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Smith
Faculty Opinion Article
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May 10,
2006
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
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WEB SITE |
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Its High Time for
John Snow to Cite China for Manipulating
the Yuan
U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow
will soon issue his semiannual report on
the currency policies of major trading
nations. The Omnibus Trade and
Competitiveness Act of 1988 requires him
to consider whether countries manipulate
the rate of exchange between their
currency and the United States dollar
for the purposes of preventing effective
balance of payments adjustments or
gaining unfair competitive advantage in
international trade."
Secretary John Snow should determine
that China manipulates the yuan to
obtain an unfair competitive advantage.
Sadly, he will likely again deny sound
economics and finesse the issue.
International trade and investment
flows best promote global prosperity and
progress in developing countries when
those reflect comparative advantages and
national differences in
market-determined rates of return for
capital. Exchange rate adjustments are
vital for ensuring that national trade
and investment balances reflect these
fundamentals and promote the efficient
geographic dispersion of production.
Absent government intervention,
private actors, exchanging currencies to
execute trade and investment decisions,
would determine exchange rates.
Countries importing lots of private
capital would see their currencies rise
in value, and import more goods and
services than they export. This would
permit them to both meet consumers
present needs and amass the sinew for
future prosperity producer durables,
social infrastructure, technology, and
managerial know how.
Governments may lower or raise
exchange rates by selling or buying
their national currencies for dollars.
While managing exchange rates may create
certain national benefits, chronic
undervaluation or overvaluation imposes
significant costs on trading partners
and risks on the global commercial
system.
For example, the 1997 Asian currency
crisis was caused by overvalued
currencies, such as the Korean won,
engineered to allow manufacturers to buy
western capital goods and technology on
the cheap. These required borrowing
dollars to support currency values and
betting those loans could be repaid with
future export earnings. When bad
investment choices and corruption kept
export enterprises from paying out as
needed, dollar denominated loans could
not be repaid and calamity followed.
Speculators were tarred but it was the
stupidity of finance ministers that
precipitated the crisis.
In the 1980s and 1990s, Japan
prosecuted a mercantilist assault on
European and North American durable
goods industries by purposely
undervaluing the yen. When rising wages
and other costs finally limited
export-led development, Japans economy
sputtered, and it has suffered a decade
of stagnation.
In 1995, the Chinese government
pegged the yuan at 8.28 per dollar. In
July 2005, it adjusted that value to
8.11 and announced the yuan would be
aligned to a basket of currencies;
however it still tracks the dollar
closely and is now trading at about
8.01.
China has vast needs for capital and
technology and equally impressive
development potential. Its economy,
lacking an appreciable natural resource
such as oil, should be an equally vast
recipient of foreign investment. It
should enjoy a foreign investment
surplus and offsetting trade deficit, as
it acquires the machinery of a modern
economy and know how. Instead, China has
huge and growing trade surpluses,
exacerbating the disruptions its
integration into the international
commercial system naturally creates.
Rapid Chinese productivity growth and
large foreign investment inflows should
cause the yuan to appreciate. However,
Beijing sees the exchange rate as a
critical development tool, and
consistently sells yuan for dollars to
severely limit the appreciation of the
yuan against the dollar.
From 2001 to 2005, Chinas foreign
currency holdings increased from $216
billion to about $820 billion, and its
trade surplus grew from 1.3 percent to
5.3 percent of GDP.
In 2005, Chinese monetary authorities
purchased $206 billion in U.S. and other
foreign currencies and securities, about
9 percent of GGP. These purchases create
an off-budget subsidy on exports and
products competing with imports.
Swelling Chinas trade surplus, these
purchases distort investment decisions
in China, the United States and
elsewhere, and push up the huge U.S.
trade deficit.
Clearly, Chinas currency practices
create an unfair trade advantage and are
one reason manufacturing is not enjoying
the same scale of expansion as the rest
of the U.S. economy.
Given Chinas development status and
trade surpluses, this pattern of
official reserve purchases may be fairly
characterized as currency manipulation.
It may not be reasonably characterized
as anything else.
Sooner or later, China will reach the
limits of its ability to sell cheap
goods in the United States. With its
surplus of underemployed labor, rising
wages wont pose too much of a problem.
However, Wal-Mart can only sell so many
cheap gadgets, and if China steals too
many U.S. jobs, stagnant wages will
severely constrain U.S. demand for its
products. Chinas drain on oil and other
global resources, and the inflation that
creates, is about to preview that
phenomenon.
When China hits the wall, its size
will make the 1997 Asian currency crisis
look like afternoon tea at Buckingham
Palace.
Peter Morici
is an economist and professor at the Robert
H. Smith School of Business at the
University of Maryland. He is a recognized
expert on international economics,
industrial policy and macroeconomics. Prior
to joining the university, he served as
director of the Office of Economics at the
U.S. International Trade Commission.