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At
the end of last year, the nation’s financial deficit – what the
United States owes the rest of the world, minus what the rest of the
world owes the United States – amounted to more than $3 trillion, and
it’s still growing. This account deficit means the United States
imports more than it exports. To fill the gap – and its budget deficit
– it borrows heavily. However, while the trade deficit weakens the
dollar, it strengthens the world! For Europe, Japan, China, and even
America, as long as the nation’s trade and budget deficits continue to
grow and are financed by the world’s central banks, everyone seems to
win! Let me explain.
Let’s
take The European Central Bank “ECB” as an example. The ECB is the
central bank for Europe’s single currency, the euro. Their
main task is to maintain the purchasing power of the euro and thus price
stability in the euro area. The euro area comprises the 12 European
Union countries that have introduced the euro since 1999. The ECB needs
to be able to “place their paper” at a reasonable cost when they
borrow, the same way any corporation that borrows would have to do.
Given the fact that Germany and France are having a horrendous time
keeping their budget deficits below three percent, and Greece is
regularly “cooking their books” and running six percent budget
deficits, you would wonder who in their right mind would be interested
in putting their cash in sovereign euro debt.
The
current account deficits – the broad gap between exports and imports
of goods and services – are mushrooming out of control so much so that
on a relative basis, they almost make the euro look good on an absolute
basis. In 1999 when the euro was introduced, there was great fear that
it might fall apart. Sure, the Europeans hate the weak dollar and the
fact that the Americans and Chinese are competing with unfairly low
prices. But for now, making the euro a rival to the dollar as a world
reserve currency is more important! As the euro is being firmly
established, European countries and businesses can borrow at subsidized
rates because of the pressure to get out of the dollar. Inflation in
Europe is also lower and oil is relatively inexpensive. Euro pride can
run high!
Another
example is The Bank of Japan’s buying of limitless amounts of United
States’ treasury and agency securities. This has allowed Japan to run
their printing press much faster than they could otherwise without
suffering embarrassment. Japan’s budget deficit is approximately seven
percent, which makes the United States look fiscally responsible in
comparison! In 2005, Japan will have about $240 billion worth of fresh
Yen bonds to sell to finance their government deficit but very few
people will want to buy them with interest rates there at almost zero.
When Japan is buying dollars to hold down the Yen, no one thinks twice
about the extra monetization. What’s more important, is the fact that
as long as the world thinks there is money to be made from dumping the
dollar against the Yen, speculators and gullible investors will buy the
hundreds of billions in new government debt Japan has to place. (In
reality, Japanese fiscal policy remains bankrupt.) In addition,
Japan gets to build up massive dollar credits it can use in the future
so it can continue to attack and destroy industries, such as the
American Auto Industry (GM just announced another seven percent cut in U.S. jobs). Of
course, the Japanese would like to keep their foreign exchange reserves
safe, but funding their deficits and getting American jobs is more of a
priority.
The
story on China is similar to Japan, only more so. In 2004, speculating
investors invested over $95
billion in China. This
cash is in addition to China’s $150 billion trade surplus last year
and the massive $610
billion in foreign currency reserves they have amassed. China
is running
the fastest industrialization effort in the history of the world using
classical “mercantilist trade policies”. A greatly undervalued Yuan
is pegged to the dollar. These
speculating investors may
never get a return on their money, much less a return of their money,
but they are confident they can’t lose as the Yuan will have to
revalue against the dollar. Don’t hold your breath. (Obviously, these investors have never read history; even recent
history!)
China
has been winning the economic war against America as our factories are
closed down and relocated there. Just like the Japanese, China would
like to keep their foreign exchange reserves safe. However, for now,
with the dollar going down against the euro and the Chinese Yuan fixed
to the dollar, the Chinese government can begin their “big push to
collapse and replace European industry” after helping to reduce
American production to a meager 45 percent of our nation’s
consumption. China has recently witnessed worker riots, so getting
Western jobs remain the number one priority just to keep a lid on the
domestic, political situation.
Clearly,
one of the most important things for the Bush Administration to focus on
is getting foreign central banks to finance a major portion of our
budget and trade deficits. In the first nine months of 2004, foreign
central banks purchased $315 billion of our financial assets. This is
equivalent to about three-quarters of the U.S. trade deficit, and more
than enough to pay for the war in Iraq. Temporarily, this central bank
buying of dollar assets holds down our interest rates and keeps our
economy in a housing boom, with false prosperity and no savings. Our
government seems to have decided that as long as our country is the
military superpower, the strategy of exporting troops to the Middle East
and jobs to Asia – in exchange for a lock on the oil reserves and
cheap imports – remains more important than rebuilding American
industry.
So
for now, all the major countries seem to “win”(as their central
banks print up new money to finance our trade deficit) because (i) the
euro is secure; (ii) Japan can finance a seven percent deficit; (iii)
China gets everyone’s jobs; (iv) America gets its war paid for; (v)
every major country gets financed, and (vi) all the produced goods get
sold with that last $600 billion bought by Americans on credit.
Perhaps
things will change as inflation bursts out into the open and exposes the
fraud of prosperity through printing money. Or, at some point, central
banks may discover that not only do they need to finance new U.S. debt
being created but all the old debt as well, as the private sector dumps
their dollars en masse. This
would surely put into question the seemingly limitless dollar asset
buying spree of the world’s central banks.
For
the future, however, Bush’s wish list, led by the privatization of
Social Security and a reform of the tax code, seems to leave little
space for policies that would reduce our country’s deficits.
Greenspan, himself, in a speech to German bankers recently warned that
“foreigners would probably demand higher interest rates and bond
yields to hold American debt”. The real question may be “when does
the debt become so big that foreigners begin to worry about getting
their money back with a reasonable return?” With America taking the
short-term economic view, and Asia taking the long-term economic view,
the future will prove very interesting.
The
losers in all this will surely be those who want to save in dollars,
insist on holding investments denominated in dollars, and Americans who
would simply like a job working in the most efficient and productive
factories in the world, rather than sit back and watch them be built,
with the latest technology, half a world away. Unfortunately,
since most Americans will continue to use dollars, you can guess who’s
going to be the big losers here – just look in the mirror!

© 2005 Richard Benson
Specialty Finance Group
Benson's Economic & Market Trends
Editorial
Archive l www.sfgroup.org
About
the Author:
Richard Benson is a widely-published author on securitization and
specialty finance, and a sought-after speaker at financing conferences
on raising equity for mid-market companies. Before founding the
Specialty Finance Group in 1989, Mr. Benson acted as a trading desk
economist for Chase Manhattan Bank in the early 1980s, started in the
securitization business in 1983 at Bear Steams, and helped build the
early securitization businesses at Citibank and E F Hutton. Mr. Benson
graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1970 in the Honors Program
in Math, and did his doctoral work in Economics at Harvard University.
He is a member of the Harvard Club of New York and Palm Beach. The
Specialty Finance Group, LLC is a Florida Limited Liability Company and
is registered with the NASD/SIPC as a Broker/Dealer.
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