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A Mute Strategic
Economic
Dialogue:
Wrong Issues, Wrong Timing, and Wrong Party
By
Henry C.K. Liu
This article appeared in AToL
of May 22. 2007
General Omar Bradley, a great soldier much admired by enlisted
men, aptly characterized the Korean War as the wrong war, in the wrong
place
and against the wrong enemy.
The Strategic Economic Dialogue (SED) between the United
States and China
launched jointly by President George W. Bush and President Hu Jintao on
September
20, 2006 is showing signs
of turning into a dialogue on the wrong issues, wrong timing and with
the wrong
US Administration.
Reflecting the growing problems and
opportunities in the
expanding economic relationship between the US
and China,
the unprecedented
dialogue at the highest official levels was intended to provide an
overarching framework
for ongoing productive bilateral exchanges of views on long-term
strategic
issues. It was also intended to be a forum for discussing ways the US
and China
can
work together to address economic challenges and opportunities as
“responsible
stakeholders” in the international economic system.
The SED is now in clear danger of being conducted on the US
side by the wrong (out-going Republican) administration after the US
mid-term elections delivered the legislative branch of the US
government to the Democratic Party. And as the 2008 presidential
election
approaches, the prospect of another Republican White House appears less
than likely.
The stated official intent of the SED is to discuss long-term strategic
challenges, rather than seeking immediate solutions to the issues of
the day.
But the SED appears now to be used inappropriately by the anemic Bush
administration to defuse imminent vindictive short-term punitive
measures
against a victimized China
from a confrontational Democratic Congress unhappy with Republican
trade
policies.
The SED is also clearly being conducted with terribly wrong
timing with the US
presidential campaign heating up and with a Democratic Congress locked
in
bitter battle with a lame duck Republican administration suffering the
lowest
popularity rating in history. The high-purpose SED is forced to focus
defensively on wrong issues of trivial bilateral operational trade
friction, blaming
China for instigating conditions that have produced an unsustainable US
trade deficits
when China has actually only been a powerless respondent to the
dysfunctional terms
of trade set by US economic policies, aggressively exploited by US
transnational corporations and financial institutions for unfair profit.
President Bush’s September
20, 2006 Statement on the creation of the US-China SED
demanded
rightfully: “We must ensure that citizens of both countries benefit
equitably from
our growing economic relationship.” Whereas US-China trade has
benefited the US
economy more than the Chinese economy, much of the benefit has gone to
the US
corporate and financial sectors, rather than to workers of both trading
countries equitably. President Bush asserts that “the essential goal of
this
dialogue is to ensure that the benefits of our growing economic
relationship
with China
are
fairly shared by citizens of both countries.” Yet the mal-distribution
of the
pains and gains of US-China trade in both countries has been mostly set
unilaterally
by US
tax,
economic and trade policies. China’s
workers and peasants suffer from income disparity arising from global
trade more
severely than the US
working class. More than 60% of China’s
trade surpluses are traded by foreign companies, many of which are US
companies.
The SED convenes semi-annually and alternatively in Beijing
and Washington.
President Bush
has designated Secretary of the Treasury Henry M. Paulson to lead the US
side of the dialogue. The National Economic Adviser and other members
of the
President’s Cabinet, including Commerce,
US
Trade Representative, State, Health and Human Services, the
Environmental
Protection Agency, and Energy will be participants, as well as the
Chairman of
Federal Reserve. This team has only another 19 months, or 3 more
meetings
including the one on next Tuesday, to deal with a host of complex
long-term
bilateral strategic issues by reaching agreements with its Chinese
counterpart
that the next administration may not honor. As derivative risk analysts
would say, China
is enter
into the next rounds of dialogue with unmanageable counterparty risk.
President Hu has designated Vice Premier Wu Yi to lead the
Chinese side of the dialogue. In that role, she has been given
full
decision-making authority across all aspects of the Chinese
economy. To
demonstrate the importance of the SED, the Chinese government has
created its
largest and the highest ranking inter-ministerial working group which
Vice
Premier Wu Yi chairs, supported by the Foreign Minister, the Finance
Minister
and Deputy Secretary General of the State Council, as well as the
Ministries of
Commerce, Agriculture, Health, and Information Industries, various
financial
regulators, the National Development and Reform Commission, the
People’s Bank
of China and others. With US-China trade declining as share of China’s
total global trade and with Chinese policy aims towards weaning China’s
excessive dependence on export, the importance China
has assigned to the SED looks more like the tail wagging the dog with
every
passing day.
Structural Flaw
One structural flaw in the organization of the
SED is the
exclusion of the legislative branch of both governments. This is a
fatal flaw
as the US
government since the mid-term elections of 2006 has seen its
legislative
branch controlled by the loyal opposition which holds very different if
not
opposite views on US-China economic relations.
The discussion of long-term structural issues in the SED is
aimed at providing a stronger foundation for pursuing concrete results
through
existing bilateral economic dialogues and ensuring citizens of both
countries
benefit fairly from the growing bilateral economic relationship.
