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China's $3.2 trillion headache

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While the downgrade of Unites States government debt by Standard & Poor's shocked global financial markets, China has more reason to worry than most: the bulk of its $3.2tn in official foreign reserves - more than 60 per cent - is denominated in dollars, including $1.1tn in US Treasury bonds.

So long as the US government does not default, whatever losses China may experience from the downgrade will be small. To be sure, the dollar's value will fall, imposing a balance-sheet loss on the Peoples' Bank of China (PBC, the central bank). But a falling dollar would make it cheaper for Chinese consumers and companies to buy US goods. If prices are stable in the US, as is the case now, the gains from buying US goods should exactly offset the PBC's balance-sheet losses.

The downgrade could, moreover, force the US Treasury to raise the interest rate on new bonds, in which case China would stand to gain. But S&P's downgrade was a poor decision, taken at the wrong time. If the United States' debts had truly become less trustworthy, they would have been even more dubious before the agreement reached on August 2 by Congress and President Barack Obama to raise the government's debt ceiling.

That agreement allowed the world to hope that the US economy would embark on a more predictable path to recovery. The downgrade has undermined that hope. Some people even predict a double-dip recession. If that happens, the chance of an actual US default would be much higher than it is today.

These new worries are raising alarm bells in China. Diversification away from dollar assets is the advice of the day. But this is no easy task, particularly in the short term. If the PBC started to buy non-dollar assets in large quantities, it would invariably need to convert some current dollar assets into another currency, which would inevitably drive up that currency's value, thus increasing the PBC's costs.

Showing appreciation

Another idea being discussed in Chinese policy circles is to allow the renminbi to appreciate against the dollar. Much of China's official foreign reserves have accumulated because the PBC seeks to control the renminbi's exchange rate, keeping its upward movement within a reasonable range and at a measured pace. If it allowed the renminbi to appreciate faster, the PBC would not need to buy large quantities of foreign currencies.

But whether renminbi appreciation will work depends on reducing China's net capital inflows and current-account surplus. International experience suggests that, in the short run, more capital flows into a country when its currency appreciates, and most empirical studies have shown that gradual appreciation has only a limited effect on countries' current-account positions.

If appreciation does not reduce the current-account surplus and capital inflows, then the renminbi's exchange rate is bound to face further upward pressure. That is why some people are advocating that China undertake a one-shot, big-bang appreciation - large enough to defuse expectations of further strengthening and deter inflows of speculative "hot" money. Such a revaluation would also discourage exports and encourage imports, thereby reducing China's chronic trade surplus.

But such a move would be almost suicidal for China's economy. Between 2001 and 2008, export growth accounted for more than 40 per cent of China's overall economic growth. That is, China's annual GDP growth rate would drop by four percentage points if its exports did not grow at all. In addition, a study by the China Centre for Economic Research has found that a 20 per cent appreciation against the dollar would entail a three per cent drop in employment - more than 20m jobs.

There is no short-term cure for China's $3.2tn problem. The government must rely on longer-term measures to mitigate the problem, including internationalisation of the renminbi. Using the renminbi to settle China's international trade accounts would help China escape the United States' beggar-thy-neighbour policy of allowing the dollar's value to fall dramatically against trade rivals.

But China's $3.2tn problem will become a 20tn renminbi problem if China cannot reduce its current-account surplus and fence off capital inflows. There is no escape from the need for domestic structural adjustment.

To achieve this, China must increase domestic consumption's share of GDP. This has already been written into the government's 12th Five-Year Plan. Unfortunately, given high inflation, structural adjustment has been postponed, with efforts to control credit expansion becoming the government's first priority. This enforced investment slowdown is itself increasing China's net savings, ie: the current-account surplus, while constraining the expansion of domestic consumption.

Real appreciation of the renminbi is inevitable so long as Chinese living standards are catching up with US levels. Indeed, the Chinese government cannot hold down inflation while maintaining a stable value for the renminbi. The PBC should target the renminbi's rate of real appreciation, rather than the inflation rate under a stable renminbi. And then the government needs to focus more attention on structural adjustment - the only effective cure for China's $3.2tn headache.

Yao Yang is Director of the China Centre for Economic Research at Peking University.

A version of this article was first published by Project Syndicate.

The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily represent Al Jazeera's editorial policy.


China's $3.2 trillion headache - Opinion - Al Jazeera English
 
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There are a lot of countries in the world who wish they had this kind of Chinese problem:china:
 
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Not just Dollar but Euro and Yen are failing too. Everyone is buying Swiss Franc and gold.
 
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Not just Dollar but Euro and Yen are failing too. Everyone is buying Swiss Franc and gold.

Problem if that it is a systemic failure and this is accepted in western circles and that means capitalism has failed.
 
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If countries like Britain and America can survive with only $100 billion in currency reserves (and much larger debt interest payments than us), then we'll do fine with $3 trillion, or even just a tiny fraction of that.

Our debt interest payments are small, and we have no trade deficit.
 
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If countries like Britain and America can survive with only $100 billion in currency reserves (and much larger debt interest payments than us), then we'll do fine with $3 trillion, or even just a tiny fraction of that.

Our debt interest payments are small, and we have no trade deficit.

I agree with you brother. China has no problems. Its just propagand cos they cant think of anything else to say

---------- Post added at 11:59 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:57 PM ----------

err...what exactly is China of today, pray tell, smart one?

Listen mate there are many types of capitalism. The capitalism advertised and propagated by america and her mates ie that is unchecked has failed
 
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I agree with you brother. China has no problems. Its just propagand cos they cant think of anything else to say

Buddy we do have a lot of problems, but in terms of economy we're doing alright. :azn:

err...what exactly is China of today, pray tell, smart one?

Our system is called "Socialism with Chinese characteristics"... or to describe it more objectively, "state capitalism".
 
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You may even call it "Marxism with Mongoloid sperm", for all the world cares.

It is nothing more than state controlled capitalism.

That's what it is.

What's with the attitude?

I said its official name, as well as a more objective description.

I was the one who said "state capitalism", you just parroted what I said, while talking about sperm at the same time. :rolleyes:
 
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You may even call it "Marxism with Mongoloid sperm", for all the world cares.

It is nothing more than state controlled capitalism.

That's what it is.


Wow. So kind of you to share your knowledge with us/
 
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What's with the attitude?

I said its official name, as well as a more objective description.

I was the one who said "state capitalism", you just parroted what I said, while talking about sperm at the same time. :rolleyes:

You didn't even have to jump in, in the first place.

I was replying to the one who said 'Capitalism has failed'.
 
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You didn't even have to jump in, in the first place.

I was replying to the one who said 'Capitalism has failed'.

Learn to read, my post supported your point. I was the one who said that China's system was state capitalism, the only thing you contributed was some BS about sperm.

Now if you don't mind, it's time to get back on topic.
 
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If countries like Britain and America can survive with only $100 billion in currency reserves (and much larger debt interest payments than us), then we'll do fine with $3 trillion, or even just a tiny fraction of that.

Our debt interest payments are small, and we have no trade deficit.

US doesn't need currency reserve. It pays in dollar.
 
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US doesn't need currency reserve. It pays in dollar.

And even then they ran into trouble with their own debt ceiling.

Anyway, out of our $3 trillion currency reserves, only about $1 trillion of that is in US debt.

It's extremely unlikely for the American economy to collapse in the near future, so I'm not too worried.

And even IF it happened, the leftover $2 trillion would still be the largest currency reserves on Earth by a very large margin.
 
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