Just another Reality-based bubble in the foam of the multiverse.

Friday, May 20, 2005

Watch Out What You Ask For- You Might Get It

My favorite Princeton economist does it again.

What happens if China listens to us and actually revalues the Yuan?

Over the last few years China, for its own reasons, has acted as an enabler both of U.S. fiscal irresponsibility and of a return to Nasdaq-style speculative mania, this time in the housing market. Now the U.S. government is finally admitting that there's a problem - but it's asserting that the problem is China's, not ours.

And there's no sign that anyone in the administration has faced up to an unpleasant reality: the U.S. economy has become dependent on low-interest loans from China and other foreign governments, and it's likely to have major problems when those loans are no longer forthcoming.

Here's how the U.S.-China economic relationship currently works:

Money is pouring into China, both because of its rapidly rising trade surplus and because of investments by Western and Japanese companies. Normally, this inflow of funds would be self-correcting: both China's trade surplus and the foreign investment pouring in would push up the value of the yuan, China's currency, making China's exports less competitive and shrinking its trade surplus.

But the Chinese government, unwilling to let that happen, has kept the yuan down by shipping the incoming funds right back out again, buying huge quantities of dollar assets - about $200 billion worth in 2004, and possibly as much as $300 billion worth this year. This is economically perverse: China, a poor country where capital is still scarce by Western standards, is lending vast sums at low interest rates to the United States.

Yet the U.S. has become dependent on this perverse behavior. Dollar purchases by China and other foreign governments have temporarily insulated the U.S. economy from the effects of huge budget deficits. This money flowing in from abroad has kept U.S. interest rates low despite the enormous government borrowing required to cover the budget deficit.

Low interest rates, in turn, have been crucial to America's housing boom. And soaring house prices don't just create construction jobs; they also support consumer spending because many homeowners have converted rising house values into cash by refinancing their mortgages.

So why is the U.S. government complaining? The Treasury report says nothing at all about how China's currency policy affects the United States - all it offers on the domestic side is the usual sycophantic praise for administration policy. Instead, it focuses on the disadvantages of Chinese policy for the Chinese themselves. Since when is that a major U.S. concern?

In reality, of course, the administration doesn't care about the Chinese economy. It's complaining about the yuan because of political pressure from U.S. manufacturers, which are angry about those Chinese trade surpluses. So it's all politics. And that's the problem: when policy decisions are made on purely political grounds, nobody thinks through their real-world consequences.

Here's what I think will happen if and when China changes its currency policy, and those cheap loans are no longer available. U.S. interest rates will rise; the housing bubble will probably burst; construction employment and consumer spending will both fall; falling home prices may lead to a wave of bankruptcies. And we'll suddenly wonder why anyone thought financing the budget deficit was easy.


It's unlikely at this point China will listen to us.

It is far more likely at this point they'll use their financial clout with us to keep us out of their way.

1 comment:

spocko said...

Kelley B: Are you sure we aren't related some how? You posted three articles on the exact same topics I've been thinking about!

Thanks for the link to Krugman (I think he is the best thing in the NY Times most weeks!).

I can't imagine how long China will keep this up, but one thing you won't be surprised at will be how our leverage and clout with China shrinks as we owe them more and more money.
Sure we can still say, "Hey knock it off with those human rights abuses. Let the yuan float!" and China can say right back, "Hey round eyes, you want higher interest loans? No? Then shut up. You no pull the wool over our feet."

I was at a conference where they talked about oil and the issue came up. What happens when it's between the US and China in the quest for oil? Will we go to war with them over access to Venezuela?
Will it come to that? I also read that China tried to cut a deal with Venezuela to get exclusive access to future oil extracts. But I guess since we have Iraq we will be fine. (HA!)

One thing I heard yesterday was that as the oil price pressure goes up people will say, "Okay we aren't willing to give up our SUVs and our oily ways, start drilling off the coast of California. Besides they are a big blue state anyway."