In
reality, the SED, if it successfully restructures the currently
dysfunctional
terms of trade, may actually equalize the benefits in favor of China.
The SED intends to provide support and guidance for existing
bilateral economic forums, which will remain essential to managing
specialized
aspects of the interdependent US-China economic relationship. High
level SED discussions
are expected to enhance, not diminish these existing functional
forums.
Bilateral issues will continue to receive full attention from the US,
including
pressing China for floating exchange rates, greater protection of
intellectual
property rights, and increasing access to Chinese markets, all
short-term symptoms
of structurally flawed terms of trade set by the US, blamed on a
demonized China
by deep-rooted US bias, notwithstanding the stated intent of the SED
“to
discuss long-term strategic challenges, rather than seeking immediate
solutions
to the issues of the day”.
Themes of the discussions in the SED raised by the US
have included: “building innovative societies, seizing the
opportunities of
global economic integration to assure sustained growth, and the
economics of
energy and conservation.” The US
pledges to support China
in what it views as China’s
alleged “goal of building a consumer-driven economy rooted in open
markets”.
Yet to formulate US economic policy on China
with this illusion regarding China’s
national goal is the equivalent of relying on a compass with a
defective magnetic
needle for navigation. China’s
national goal is to develop its economy through socialist market
economy, not
the open markets envisioned by Wall Street.
Paulson the Quiet
American
Writing in the Washington Post on December 11, 2006, Secretary Paulson laid out
his goal on A Broad Dialogue with China: “My
highest priority as Treasury secretary is the long-term strength and
competitiveness of the US
economy. Managing our economic relationship with China
to ensure both nations benefit is vital to our nation’s future
prosperity. A
market-based economy in China,
with sustainable economic growth and full participation in rules-based
international trade, is in our best interest -- and in the interest of
the
Chinese people.”
While Paulson's priorities for the US
are correct from the US
perspective, his assertion of a market-based economy being in the best
interest
of the Chinese people is controversial. After almost 3 decades of
economic
reform, there is now in Chinese policy circles a heated debate on the
validity
of a run-away market-based economy and its suitability to Chinese
culture,
historical conditions and national purpose. China
remains committed to the belief that socialist construction, albeit
requiring
modification based on lessons from past errors, is the correct approach
to the
long-overdue revival of Chinese civilization. Paulson’s market model
had been
tried by misguided reformers of the late Qing dynasty by appeasing
Western
imperialism and by the Koumindang (Nationalists) rightists followed the
advice
of Washington after
WWII. Both
failed miserably, with China
falling into chaos and foreign domination until socialism rose over China.
China
is not
about to go down the same path again.
Paulson went on to say: “China
is at a crucial juncture. Decisions it makes in the next few years will
have
long-lasting effects around the world. The United
States and China
each have a vision of how our relationship will evolve, and in many
respects
our visions are similar. We both want strong commercial ties that
produce
benefits for workers and consumers in America
and China.
We
both want China
to grow in a way that is sustainable economically and environmentally
and that
contributes to global prosperity. We both want China
to be a responsible stakeholder in the global economy and in
multilateral
institutions.”
On the face of it, Paulson’s vision is a viable one. Yet the
path to reaching Paulson’s goal does not necessarily mean China
must follow the US
model of development. There is no
question that within the limits of his personal commitment to
capitalism,
Paulson’s proposal for China
is friendly, peaceful and well-intentioned. His own success in finance
capitalism understandably provides him with a world view that finance
capitalism
is the best path to solving the world’s socio-economic problems. Yet,
unless
and until he recognizes the limits of the US
model being suitable only to US
culture and conditions, he runs the risk of becoming the economic
version of
Graham Greene’s The Quiet American,
whose well-intentioned yet naïve idealism caused enormous damages
of unintended
consequences in global geopolitics during the Vietnam War era.
The Shanghai Communiqué Renounces Policy of
Transformation
In the 1972 Shanghai Communiqué, the US
sides states: “The United States
believes that the effort to reduce tensions is served by improving
communication between countries that have different ideologies so as to
lessen
the risks of confrontation through accident, miscalculation or
misunderstanding.
Countries should treat each other with mutual respect and be willing to
compete
peacefully, letting performance be the ultimate judge. No country
should claim
infallibility and each country should be prepared to reexamine its own
attitudes for the common good.”
The Chinese side states: “that the people of all countries
have the right to choose their social systems according to their own
wishes and
the right to safeguard the independence, sovereignty and territorial
integrity
of their own countries and oppose foreign aggression, interference,
control and
subversion.”
The two sides jointly state: “There are essential
differences between China
and the United States
in their social systems and foreign policies. However, the two sides
agreed
that countries, regardless of their social systems, should conduct
their
relations on the principles of respect for the sovereignty and
territorial
integrity of all states, non-aggression against other states,
non-interference
in the internal affairs of other states, equality and mutual benefit,
and
peaceful coexistence. International disputes should be settled on this
basis,
without resorting to the use or threat of force. The United
States and the People’s Republic of China
are prepared to apply these principles to their mutual relations.”
