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IN THE
SHALLOW END
OF A DEEP POOL
by Paul Petillo
Managing Editor,
BlueCollarDollar.com
May 30, 2007
Recent talks with Chinese
ended last week with the feeling that we have gained little ground. And
with good reason. Only the US sees the growing trade deficits and the
dollar-Yuan peg as a problem of growing importance.
The
Chinese general/philosopher Sun Tzu once wrote “.
. . If you know the enemy and know yourself, your victory will not stand
in doubt, if you know Heaven and know Earth, you may make your victory
complete”. He seemed to be offering rather pointed advice
several thousand years removed on how negotiations with the US should
proceed.
The
topics on the table are important, at least to the US negotiators. But
the issues seem less so to the Chinese who, represented by Vice Premier
Wu Yi, left both the White House and Congress frustrated by the seeming
lack of interest in the subject.
The
US wants the same thing it has always wanted: concessions. The topics
discussed at the most recent meeting by these two global giants have
focused on the tight control the Chinese have kept on the Yuan and the
ever burgeoning trade deficit the US believes is attributable to the
perceived undervalue of that currency.
Congress
has made it clear that the situation is not tolerable and seeks to stem
the imbalance by imposing duties on imported goods. This stance is seen
as a vague attempt by the lawmakers to prompt the Chinese to allow their
currency to adjust itself naturally on the open market.
The
Yuan however is not the problem. There is no real proof that the
sovereign regulation of a country’s own currency has any impact on the
balance of trade between other nations. The People’s Bank of China
prints money to control short-term interest rates within its borders.
These rates help regulate their economy using them in the same fashion
as the Federal Reserve.
These
internal controls have little effect on trade deficits. The Chinese
produce goods and the US buys – often on credit, over $233 billion
worth. And this is where the members of Congress see the source of the
problem.
The
US contends that the PBOC prints money for a different purpose. They
contend that the Chinese are using their cheaper currency to buy dollars
and then buy dollar denominated assets. While this may be perceived as
trade adverse, the Chinese and most economists see the problem
differently.
It is
important to remember that the Chinese view the US as a mature economy
with a banking system with a strong network of banks whose link helps
control the nation’s economic health. This close association allows
our institutions to make risk-adjusted decisions about credit. The
Chinese do not yet have that sort of infrastructure in place. Their
meteoric rise in the global marketplace has exposed some flaws when held
against similar banking structures in other countries. Removing the
dollar-Yuan peg will offer little in the way of an equitable fix
especially from the Chinese point of view.
Pushing
China to change is largely a waste of time. There are three reasons for
this. China has a low-wage workforce at its disposal comparative to much
more mature economies in the US and Europe. This is one of the most
prominent reasons behind the trade imbalances.
I
mention Europe at this point in the discussion for a good reason. Much
to the dissatisfaction of the US, the Yuan is allowed to float against
the Euro. The same type of trade imbalance exists there as well. If you
were to do a side-by-side comparison over the last ten-years, you would
notice that the amount of exports from China to Europe have grown almost
in tandem with the US.
The
second reason the US should drop their zealous effort to fix this
currency issue portrays a basic misunderstanding of where the Chinese
are right now. The only link the PBOC has with the economy has comes
with their attempt to regulate is what is called nominal prices.
Supply
and demand regulates nominal prices by putting pressure on nominal
exchange rates. Nominal prices are described as a monetary unit. When
nominal prices are used as the PBOC does, the math becomes much simpler
allowing currencies to be exchanged in a straightforward manner.
Comparative advantage, the US should note, affects the rest.
And
lastly, efforts by the US to force the Chinese to shift their policies
could precipitate a possible currency collaboration with other Asian
nations. This would benefit China’s smaller neighbors, whose economies
are equally immature and whose labor force may be seen as a threat to
the competitive advantage the Chinese have internationally.
Such
Euro like affiliations would not serve the US interests and would make
Congressional pressures concerning duties and the Treasury
department’s repeated request to float their currency a moot
point.

© 2007 Paul Petillo
Editorial Archive
CONTACT
INFORMATION
Paul Petillo
Blue Collar Dollar.com
Portland, OR USA
(501) 313-5252
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