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Smith Faculty
Opinion Article |
September 27,
2006 |
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
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America, the Debtor
Nation
The United States is a debtor nation,
just like the poorest states in Africa,
Latin America and Asia. Since the fourth
quarter of last year, U.S. citizens and
businesses have paid more dividends,
interest and the like to foreigners than
they have received from abroad.
How Americans entered a debtors life
is hardly a puzzle but what it means is
even more troubling.
For most of the last 30 years the
United States has been piling up large
trade deficits. The current account,
which includes net exports of goods,
services and income payments, has now
reached 6 percent of GDP, and must be
financed by capital inflows. Foreigners
must purchase large amounts of U.S.
property, stocks, bonds, bank deposits,
and currency, or the current account
deficit cannot be financed.
The U.S. appetite for foreign goods
and services moves up in a fairly steady
fashion, other things remaining the
same, but the private sector appetite
for U.S. assets is erratic. When foreign
purchases of U.S. assets dip and do not
finance the current account deficit, the
supply of U.S. dollars in foreign
exchange markets should exceed the
demand, and the dollar should fall in
value against other major currencies.
U.S. exports should become more
competitive and imports more expensive.
In turn, the trade deficit should shrink
to an amount foreign creditors wish to
finance.
However, for decades, Asian nations,
led first by Japan and now China, have
prosecuted a mercantilist development
strategy. They consistently buy U.S.
dollars and securities to keep their
currencies and products cheap.
Regardless of the level of private
demand for U.S. assets, these
governments have consistently entered
foreign exchange markets, sold their
currencies for U.S. dollars and
converted the proceeds into U.S. bonds
and bank deposits.
When private purchases of U.S. assets
slack off, those governments rev up
purchases to keep their currencies and
their products artificially cheap on
U.S. markets. To support these policies
they erect arcane barriers to U.S.
exports automobiles and parts, heavy
machinery, electronics, and software
have been particular targets for their
protectionist industrial policies.
This process has escalated during the
recent economic expansion to dangerous
proportions. Each year, China spends
more than $200 billion, or 9 percent of
its GDP, purchasing dollars and other
foreign currencies and converting those
into debt instruments. This provides an
off budget export subsidy of about 25
percent of the value of Chinas exports.
The debt Americans are incurring is
massive. Direct investment in U.S.
productive assets provides only about 11
percent of the needed funds, and the
balance is obtained through the sale of
Treasury securities, corporate bonds,
bank accounts, and other paper assets.
Americans borrow nearly $60 billion each
month to consume more than they produce.
The total debt will exceed $6 trillion
by the end of 2006.
At the same time, our ability to
finance this debt is shrinking, and with
it our economic security. By running
such massive deficits, the United States
is shifting resources in record amounts
out of export and import-competing
industries, like autoparts and software,
where worker productivity and
investments in R&D are high, into
non-trade competing activities, like
restaurants and retirement homes. This
lowers GDP immediately and cripples
future growth.
Over the past five years, the process
has accelerated, as Americans, financed
by China and other Asian governments,
over-invested in large houses and
shopping malls instead of R&D, plants,
equipment, and software that drive
productivity growth and product
innovation. JPMorgan estimates that
potential U.S. GDP growth has declined
from 3.5 percent 1996 to 2002, to 2.7
percent in the years since. Going
forward it estimates potential growth to
be even lower.
Rising debt and falling growth are
prescriptions for calamity.
The Bush Administration urgently
needs to persuade China and other Asian
countries to significantly revalue their
currencies and to stop intervening in
foreign exchange markets.
So far China has balked at meaningful
action. It has permitted the yuan to
appreciate by about 4.5 percent over 15
months. That is hardly enough to have
any meaningful effects.
At the conclusion of his recent trip
to Asia, Treasury Secretary Henry
Paulson announced the initiation of a
U.S.-China Strategic Dialogue. We have
had years of talk, now we need strong
action to combat Chinese and broader
Asian protectionism.
Unfortunately, many U.S.
multinationals, like GE, Caterpillar and
GM are making huge profits in the
protected Chinese market, and President
Bush is reluctant to disappoint his
strongest supporters.
Branding his critics protectionists,
instead of the Chinese, the President
appeases his domestic allies and foreign
powers to the peril of the nation.
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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