US Must Accept China as a Socialist Nation
The only way the US
and China
can
productively cooperate is for the US
to accept China
as a socialist nation with Chinese characteristics and for China
to accept the US
as a capitalist nation. There is no need for the separate
socio/economic
systems of the two nations to converge. The US
transformation policy of regime change by any means, violent or
nonviolent, will
not lead to full cooperation or peace.
The problem with Paulson’s vision is that two decades of global
neo-liberal trade have not produced equitable benefits for workers in
either
country. And until the SED focuses on equitable distribution of the
benefits of
trade by restructuring the current dysfunctional terms of trade, both
internationally and domestically, all the high-level bilateral
dialogues will still
not prevent social instability that translates into political
instability in
either country and conflicts between them.
To appease domestic political pressure from Congress, Paulson
is forced to mis-identify, against his better judgment, mere symptoms
as
fundamental causes of trade imbalance: “We do have our differences. The
United States
believes China
can do more to reduce its trade surplus. We are encouraging China
to introduce greater flexibility for its currency, consistent with
economic
fundamentals. And China
needs to do more to protect intellectual property rights.”
Paulson went on to identify “transparency and respect for
the rule of law as core principles that affect all economic policy and
trade
issues. Commitments to these principles are essential to China’s
maintaining the confidence of international businesses and of its own
investors
and entrepreneurs.” Yet China,
with its alleged lack of transparency and deficiency in rule of law, is
currently inundated by massive foreign capital inflow, which reveals
Paulson’s
assertion as pure ideological fixation.
He also asserts that “working on these principles across
government ministries can enhance our ability to reach agreement on a
number of
key issues that we negotiate ministry-by-ministry.” The issue of
transparency
and rule of law are not issues of bureaucracy. They are
philosophical/cultural
issues that separate societies. From China’s
perspective, the US
system is not transparent and its respect for rule of law is highly
selective.
Yet China
does
not demand the US
to change before it will trade with it. The US
openly advocates trade as a means for regime change by peaceful
evolution.
There in lies the fundamental conflict in US-China economic relations.
For tens of centuries, China
has traded with the rest of the world without insisting that its trade
partners
be reformed to be more like China.
Must China
now
make itself a mirror image of the US
in order to trade with it?
A Protectionist US Presses China to
Open Markets
Paulson went on: “One of the most important topics for
discussion is how to help China
manage its transition to freer, more open markets, including capital
markets.
Every strong, vibrant economy in the world has open, competitive
capital
markets that attract investment and allocate resources to their most
productive
uses. Such markets will contribute to sustained economic growth and
boost job
creation in China.
And strengthening and reforming financial markets will ultimately allow
the
Chinese to freely float their currency.”
Free and open markets have elicited powerful protectionist
backlash in Paulson own backyard. Such free and open capital markets
have
produced recurring financial crisis around the world in past decades,
and
competition for markets by big powers have caused two world wars.
China Market Already
More Open than US’s
Still, according to the Institute for International
Economics, China’s
ratio of imports to GDP has soared from 5% in 1978 to 30% in 2005. By
that
measure, China
is now twice as open to trade as the US
and three times as open as Japan.
China
has in
fact been the most rapidly growing market for US exports for the last
15 years:
During 2000-2005, for example, US
exports to China
grew by 160% while its exports to the rest of the world rose by only
10%.
Paulson observes: “The Chinese government is committed to
creation of a social safety net, including health and retirement
programs that
will contribute to balanced growth by giving Chinese workers and
families the
confidence to spend more. China’s
high saving rate is a major contributor to the country’s large global
trade
surplus. Increasing consumption in China
will benefit US and other exporters.”
US now an Underdevelopment
Nation in Health Care and Retirement
The need for China
to reconstruct its socialist, people-based economic policy and programs
that
had fallen into neglect since 1978 is critical and long overdue. Yet,
the path to
success in this task cannot be through deregulated market capitalism.
The US
itself is the clearest example of such structural failures,
particularly in the
two areas of health care and retirement that Paulson mentioned. The US
has now become one of the world’s underdeveloped nations in these two
vital socio-economic
sectors.
Trade Surplus under
Dollar Hegemony Prevents China from Saving
With regard to Chinese savings, Paulson betrays his
misunderstanding of the problem. China’s
huge foreign exchange surplus is not voluntary. It is the structural
result of
dollar hegemony in which the Chinese central bank must buy up the
dollar inflow
from both trade and investment with Chinese yuan. China
cannot expand domestic consumption because Chinese wages and benefits
are too
low. Yet Chinese cannot raise wages faster because real wealth has been
leaving
the country through export trade while the yuan money supply is
expanding
through the central bank buying dollar inflows with yuan. The result is
a
liquidity bubble with too much currency chasing after a dwindling
supply of
real wealth that has been exported.
