Keith Hart on Tue, 30 Nov 2004 11:08:33 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime>the dollar's demise (and the rise of Asia) |
"A pool of fools to buy it all the way down." The ASEAN-India-China summit is taking place in Laos this week, where a=20 major free trade pact to create the world's largest trading bloc between=20 Southeast Asia and China was signed yesterday. India will be signatory=20 to a similar but more gradually phased set of trade liberalisation=20 measures soon. In the meantime, the follopwing article appeared in The=20 Economist. My comments first. Thanks to Shekhar Krishnan for bringing it=20 my attention. Bush's economic policy should be seen as Keynesianism for the rich,=20 spending public money to line their pockets. Pat Buchanan has written a=20 fine book, Why the right went wrong, that forecasts the doom entailed in=20 Bush's rejection of the two cornerstones of republicanism -- balance the=20 budget and stay at home. Bush's bet is that the rest of the world can't=20 afford to call his bluff. First of all because the US economy is the=20 only one that is steaming ahead (on borrowed money) enough to buy their=20 exports. (The Chinese are booming but mainly importing raw materials=20 from the poor countries). This is linked to the American global policy=20 of threatening to exclude countries from the US market unless they sign=20 up bilaterally for a strict intellectual property treaty and another=20 exempting the US military from prosecution for war crimes. Second, as=20 this article makes clear, its main trading partners will keep up the=20 price of the dollar in order to protect their own assets, both in dollar=20 paper and US property. The EU is really caught, since home demand is=20 sluggish and an overpriced euro means they are priced out of the US marke= t. So the neocons have taken two huge gambles, based on impeccable logic,=20 that they are going to lose -- Iraq and the dollar. They really think=20 that being the only military superpower trumps all other factors and=20 they are wrong. God, I hope they are wrong, but I beleive they are. This=20 is my delayed reaction to the election result, that these bastards are=20 really going to reap the whirlwind they sowed. The other main feature of the article is the role that Asia now plays in=20 financing the US trade and budget deficits. (Have you seen the latest on=20 the projected social security bill that will involve incredible=20 government borrowing in order to give each citizen a personal account?=20 It really is a Keynesian recipe -- spend money you don't have and tell=20 the markets to get lost, except that globalisation and the money=20 slushing around the world today makes it a very different scene from the=20 1930s). So it is China and Japan that are holding the tab for America's=20 profligacy, plus some lesser Asian countries like Singapore. I like the=20 idea of calling it a cartel and waiting for the first member to break=20 ranks (a liberal economist's dream, but not always true to life). On=20 ideological grounds alone, India will probably go with the euro. But=20 this article doesn't mention the Saudis and all that Arab oil money.=20 Does Iraq make them more or less dependent on the USA? The neocons think=20 they can just take the Saudis over if they get obstreperous. But the=20 Pentagon is strapped for resources and Saudi Arabia is a very=20 complicated country to invade right now. Anyway, read on, nettimers, and contemplate the end of the world as we=20 know it. Or at least get out while you can. Keith Hart The dollar=92s demise Nov 23rd 2004 From The Economist Global Agenda http://www.economist.com/agenda Is the dollar=92s role as the world=92s reserve currency drawing to a clo= se? WHO believes in a strong dollar? Robert Rubin, Bill Clinton=92s treasury=20 secretary, most certainly did. John Snow, his successor but two, says he=20 does but nobody believes him=97if only because he wants other countries=92= =20 currencies, in particular the Chinese yuan, to go up. Mr Snow=92s boss,=20 President George Bush, in one of his mercifully rare forays into=20 economics last week, also said he wants a muscular currency: =93My nation= =20 is committed to a strong dollar.=94 Again, it would be fair to say that=20 this was not taken as a ringing endorsement. =93Bush=92s strong-dollar=20 policy is, in practical terms, to maintain a pool of fools to buy it all=20 the way down,=94 a fund manager was quoted by Bloomberg news agency as=20 saying. It does not help when the chairman of your central bank, Alan=20 Greenspan, whose utterances on the economy are taken rather more=20 seriously than Mr Bush=92s, has said the day before that the dollar seems= =20 likely to fall: =93Given the size of the current-account deficit, a=20 diminished appetite for adding to dollar balances must occur at some=20 point,=94 were his exact words. The foreign-exchange market immediately=20 decided that it was sated, and the dollar fell to another record low=20 against the euro. America's Federal Reserve posts Alan Greenspan's comments. The US=20 Treasury Department offers information on monetary and fiscal policy.=20 The People's Bank of China, the Bank of Japan and the European Central=20 Bank give economic statistics and publish statements on monetary policy.=20 The New York Federal Reserve publishes Matthew Higgins and Thomas=20 Klitgaard's paper, =93Reserve Accumulation=94. The Institute for=20 International Economics posts research and policy briefs on exchange=20 rates and monetary policy. Mr Greenspan=92s words were of huge moment, and not just because he spoke= =20 clearly, unusual though this was, nor because the Federal Reserve rarely=20 comments on foreign-exchange movements. No, Mr Greenspan=92s words were=20 significant because he was tacitly admitting what right-thinking=20 economists the world over have long believed: that the emperor has no=20 clothes. Mr Greenspan=92s previous line had been that America=92s ever-expanding=20 current-account deficit was not a problem when capital could flow so=20 freely around the world; and that, in effect, it would continue to flow=20 to America because the country is such a wonderful place in which to=20 invest. Now he is saying that it won=92t, or at least that investors will= =20 demand a cheaper dollar, or cheaper assets, or both, to carry on=20 financing America=92s deficit. But Buttonwood suspects that the deeper significance of Mr Greenspan=92s=20 admission is that the game that has been played since the collapse of=20 the Bretton