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China’s Trilemma

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Yu Yongding
predicts that China may soon have little choice but to float the renminbi.

- Project Syndicate


BEIJING – The Nobel laureate economist Robert Mundell showed that an economy can maintain two – but only two – of three key features: monetary-policy independence, a fixed exchange rate, and free cross-border capital flows. But China is currently juggling all three – an act that is becoming increasingly difficult to sustain.

At first glance, this may not seem to be the case. Given that the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) has largely maintained its monetary-policy independence over the last three decades, and actively manages the renminbi’s exchange rate, it is natural to conclude that China imposes strict controls on capital flows. In fact, China liberalized inward foreign direct investment more than 20 years ago, and eased controls for much of the capital account thereafter.

China’s efforts to regulate cross-border capital flows have never been very effective. During the Asian financial crisis of the 1990s, China had to implement draconian measures to prevent capital flight. In the early 2000s, short-term capital began to flow into China, with investors betting on the renminbi’s appreciation and, from 2004-2006, on rising asset prices. Since renminbi internationalization was launched in 2009, exchange-rate arbitrage and the carry trade have surged.

Certainly, China’s capital controls, though porous, increase the transaction costs of moving short-term capital to and from China, thereby reducing upward pressure on the renminbi’s exchange rate; in extreme circumstances, this could play a decisive role in China’s financial security. But capital continues to flow – if not entirely freely – across China’s borders.

This raises an obvious question: How has China managed to defy the Mundell trilemma by maintaining all three policy objectives simultaneously? The answer lies in China’s sterilization policy.

China has run a capital-account surplus for most of the last 30 years, and a trade surplus every year since 1993. The PBOC keeps the exchange rate stable by intervening heavily in the foreign-exchange market, creating so much liquidity that the authorities must engage in massive sterilization to avoid overshooting the targeted increase in the monetary base.

In China, unlike in advanced countries, monetary and sterilization policy are often one in the same. The degree to which monetary policy is expansionary depends on the degree to which the liquidity created by currency-market intervention has been sterilized.

The most frequently used monetary instrument in sterilization is open-market operations. Given China’s twin surpluses, the PBOC sold all of the government bonds that it had accumulated in 2003, so it has been selling central-bank bills ever since, with CN¥5 trillion ($812 billion) in such bills currently held by banks.

Another important instrument for sterilization is the reserve-requirement ratio, which, when raised, locks a large amount of liquidity in the banking system. The ratio, which the PBOC has changed 42 times since 1998, currently stands at 20% – double the ratio for large banks in the United States.

Whatever the mechanism, the costs of sterilization are very high. For starters, by maintaining an undervalued real exchange rate, China has fallen into the so-called “dollar trap,” boosting the US dollar’s international importance at China’s own expense. As time passes, the senselessness of this policy will become increasingly apparent.

Sterilization also leads to a serious misallocation of resources, most obviously by functioning as a subsidy to the export sector, at the expense of the rest of the economy. A less noticed form of resource misallocation stems from the fact that only sellers of foreign exchange gain liquidity, but the whole economy feels the effects. As a result, small and medium-size enterprises that produce non-tradable products are denied much-needed funds and suffer from sterilization’s negative externalities.

Furthermore, the high reserve ratio and forced purchase of central-bank bills squeezes commercial banks’ profits severely – a phenomenon that will be intensified by interest-rate liberalization. The quest for yield on available funds will drive banks to make riskier investments.

There are also quasi-fiscal costs involved. Fortunately, despite the low returns on foreign assets, this is not yet a major problem for China, owing to the low costs of the corresponding PBOC liabilities.

Nonetheless, though predictions that China would abandon its exchange-rate controls in order to uphold monetary autonomy have proved wrong over the last decade, this time may be different. With China’s liberalization of interest rates and short-term capital flows making it increasingly difficult for the country to juggle Mundell’s “irreconcilable trinity,” one hopes that Chinese leaders will finally allow the renminbi to float, while keeping in place existing capital controls.

Yu Yongding
predicts that China may soon have little choice but to float the renminbi.

- Project Syndicate


© 1995-2014 Project Syndicate


Read more at Yu Yongding
predicts that China may soon have little choice but to float the renminbi.

- Project Syndicate
 
Here is my thought, RMB will float more as its international role expands, that's inevitable. However, I disagree that China will ever abandon control over RMB's value.

The biggest problem with the article is that it is attempting analyze China using an economic model developed for US and Europe. This approach has been consistently proven wrong in the past sixty years.