Unlike Japan
and Germany
where their governments have structured their economy to save rather
than to
consume, the Chinese trade surplus is not benefiting China
fully because real domestic saving is not an option for China
due to dollar hegemony. Despite a trade surplus, Chinese consumers
simply do
not have enough income and benefits to consume more.
In 2004, Chinese global surplus was only 8% of US
global trade deficit, about the same as The Netherlands. The impact of
WTO
accession since 2004 has pushed China’s
net global trade surplus up to over 20% of US
trade deficit. In 2005, US
bilateral trade deficit with China
was around $200 billion, about 25% of US
total global deficit. But such rise was not caused by the yuan being
too low,
but by China’s
inability to channel its trade surplus into higher Chinese wages and
benefits
because of dollar hegemony.
China Consumes Energy
Only to Serve US Gluttony
Paulson correctly points out: “Energy is an issue with
far-reaching effects. Both the pattern of China’s
growth -- with its heavy dependence on industry -- and low domestic
prices for
energy have led to rapidly increasing energy use by China.
Unfortunately, because of technological and infrastructure challenges,
much of
that energy is produced from sources that generate high levels of
pollution.
This harms the air and water we all share, and creates health problems
for
Chinese citizens.”
This is all true. Yet much of the energy waste and pollution
is caused by China’s
export sector. As pointed out in my earlier articles: when it comes to
energy
consumption, China
is only the kitchen, the dining room is in the US.
Open Financial
Markets with Currency Liberalization Dangerous
The US Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association
(SIFMA), a lobby organization representation the shared interests of
more than
650 securities firms, banks and asset managers, issued on March 7, 2007
a
statement in support of Treasury Secretary Paulson’s speech before
China’s
Shanghai Futures Exchange calling for opening of Chinese financial and
equity
markets. The statement said: “Removing the roadblocks that prevent
innovation,
reform and modernization is essential to the success of the global
financial marketplace.
Such barriers hurt not only the international community being barred
from
entry, but also stunt the growth and development of the ‘protected’
economy by
blockading expertise and innovation at the border. We congratulate
Secretary
Paulson and the Treasury Department for continuing this dialogue.
Because
financial reform is in China’s
self-interest and is critical for achieving more balanced economic
growth, we
are optimistic that these talks [SED] will prove fruitful in the short
term. But, we must remain grounded in the understanding that
immediate
results can not be willed overnight.”
Yet freely convertible currency and open financial and
equity markets are a dangerous combination that has destroyed many
otherwise
healthy economies in the past several decades.
Congressional
Confrontation
US Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
held a hearing on “The Treasury Department’s Report to Congress on
International Economic and Exchange Rate Policy (IEERP) and the
US-China
Strategic Economic Dialogue (SED)” on January 31, 2007 in which its new
Democratic Chairman, Senator Schumer, said to Secretary Paulson: “I am
currently chairing my first Joint Economic Committee hearing on the
economy and
the middle class, issues that I know you care about deeply, but I
wanted to
make a very brief statement about China’s currency practices. Although
the pace
of currency appreciation has quickened slightly, nearly all experts
still agree
that the Chinese yuan remains significantly undervalued; that this
undervaluation is the result of deliberate intervention by the Chinese
government in world currency markets; and that this policy gives
Chinese
products a tremendous advantage in the United
States market. Yet the Treasury
Department has repeatedly used a technical and legalistic dodge to
determine
that China
does
not manipulate its currency. You and I have talked about that,
and you
know that I disagree with your position because if it walks like a duck
and
quacks like a duck, it’s a duck.”
Senator Schumer then quoted Federal Chairman Bernanke that “what
the Chinese are doing with their currency amounts to an export
subsidy. I
think there is an emerging consensus that this is simply a fact,
regardless of
what official government reports may say, and regardless of how
Administration
officials might parse their words to dance around the real issues. …
The simple
fact is, Mr. Secretary, the Chinese could do more and should do more,
and we
have not been pushing them hard enough. We need to push them
harder, even
if that means ruffling a few feathers. The American workforce is
counting
on us. Last Congress, Senator Graham and I ruffled a few feathers with
our
bill, which we set aside at the very end of the Congressional session
because
we wanted to work with Senators Baucus and Grassley – the [Republican]
Chairman
and [Democrat] Ranking Member of the Finance Committee, albeit in
reverse order
than a few months ago – on a new currency bill that was WTO
compliant. I
need for you to impress on your Chinese counterparts that if the pace
of
progress does not pick up, and more market reforms are not accomplished
in the
currency arena, then bipartisan legislation will pass the Congress that
will
put the President in an uncomfortable position. Last year, Senator Graham and I were clear that we never intended
for our bill to become law. It was a shot across the bow.
But now
the possibility for legislation in the 110th Congress is
real,
because the number of people who will vote for strong legislation
exceeds the
number of people who would have voted for an explicit tariff. I
hope that
you recognize that reality and that you will communicate it
forcefully.” It
appears that the Congress has issued an ultimatum to replace the
dialogue.
