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China rejects US demands for currency float
By Nick Beams
21 October 2003
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Chinas President Hu Jintao has ruled out floating his
countrys currency, the yuan, or any immediate revaluation.
In a meeting with US President Bush on the eve of the Asia Pacific
Economic Co-operation (APEC) meeting in Bangkok, Hu insisted that
any rapid deregulation of the yuan, also known as the renminbi,
would destabilise both China and the international economy.
China has come under intense pressure in recent weeks from
the Bush administration, which has claimed that an undervalued
yuan is contributing to the US balance of trade deficit and the
loss of jobs in American-based factories. This pressure was intensified
at the recent meeting of the Group of Seven finance ministers
which called for currency values to be determined by market
forcesa veiled criticism of the actions of both the
Chinese and Japanese central banks, which have intervened heavily
in currency markets to prevent their currencies rising against
the US dollar.
But Hu did not leave Bush officials entirely empty-handed,
agreeing to the setting up of an experts group to examine
how quickly China could move toward the establishment of a floating
currency.
Earlier he told a meeting of international business executives
that keeping the exchange rate of the renminbi stable serves
Chinas economic performance and conforms to the requirements
of the economic development of the Asia-Pacific region and the
whole world.
The governor of the Peoples Bank of China also rebuffed
calls for a revaluation and rejected claims that China was responsible
for the US trade deficit and the loss of jobs.
The US trade deficit, he told the official Xinhua
news agency, may be attributable to structural imbalances
and fiscal deficits in the United States rather than the renminbi
exchange rate. Some people even relate the loss of jobs in some
developed countries to the renminbi exchange rate [but] in our
view, each country has to face the issue of employment in its
presidential election, and what we need to do is to identify first
domestic causes for the job losses.
The US calls for a yuan revaluation have come under fire from
numbers of international economists who point out that US job
losses are not caused by an undervalued Chinese currency and warn
that such a move could have major consequences for the international
financial system. One of the biggest fears is that a float would
set off a series of collapses in the highly indebted Chinese banking
system. Furthermore, it is estimated that not even a 30 percent
revaluation of the yuan would assist US manufacturers, while adversely
affecting US firms with large investments in China.
According to the vice-chairman of Goldman Sachs Asia, Kenneth
Courtis: The idea of China revaluing its currency as a panacea
to US trade problems is about as loony as the tariffs on steel
last year.
Courtis pointed out that some 60 percent of Chinas exports
are generated by joint-venture companies, many of them involving
US corporations.
Morgan Stanley chief economist Stephen Roach has insisted that
China is being made the scapegoat for problems which have their
source in the US economy and the policies of the Bush administration,
in particular the growth in the US budget deficit resulting from
tax cuts.
The increasing protectionist calls emanating from US politiciansboth
Republican and Democratcite figures which show that China
accounts for the largest portion of the US trade deficit, some
$103 billion in 2002 and probably more than $120 billion in 2003.
But further calculations presented by Roach show that this
increase in exports is the result of the inflows of foreign direct
investment over the past decade and the outsourcing of manufacturing
operations by major corporations, many of them based in the US.
[T]he Chinese factory sector, he noted, has
become a critical ingredient in the global supply chain. Fully
65 percent of the tripling of Chinese exports over the past decadefrom
$121 billion in 1994 to $365 billion in mid-2003is traceable
to the outsourcing dynamic of Chinese subsidiaries of multinational
corporations and joint ventures.
The Chicago-based international economic analyst David Hale
has repeated a warning made by others that US-China economic relations
are being tied into the US political cycle. He told Asian officials
and businessmen in Bangkok that the situation in the US
is extremely dangerous with congressional Democrats and
Republicans attacking China.
He said Bush was under pressure because of the jobless
recovery under conditions where support for free trade within
the Republican Party had collapsed. Much will depend on
what happens to US employment over the coming months. If we keep
losing jobs, my great fear is that early next year, Karl Rove,
the presidents political strategist, will say, Mr
President, its time for you to join the China bashers.
Hale warned that if that happened it could trigger a financial
crisis as Asian funds, which have been financing the US balance
of payments deficits and keeping interest rates low, were withdrawn.
This would lead to a rise in interest rates, undermining US consumer
spending and the housing market.
Hales remarks point to the fact that the international
financial system is increasingly coming to resemble a house of
cards. With slow or non-existent growth in Europe and Japan, the
world economy as a whole has become ever more dependent on the
US economyit accounted for some 96 percent of the cumulative
increase in world gross domestic product in the period 1995 to
2002. However, this growth has been financed by increasing debt,
much of it financed by capital inflows from the rest of the world.
During the investment bubble-boom of the late 1990s, much of
this investment was attracted by the greater profit opportunities
and capital gains available in the US. But with the collapse of
the bubble much of the capital inflow is now emanating from Asian
central banksChina and Japan in particularwhich are
purchasing dollar assets in order to keep down the value of their
currencies and maintain export levels.
This mechanism is inherently unstablethe world economy
cannot be sustained indefinitely by US growth financed by increasing
debt. Consequently, a sudden turn in the situation, resulting
from either economic or political factors, such as China
bashing in the US 2004 election campaign, could rapidly
result in international financial turbulence leading to a recession
in the global economy.
See Also:
US pressure continues over value of Chinese
currency
[13 October 2003]
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