclear how much China would have to
revalue its currency in order to cancel its cost
advantages and cause US firms to move enough of their
production back to America to close the trade gap.
To understand the
shortcomings of the statements by the Wisconsin
professor and Treasury Secretary Paulson, consider that
if China were to increase the value of the yuan by 30
percent, the value of China’s dollar holdings would
decline by 30 percent. It would have the same effect on
China’s pocketbook as dumping dollars and Treasuries in
the markets.
Consider also, that as
revaluation causes the yuan to move up in relation to
the dollar (the reserve currency), it also causes the
yuan to move up against every other traded currency.
Thus, the Chinese cannot revalue as Paulson has ordered
without making Chinese goods more expensive not merely
to Americans but everywhere.
Compare this result with
China dumping dollars. With the yuan pegged to the
dollar, China can dump dollars without altering the
exchange rate between the yuan and the dollar. As the
dollar falls, the yuan falls with it. Goods and services
produced in China do not become more expensive to
Americans, and they become cheaper elsewhere. By dumping
dollars, China expands its entry into other markets and
accumulates more foreign currencies from trade
surpluses.
Now consider the
non-financial costs to China’s self-image and rising
prestige of permitting the US government to set the
value of its currency. America’s problems are of its own
making, not China’s. A rising power such as China is
likely to prove a reluctant scapegoat for America’s
decades of abuse of its reserve currency status.
Economists and
government officials believe that a rise in consumer
prices by 30 percent is good if it results from yuan
revaluation, but that it would be terrible, even beyond
the pale, if the same 30 percent rise in consumer prices
resulted from a tariff put on goods made in China. The
hard pressed American consumer would be hit equally hard
either way. It is paradoxical that Washington is putting
pressure on China to raise US consumer prices, while
blaming China for harming Americans. As is usually the
case, the harm we suffer is inflicted by Washington.
COPYRIGHT
CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Paul Craig Roberts
[email
him] was Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan Administration.
He is the author of
Supply-Side Revolution : An Insider's Account of
Policymaking in Washington;
Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and
Meltdown: Inside the Soviet Economy,
and is the co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice. Click
here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts
about the recent epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.