The Senator went on: “Finally, Mr.
Secretary, since you are
the principal economic spokesperson for the Administration, I want to
make one
point regarding the challenges facing middle-class Americans, since
that is the
primary focus of my hearing as Chairman of the Joint Economic
Committee.
This morning, Bob Rubin, Larry Summers, [former Democratic Treasury
Secretaries] and Alan Blinder [former Fed Vice Chairman] are all
talking about
the economy and the challenges facing the middle class. And just
as he
has for the past several years, the President is again making it clear
through
speeches the last couple of days that his number one economic priority
is
making his [anti-middle class] tax cuts permanent. Now, I’ve heard you
talk
about how you recognize that today’s economic growth is not being
shared by all
income groups, and I commend you for saying it publicly when it appears
that so
many members of the Administration have given that issue short shrift.
… I
urge you to get the senior members of this Administration to think more
broadly
about policies that can help the middle class in both the short run and
the
long run.”
Thus there is official recognition that the terms of trade
in globalization has produce growth in the US
that is not being shared by all income groups. This is a problem that
also
plagues China
but it cannot be solved by China,
only by US
policy.
Dr. Albert Keidel of the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace, former deputy director for the Office of East
Asian
Nations at the US Department of the Treasury, presented testimony at a
hearing
on “The Treasury Department’s Report to Congress on International
Economic and
Exchange Rate Policy (IEERP) and the U.S.-China Strategic Economic
Dialogue” for
the U.S. Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee on
Wednesday,
January 31, 2007. Dr. Keidel said in his remarks that the US-China SED
can be a
very effective means for both sides to address trade issues and the US
should use SED wisely. He argues that the exchange rate of
the yuan is
not a causality in US-China trade imbalance and that focusing on the
exchange
rate of China’s
currency is a risky distraction for US
economic policy. Keidel also commented that China’s
currency rate should not be blamed for the large and growing US
current account deficit; he emphasized that the US
has a large deficit with the global supply chain as a whole. Dr.
Keidel
suggests that instead of focusing on China’s
currency exchange rate, the US
should focus on economic issues at home such as education, pension
mobility and
heath care in order to strengthen its own global competitiveness. He
might add
that instead of focusing on export to earn more dollars that cannot be
used at
home, China should invest more in its human asset through improved
education,
health care and environmental preservation.
Bush Pushes China to Appease Congressional Opposition
A series of recent actions by the Bush
administration in the
area of bilateral trade have apparently caused tremendously negative
impacts. The
US Commerce Department recently imposed countervailing duties to be
applied to
economies such as China’s
on industries that allegedly receive government subsidies. But
Beijing's sharp
response to the latest US decision to file WTO complaints on
intellectual-property violations in China contrasted with the mild
Chinese
response about past US complaints on the Chinese auto-parts sector and
the
imposition of duties on Chinese coated paper, suggesting that bilateral
trade
disputes are entering a new bitter phase that may adversely affect
bilateral political
relations.
Forcing Chinese imports to the United
States to rise in price through
exchange-rate manipulation would only cause US
inflation without lowering the trade deficit, as the trade imbalance
would
remain unchanged while the actual amount of goods exchanged would
adjust.
Trade with US
Increasingly Less Important for China
Further, the share of Chinese exports to the US
has been shrinking as a percentage of total Chinese exports, from 37%
in 2000
to about 25% in 2006, being replaced by Chinese exports to markets
outside the US.
Chinese exports to the European Union remain stable at about 20%, and
to East Asia they declined from 25% in 2000 to
20% in 2006. Exports to the
rest of the world, such as the Middle East, Africa,
and Central/Latin America, grew from 16% in 2000 to 30% in 2006 and are
expected to grow more in coming years to pay for increases in imports
in key
commodities. While China's
foreign reserves keep growing, most of the growth is now increasingly
coming
from other countries than directly from the US.
The day is fast approaching when US-China trade, while continuing to be
important, will cease to be the all-consuming factor in determining
Chinese
policy and US-China relations.
For the first time since World War II,
Japan’s
biggest trade partner is no longer the United
States. In the fiscal year ended on March 31, 2007, China
overtook the US
as Japan's
largest trading partner, with trading volumes reaching 25.43 trillion
yen ($215
billion). Japan's
trade with the US
in the same period was 25.16 trillion yen. Japan's
trade surplus widened to 74% from a year earlier at 1.633 trillion yen.
Trade
between the two Asian giants is boosted by Japanese firms shifting
their
manufacturing work to China
to lower labor costs and to tap into China's
fast-growing market, helped by a weaker yen.
