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Smith Faculty
Opinion Article |
November 15,
2006 |
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
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The
Yen, Yuan and the Big Three Meeting with
President Bush
The President is meeting with leaders
of the Big Three domestic automobile
companies. Auto leaders say they want
don't want special treatment but rather
solutions that generally help U.S.
businesses.
High on the list is the undervalued
Japanese yen, and it provides a perfect
example of an issue where the auto
industry speaks out of two sides of its
mouth and behaves unrealistically.
The dollar is extremely overvalued
against the Chinese yuan, Japanese yen
and several other Asian currencies, and
this problem affects all domestic
manufacturers competing with
trans-Pacific imports.
Consistently, GM, Ford and Chrysler
lobby for relief on the yen but are
noticeably reticent on the Chinese yuan,
because they are locating factories in
China and enjoy the benefits of Chinese
protectionism.
The Big Three cant have it two ways,
a stronger yen and a weaker yuan. Japan
cannot appreciably revalue its currency,
nor can other Asian governments revalue
their currencies, until China stops
intervening in currency markets.
Each month, China buys with yuan
nearly $20 billion in U.S. dollars and
hard currencies. The yuan it prints for
this purpose flow into the hands of
consumers in the United States and
Europe, and create a 25 percent subsidy
on Chinese exports. Unless and until
China stops this egregious violation of
free trade principles, Japan and other
Asian economies undervalue their
currencies too.
A resolution to the Big Threes
problems with the Japanese yen is not
possible until the Big Three embrace
realism and recognize the damage imposed
by Chinese currency manipulation.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of Business
and former Chief Economist at the U.S.
International Trade Commission.
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