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Smith
Faculty Opinion Article
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December
13, 2007
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor
of International Business
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Chinas Dragon Does
Not Flinch and the Bernankes Toothless
Dog
This week, the big news continues to
center around the dollar and the credit
crisis. Secretary Henry Paulson returns
from China empty handed on the
dollar-yuan exchange rate, and Federal
Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke is stunned
when an interest rate cut sinks the
stock market.
Henry and the Dragon
Paulson continued his Strategic
Dialogue with Chinese officials but was
broadly rebuked in his efforts to
persuade China to meaningfully revalue
its currency.
Since China pegged the yuan against
the dollar in 1994, and adopted a gently
sliding peg in 2005, the yuan has become
progressively undervalued against the
dollar.
This is evidenced by the
ever-widening gap between the demand for
yuan created by foreign purchases of
Chinese goods and private foreign
investment in China, and the supply of
yuan created by Chinese imports and
private overseas investments. Rather
than permit the yuan to rise and
equilibrate demand and supply, as
western market economies do, the Peoples
Bank of China has intervened in currency
markets, printing and selling yuan, and
buying dollars, euros and other western
currencies. This makes Chinese products
artificially inexpensive in the United
States and U.S. products artificially
expensive in China.
The magnitude of undervaluation of
the yuan is revealed by the growing
level of Chinese net intervention in
currency markets, which was $47 billion
in 2001 or 19 percent of exports, and is
on track to be $450 billion or 45
percent of exports in 2007. Although
China has permitted the yuan to rise
about 5.8 percent in the last year,
modernization and rapid productivity
growth raise the yuans intrinsic value
at least 7 and 8 percent each year. The
yuan is now 40 to 70 percent undervalued
against the dollar.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke
has correctly concluded that Chinas yuan
policy provides a subsidy on exports. By
the scope of intervention, this is a 45
percent subsidy. However, the Bush
Administration has rebuked any suggested
U.S. policy to offset this subsidy as
protectionista profoundly different view
than the one it has adopted on other
forms of industry aid offered by China.
The Chinese government is using the
yuan peg as an employment policy to
create more jobs for rural workers
moving to cities than comparative
advantage and free competition would
require in international markets without
these subsidies.
U.S. experiences with intellectual
property and other protectionism teaches
China will not relent on mercantilist
practices until the United States is
willing to take tangible trade actions
to offset their effects.
Mr. Paulson traveled to China without
a stick, and the Chinese dragon did not
flinch.
Meanwhile, the United States is
amassing a huge overseas debt, which the
Chinese government now wants to convert
into equity holdings in the United
States. The U.S. government does not own
stock in U.S. companies, now ironically,
it is paving the way for the Chinas
sovereign investment fund to do just
that.
Bens Toothless Dog
Tuesday, the Federal Reserve
announced a quarter-point reduction in
the target federal funds rate to 4.25
percent and equity markets gave Ben
Bernankes performance a failing grade.
Within two hours, the major stock
indexes shed more than two percent of
value.
Economists expected only a quarter
point cut, because the jobs report last
Friday indicated the U.S. economy
continued to expand. Thursday, a strong
retail sales report for November
confirmed their confidence but investors
remain skeptical.
Investors are flabbergasted, because
the Fed fails to recognize the country
is not suffering from a liquidity
crisisbanks can get all the funds they
want from the Federal Reserve Discount
Window and the newly announced Term
Auction Facility. Credit markets and the
economy are suffering from a profound
crisis of confidence, and the Fed does
not appear to understand or know how to
cope.
The subprime meltdown reveals
fundamental structural flaws in the U.S.
banking system. The write downs at
Citigroup, UBS and others indicate that
bankers have been overvaluing
mortgage-backed securities. The
motivation is clear. The compensation
awarded bank executives who create
mortgage-backed and other securities is
directly related to the estimated values
banks assign these complex and opaque
instruments.
The bonuses to bank executives have
been paid and are gone, while the banks
stockholders find themselves selling off
equity to Middle East investors. Mutual
funds, U.S.-state run money market funds
for municipalities, pension funds, and
insurance companies that trusted
Citigroup and other banks now hold
worthless paper, and the market for
mortgage-backed securities has
evaporated.
The whole chain that creates
financing for mortgages has been
corrupted from loan officers to banks
that bundle loans into securities, to
bond rating agencies like Standard and
Poors who demand payments from banks
instead of charging investors to
evaluate mortgage-backed securities.
All along the chain, executives and
smaller folks have been enriched and now
there is no meaningful market for
mortgage-backed securities, except those
created by the federally sponsored
banks. As Fannie Mae and others
generally dont do jumbosloans above
$417,000the cost of jumbo mortgages has
rocketed. No recovery in the housing
sector is possible without resurrecting
the jumbo market and the market for
somewhat riskier mortgages.
Evidencing this sad state of affairs,
the banks are so suspicious of each
others accounting they wont lend each
other money. The Fed can cut the federal
funds rate to zero without effect until
this mistrust abates. It is no surprise
that the inter-bank lending rate, Libor,
is now well above the federal funds
rate.
Mr. Bernanke keeps pushing the
buttons that work in textbook
economicsthe federal funds rate,
discount window and similar vehicleswhen
for some time now those have had little
effect on mortgage rates, and now have
dwindling effects on short-term lending
rates, as indicated by the decoupling of
the federal funds rate and Libor.
Central bank monetary policy becomes
a toothless dog when the banking system
becomes corrupted and confidence
evaporates about the integrity of
principal players in capital markets.
It is high time for Bernanke to
address the institutional problems in
U.S. banking that undermine Federal
Reserve efforts to effectively steer the
economy: excessive compensation schemes
on Wall Street and throughout the
financial system that incentivize the
overvaluation of assets; conflicts of
interest in mortgage, commercial and
investment banking; and self dealing at
Standard and Poors and other bond rating
agencies.
The Week Ahead:
Forecasts for the Weeks of December 17
and 23
Forecast Prior Period
December 14
CPI - Nov 0.6% 0.3
CPI - Core 0.2 0.2
Industrial Production - Nov 0.1% -0.5
Capacity Utilization 81.7 81.7
Week of December 17
December 17
Current Account Q3 -$181.9b -190.8
Net Foreign Purchases - Oct $35.0b 26.4
(line 19 US Treasury TIC Report)
NAHB Market Index 20 19
December 18
Housing Starts - Nov 1.185m 1.229
Building Permits 1.178 1.178
December 20
GDP - Q3 (f) 5.0% 4.9
GDP Deflator 0.9 0.9
PCE 2.7 2.7
PCE Deflator 1.7 1.7
Core Deflator 1.8 1.8
Leading Indicators Nov -0.2% -0.5
Initial Jobless Claims 335k 338
December 21
Personal Income - Nov 0.5% 0.2
Personal Spending 0.4 0.2
PCE Index 0.6 0.3
Core PCE Index 0.2 0.2
Real Personal Spending -0.2 0.0
Mich Cons Sentiment - Dec (r) 73.5
74.5
Week of December 24
December 27
Durable Goods 0.5% -0.4
Consumer Confidence Dec 86.8 87.3
December 28
New Home Sales - Nov .726m .728
Help Wanted Index Nov 23 23
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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