US Strategic Policy
yields to Political Expediency
The US
administration’s unilateral decision to file two complaints against China
with the WTO caused the Chinese government to express "deep regret and
strong dissatisfaction" with the move. Zhang Yansheng, head of the
International Economic Research Institute at the Economic Planning
Ministry,
said the tough US
protectionist stance on its uncompetitive sectors would make it hard
for China
to compromise in the future. He said the US
should act as “an ordinary member of WTO, rather than the lawmaker.” Higher-level response came a few days later
from Vice Premier Wu Yi who heads China’s SED with US Treasury
Secretary Henry Paulson,
warning that complaints to the WTO over commercial piracy in China will
“badly
damage” cooperation with Washington and bruise bilateral trade ties.
In an op-ed opinion article published in The Wall Street
Journal on May 17, Vice Premier Wu Yi writes: "Mutual
benefit and win-win progress:
These are what China-U.S. business and trade relations are all about,
and these
intrinsic qualities have made our trade ties strong and vibrant. China’s
exports brings incontrovertible economic benefits to the US.”
She cites a recent report: China: The
Balance Sheet, jointly published by the Center for Strategic and
International Studies and the Institute for International Economics,
the rapid
growth of the Chinese market boosts US exports; China’s exports to the
US and
its investments in American financial assets help restrain US inflation
and
interest rates, and thus permit faster economic growth and more job
creation.
Madame Wu points out that since joining the World Trade
Organization, China
has become America’s
fourth-largest export market. Over the same period, the growth rate of
US
exports to China
was 3.7 times that of U.S.
exports to other countries. Mutually beneficial business and trade
relations
also mean good returns on investment made by companies of both sides.
Between 1979, when the policy of reform and opening up was
adopted in China,
and the end of this March, 52,887 American investment projects were
undertaken
in China,
with
paid-in investment reaching $54.7 billion. US
companies have steadily expanded market share in China
through investment, with sales in China
exceeding $75 billion in 2004. A survey conducted by the American
Chamber of
Commerce in China
shows that in 2005, sales of US
companies in China
reached $61.1 billion, and $47.6 billion of US
products made in China
were exported. She cited Morgan Stanley as saying that four to eight
million US
jobs are closely associated with trade with China, and China’s low-cost
exports
have saved US consumers $600 billion dollars over the past decade and
nearly $100
billion alone in 2004. Labor-intensive Chinese exports have enabled the
US
to focus on developing capital and advanced technology-intensive
products. US
employment data also shows that although the US
lost three million manufacturing jobs between 1996 and 2005, the
service sector
created 15 million new jobs over the same period. Trade deficits are
caused by
a number of macroeconomic factors associated with economic
globalization and “attempts
to politicize trade issues should be resisted,” Wu writes.
China Adjusts Macro
Monetary Measures
Meanwhile, the People's Bank of China announced on May 18
that the one-year deposit and loan interest rates will be raised by
0.27 and
0.18 percentage points respectively, to 3.06% and 6.57% effective May
19. The central bank will also raise
banks'
reserve requirement ratio by 0.5 percentage points to 11.5% effective
June 5. Many
banks already have even larger reserves however, as they have been
swamped with
deposits from China’s
brisk economic growth and large trade surplus, and have had trouble
finding
ways to lend this money in a developing liquidity trap.
This is the first time in 10 years that the central bank
simultaneously raised the benchmark interest rates and the bank reserve
ratio. The move aims to “strengthen
liquidity
management in the banking system, rationalize the growth of lending and
investment and maintain price stability.” The
bank said it would continue to “keep the
exchange rate basically stable at an adaptive and equilibrium level
based on
market supply and demand with reference to a basket of currencies.”
China
has raised interest rates five times since 2004 and bank reserve ratio
eight
times since 2006. China’s
central bank announced on May 18 that it would begin allowing the
country’s
currency to fluctuate more during each day’s foreign exchange trading,
but
again rebuffed demands from the US
and the EU for a sustained rise in the currency.
The central bank also raised interest rates and demanded
that commercial banks set aside more of their assets as reserves on
lending.
Both moves are aimed at reducing the risk of overheating in an economy
that is
growing at more than 11% annually and at taming speculation in domestic
stock
markets that have more than tripled since the beginning of last year.
Widening the daily trading band is the latest and most
noticeable in a long series of steps by Chinese officials to gently
awaken
businesses to the risks that fluctuating currencies can pose. China
pegged the yuan at 8.28 to the dollar from 1997 to 2005, lulling some
businesses into ignoring currency risk.
Chinese officials think that faster appreciation of the yuan
could threaten “social stability.” Chinese workers making goods like
textiles
that compete with exports from even lower-wage countries would be hurt
if
currency appreciation makes their products uncompetitive and costs them
their
jobs. Two-thirds of China’s
population still lives in rural areas and the agricultural sector is
barely
competitive with imports at current currency levels, raising the
prospect of
increased rural unemployment if the yuan rose sharply and the price of
food
imports falls to threaten domestic producers.
By raising the benchmark regulated rate
for one-year bank deposits by 0.27
percentage point, to 3.06%, and increasing the benchmark rate for
one-year bank
loans by 0.18 percentage point, to 6.57%, the
government showed confidence that the banks had put enough of their
bad-loan
problems behind them to survive on slightly narrower profit margins.