Woods system in the early 1970s is drawing to a close. The=20 dollar=92s status as the world=92s reserve currency=97its preferred store= of=20 value, if you will=97is gradually coming to an end. And, ironically, the=20 fact that it has become so popular in recent years will only hasten its=20 demise. One man who undoubtedly believes in a strong dollar is Japan=92s prime=20 minister, Junichiro Koizumi. Unlike America, Japan has been putting its=20 money where its leader=92s mouth is. On behalf of the finance ministry,=20 the Bank of Japan has bought more dollars than any other central bank=20 has ever done. At last count, it had the equivalent of $820 billion in=20 foreign-exchange reserves, most of it denominated in the American currenc= y. As goes Japan, so goes the rest of Asia. In an interview this week with=20 the Financial Times, Li Ruogu, the deputy governor of China=92s central=20 bank, the People=92s Bank of China, said that his country would not be=20 rushed into revaluing the yuan, and that America should put its own shop=20 in order. Mr Ruogu=92s bank, too, has been a huge buyer of dollars in=20 recent years. China and the rest of developing Asia now have $1.4=20 trillion of reserves, mostly dollars. This is more than the combined=20 reserves of the rest of the world (excluding Japan). Thanks mostly to=20 Asian intervention, foreign-exchange reserves at the world=92s central=20 banks have climbed from $2 trillion in 2000 to $3.5 trillion in 2004. It used to be that countries amassed reserves as a war chest to protect=20 against a run on their currencies of the sort suffered by East Asia in=20 1997, or Russia in 1998. But Asian countries have snaffled up far more=20 than would be justified to prevent such crises. Their aim in=20 accumulating these reserves is generally different now: to stop their=20 currencies rising against the dollar and so keep their exports=20 competitive. In effect, they are trying to peg their currencies; China=92= s=20 peg is explicit. Huge foreign-exchange reserves are the result. Some pundits have dubbed this arrangement the new Bretton Woods. The=20 Bretton Woods arrangement (a post-second world war agreement that tied=20 the dollar to gold and other currencies to the dollar) collapsed in=20 1971. The present arrangement seems similarly doomed to failure. The big=20 question is whether the world will suffer similarly ill effects when it=20 collapses. Past saving? The upward pressure on Asian countries=92 currencies stems either from=20 their saving too much and consuming too little, or from America saving=20 too little and spending too much. American politicians, naturally, tend=20 to concentrate on the first interpretation, because it stops them having=20 to recommend unpleasant remedies, such as cutting deficits or=20 encouraging Americans to save more. But Mr Greenspan=92s most recent=20 comments show that he recognises the problem is more home-grown.=20 Personal saving in America, as a percentage of household income, slumped=20 to just 0.2% in September, close to a record low. Indeed, the savings=20 rate has been declining remorselessly since 1981, when it reached a high=20 of 12.5%. This lack of saving shows up in the current-account deficit,=20 which is a record near-6% of GDP and rising. In effect, foreigners are saving on America=92s behalf. In a recent study= =20 for the New York Fed, two economists, Matthew Higgins and Thomas=20 Klitgaard, point out that the United States now absorbs more than the=20 measured net saving of the rest of the world combined (suggesting=20 someone=92s got their figures wrong somewhere). The American economy=20 cannot continue to expand at its current rate without those foreign=20 savings. The question is whether foreigners will be happy to carry on=20 financing this growth with the dollar and asset prices at their present=20 level. The private sector is already voting with its wallet: it has been=20 financing an ever smaller percentage of the deficit, and there has been=20 a net outflow of direct investment. That leaves the public sector=97ie,=20 central banks=97and those, in particular, of Asia. At the heart of the=20 central banks=92 calculations is a trade-off: intervening to keep your=20 currency down can be costly, but it is good for exports. Though the=20 costs of intervention are hard to quantify, they are potentially big.=20 Because the domestic money supply is expanded=97those dollars must be pai= d=20 for with something=97it can cause inflation (though this can be=20 neutralised through =93sterilisation=94, ie, bond sales). But the big=20 potential cost is in amassing a huge stash of dollars with precious=20 little exit strategy. Quite simply, Asian central banks now own too many=20 of them to exit en masse, for their exit would cause the dollar to crash=20 and American interest rates to soar, which would cause huge losses on=20 their holdings of Treasuries. Get out while you can The biggest risk, of course, is that lenders would lose pots of money=20 were the dollar to fall. As the printer of the world=92s reserve currency= ,=20 America can pass on foreign-exchange risk to the lenders because, unlike=20 other indebted countries, it can borrow in its own currency. Messrs=20 Higgins and Klitgaard reckon that for Singapore, the most extreme=20 example, a 10% appreciation against the dollar and other reserve=20 currencies would lead to a currency capital loss of 10% of GDP. Though=20 loading up with even more dollars might of course stop the dollar from=20 falling for a while, it would increase the risk of still larger losses=20 were it eventually to do so. America already needs almost $2 billion a=20 day from abroad to finance its spending habits, and the situation=20 deteriorates by the week because America imports more than it exports,=20 which worsens the current-account deficit. The incentives to flee the Asian cartel (to give it its proper name)=20 thus increase the bigger the game becomes. Why take the risk that=20 another central bank will leave you carrying the can? Better to get out=20 early. Because the game is thus so unstable it will come to an end, and=20 probably a messy one. And what will then happen to the dollar? It is=20 hard to imagine its hegemony remaining unchallenged when so many will=20 have lost so much. And doubly so given that America has abused the=20 dollar=92s reserve-currency role so egregiously that its finances now loo= k=20 more like those of a banana republic than an economic superpower. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net