Higher
deposit rates also make it a little more attractive for Chinese
families to put
their savings in banks, instead of risking them in China’s
feverish stock markets.
But raising domestic lending rates could make it harder for China
to allow further appreciation of the yuan. That is because the central
bank is
itself a borrower. It borrows yuan, by issuing bonds, to pay for its
need to
buy dollar inflows from currency markets, where it has accumulated $1.2
trillion in foreign exchange reserves, mainly dollars.
The central bank earns a higher interest rate on US Treasury
securities than it pays on yuan-denominated bonds at home. The
authorities use
this profit from the interest rates spread to cover losses on the
foreign
exchange reserves, which are worth less and less in yuan as the yuan
appreciates. This causes a boom in the bond market which rising bond
prices
unsupported by fundamentals.
The semiofficial China Business News newspaper reported on May
18 that the government had entrusted $3 billion to the Blackstone
Group, the
private equity firm, to invest abroad. Blackstone declined to comment,
being in
a “quiet” period before a planned initial offering on the New York
Stock Exchange.
It is widely expected that China
will make larger use of “alternative investment” vehicles, which may
add to
systemic risk inn the global structured finance markets.
US Labor Sees the Light
On May 18, the head of the Teamsters union, James Hoffa, in a
dramatic gesture, arrived in Beijing to visit US-owned factories and to
meet
with Chinese union leaders and top Communist Party officials, as a
first stop
of a 10-day trip to China
with members of several other large US
labor unions, including the Service Employees International Union, the
United
Farm Workers and Change to Win, a coalition of unions that represents
about six
million US
workers.
“We felt it was time to get our head out of the sand and engage this
enormous
country,” Mr. Hoffa said at a news conference. “We’ve been behind the
curve,”
said Greg Tarpinian, executive director of Change to Win. “Nixon came
in ’71.
We’re coming in 2007.” US union leaders
say that encouraging union leaders in China
may actually raise standards in China
and around the world, thereby making US jobs more competitive. “I think
a
dialogue with them is very constructive,” Mr. Hoffa said. “You can’t
ignore a
union that claims to have 100 million workers.” The visit comes as China’s
only official union is pressing multinational corporations like
Wal-Mart and
McDonald’s to allow unions in their Chinese factories and stores.
China’s
union is helping to draft a new labor law that some US
corporations are opposing. That proposed law, which has already been
through a
variety of drafts, may be passed as early as this summer, and US
union leaders say they are angry that US companies are trying to oppose
or
weaken such a law.
Currency Speculators
Currency speculators are actively trading the yuan with the
non-deliverable forward (NDF) market. An NDF is simply a contract to
buy the
yuan at anywhere from one week to several years into the future. A
trader buys
a “one-year forward” to bet on the currency will be worth more than the
price
of the forward at that time. Chinese
Mainland
companies do not usually get to play since the NDF markets are
offshore, so the
market is generally made up of speculators and foreign companies doing
business
in or with China
who feel the need to hedge their currency exposures. NDF prices have
been moving
from estimating the yuan will be 7.62 against the dollar in a year's
time at
the end of October, to 7.52 the last week of November. This suggests
that
speculators are betting again that the Chinese currency will appreciate
more
rapidly than before, in response to anticipated political pressure
coming from
overseas. The Democratic Party’s mid-term election win in the US
has traders thinking that Washington
is going to pick on China.
The average US
working family now faces a 17% chance of losing 50% or more of its
income vs.
only 7% 30 years ago because of US
tax and economic policies. China
has become the scapegoat of choice for the painful restructuring that a
rich
economy profiting handsomely from global trade needs to go through.
Hedge funds
are raiding the NDF market, looking for high returns after a year of
low
returns from low market volatility. Every change in market rules issued
by the Chinese
central bank represents a window of profit opportunity for the hedge
funds. Chinese
state-owned enterprises with insides information also trade NDF
illegally,
despite the ban of such activities by the State Administration of
Foreign
Exchange (SAFE).
Realistically Washington
has not much leverage over Chinese currency policy. The lame-duck and
unpopular
Bush Administration has its hand full with Iraq, Iran and North Korea,
investigations over scandals over cabinet members and high White House
officials, immigration policy, pending loss of British subservient
support, and
doesnot really want to add China to its full plate of problems, except
to appease a
relentlessly anti-China Congress.
And the People's Bank still has
a tough fight on its hands
to keep all the liquidity from flooding into the economy and causing
inflation.
The yuan has moved 7% against the dollar so far. Yet no amount of yuan
appreciation that China
can afford will satisfy China
critics in the US,
because the yuan issue is only an excuse for deeper anti-China
attitudes.
The Democratic majority of the 110th Congress is led by what
many from both parties view as confrontational leaders, Representative
Nancy
Pelosi and Senator Harry Reid. Both have strong records of opposition
to
perceived unfair trading practices, human rights violations, and other
policies
and behavior by Asian governments in general and China
specifically. Pelosi and Reid are in the Democratic vanguard that is
pressing
for fundamental changes in US policies and practices amid a partisan
atmosphere
supercharged by preparations for the US
presidential election of 2008.
Regime Change in the US
For over a decade these Democratic politicians have been on
the receiving end of the hard-edged policies and practices of the White
House
and the Republican congressional leadership. The Democratic
congressional leaders
are expected to pursue their agenda using the same kinds of tough,
partisan,
and openly confrontational tactics that have prevailed on Capitol Hill
and in
congressional-executive relations introduced by Republicans Newt
Gingrich and
Tom Delay two decades earlier that gave the Republicans their 1994
landslide in
Congress.
After the 2006 elections, and it is “pay-back time” fro the
Democrats. The Democratic majority is expected to employ the kinds of
tactics
used against them since the 1990s and also to take aim at the opposing
party’s
leader in the White House, seeking to discredit his rule in
anticipation of
electing a Democratic candidate for president in 2008. The new
Democratic
majority can be expected to pursue policies to reverse the free trade
emphasis
of the Bush administration. Free trader Thomas Friedman of the New York
Times predicts
a “civil war” in US politics over the massive US trade deficit and
related
economic issues, such as job loss and benefit inequities, with China.
Voter anxiety over economic trends adverse to US populist interests was
a key
factor of Democratic victory in the last mid-term elections. Skepticism
about
the benefits of free trade is spreading widely on Capitol Hill, beyond
the
active “industry-based protectionists” in the rust belt.
The Anti-China Gang
in Congress
House Speaker Pelosi built her political career on
anti-China activism throughout the 1990s to link China’s
access to US markets to Chinese human rights practices. The Democratic
Chairman
of the Subcommittee on Trade in the House Ways and Means Committee,
Representative Sander Levin, and some other members of that and other
economic policy
committees also favor a tougher US stance on trade issues, especially
with
China, and on trade issues with Japan that affect key US industries,
notably
autos. Representative John Dingell, Chairman of the House Energy and
Commerce
Committee, is a strong defender of the US
auto industry, which is fending off growing challenges from Japanese
automakers
in the US
market. Thomas Lantos, Democratic Chairman of the House Committee on
Foreign
Affairs, has a long record of vocal opposition to alleged human rights
violations, notably those by China.
This stance meshes a tight fit with the views of House Speaker Pelosi.
The strong imperatives for change coming from the
Democratic-controlled 110th Congress can force changes in US economic
policies
and practices in Asia, particularly China.
A serious recession in the US
almost certainly would strengthen congressional efforts to protect US
jobs from
alleged unfair competition from China,
Japan,
India,
and other Asian economic powers.
US hostility toward
China
US
hostility toward China
is rooted in its anti-communist phobia. Until
this phobia is cure, there will be no
peace between the two
nations. On the other side, China
needs to stop treating its socialist root apologetically like some
skeleton in the
closet. Chinese socialism has made its share of policy error through
its
protracted revolutionary history against domestic feudalism and Western
imperialism, but such errors are inevitable milestones for constructive
correction,
not excuses to abandon socialist principles of cooperative equity.
Market
capitalism has also had made drastic errors that has impoverished
billions of
people around the world and stunted their growth for centuries for the
benefit
of a select few. Yet proponents of capitalism manage to accentuate the
positives to adjust its flaws and shortcomings to perpetuate an
economic system
based on individual greed and exploitation of others.
All Eyes on China’s
Iron Lady
Madame Wu has been described in the
Western Press as China’s
“Iron Lady”. It remains to be seen if the Iron Lady would live up to
her
reputation by displaying a good trader’s nerve of steel to resist US
bullying.
She is entering the SED with a very strong hand. The rules of the game
have
been set by the US
so the US
cannot complain about unfair rules. China
has played the game under US
rules well, thus it would be unsportsmanlike for the US
to complain. US threats of punitive measures are mere empty threats
from
disingenuous politicians suffering from delusions of grandeur because
irrational punitive measures against China
would hurt the US
economy more than they do China’s.
Strategically, China
is in dire needs to shift its excessive reliance on exports toward
domestic
development but has been less than successful in its policy shift
because of
special-interest resistance from the influential export sector in
Chinese
domestic politics. If the Chinese export sector is cut down to size by US
irrational belligerence, the strategic benefit to China
would actually be substantial in the long run.
The Iron Lady should to tell the US
that the age of the US
lording over the rest of the world by treating trade with it as a
special favor
granted to poor nations is long gone. The exporting economies of the
world are
the ones granting the favor of trade to the US,
the biggest debtor nation in the world. The main theme of the US-China
Strategic Economic Dialogue should be that debtors are in no position
to be
belligerent. The US,
the world most advanced financial power, should understand this first
law of
finance.
May 21, 2007 |
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