For example, the articles cites that "Furthermore, the high reserve ratio and forced purchase of central-bank bills squeezes commercial banks’ profits severely – a phenomenon that will be intensified by interest-rate liberalization. The quest for yield on available funds will drive banks to make riskier investments." This is a fundamental misconception of the Chinese banking model. The Chinese banks are state owned enterprise. Profit is NOT its top priority. Basically, instead existing as commercial entities like the banks in the west, Chinese banks are integral part of the government structure. To put it simply, the Chinese government says jump, the Chinese bank will ask how high.
 
Here is my thought, RMB will float more as its international role expands, that's inevitable. However, I disagree that China will ever abandon control over RMB's value.

The biggest problem with the article is that it is attempting analyze China using an economic model developed for US and Europe. This approach has been consistently proven wrong in the past sixty years.

For example, the articles cites that "Furthermore, the high reserve ratio and forced purchase of central-bank bills squeezes commercial banks’ profits severely – a phenomenon that will be intensified by interest-rate liberalization. The quest for yield on available funds will drive banks to make riskier investments." This is a fundamental misconception of the Chinese banking model. The Chinese banks are state owned enterprise. Profit is NOT its top priority. Basically, instead existing as commercial entities like the banks in the west, Chinese banks are integral part of the government structure. To put it simply, the Chinese government says jump, the Chinese bank will ask how high.
The article is presenting itself as if China is like Japan, a semi US colony that will listen to the Americans. It also fails to understand that China is selling US treasury bond at a slow pace and used the funds to buy oil and mining companies around the world and fund huge projects. Thus the USD is not 100% useless.
 
Here is my thought, RMB will float more as its international role expands, that's inevitable. However, I disagree that China will ever abandon control over RMB's value.

The biggest problem with the article is that it is attempting analyze China using an economic model developed for US and Europe. This approach has been consistently proven wrong in the past sixty years.

For example, the articles cites that "Furthermore, the high reserve ratio and forced purchase of central-bank bills squeezes commercial banks’ profits severely – a phenomenon that will be intensified by interest-rate liberalization. The quest for yield on available funds will drive banks to make riskier investments." This is a fundamental misconception of the Chinese banking model. The Chinese banks are state owned enterprise. Profit is NOT its top priority. Basically, instead existing as commercial entities like the banks in the west, Chinese banks are integral part of the government structure. To put it simply, the Chinese government says jump, the Chinese bank will ask how high.

The Western economic model has not been wrong about China in the last 60 years, it's been correct. When China was full-bore communist, its economy was a basket case. When it embraced economic reform along the Western model under Deng Xiaoping and thereafter, its economy began to grow rapidly. China has been a total vindication of the Western economic model.

As far as the state-owned nature of banks in China, it is precisely this feature which has been causing problems for China in recent years. Non-performing loans are increasing (UPDATE 1-China banks' bad loan ratio hits two-year high| Reuters which is starting to damage the economy. The state doesn't know how to allocate capital effectively, so it allocates capital into either massive construction efforts for PR, or to friends and family under corrupt dealings. Even Chinese members here have agreed that for many of the millionaires and billionaires in China, that wealth was accumulated through corrupt means. As long as the state controls the banks, this corruption will continue. Once the banks are concerned only with profit, as they should be, they will allocate capital efficiently to earn high returns, which will support further economic growth for China.

Finally, this was written by someone fairly well versed in both Western and Chinese economics:

Yu Yongding, a former president of the China Society of World Economics and director of the Institute of World Economics and Politics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, served on the Monetary Policy Committee of the People’s Bank of China from 2004 to 2006. He has also served as a member of the Advisory Committee of National Planning of the Commission of National Development and Reform of the PRC.

The article is presenting itself as if China is like Japan, a semi US colony that will listen to the Americans. It also fails to understand that China is selling US treasury bond at a slow pace and used the funds to buy oil and mining companies around the world and fund huge projects. Thus the USD is not 100% useless.

Sorry to say, but China's economic growth is very similar to Japan's economic growth in the 1960s and 1970s, and South Korea's growth in the 1980s and 1990s. It's good that China is growing, but the concept of a unique and unprecedented Chinese economic model is not supported by the facts.
 
China's massive economic reforms, that were announced several months ago, will address all these issues.

Interest rate reform, currency reform and capital account reform. All to be carried out over the next few years.

Reform is necessary. But it must be done slowly and steadily, on our own terms and in our own time. Stability must be preserved.

And as @tranquilium mentioned, it is doubtful that the Chinese government will ever give up full control. The largest banks in China (which are also the largest companies in the world) are all state-owned, they are an essential part of Chinese economic policy.
 
Why do western intellectuals keep coming up with "Bust China" theories so frequently? What are they afraid of?

When China grew at double-digit rates for over a decade, they said it was unsustainable.

When China grew at double-digit rates for over 2 decades, they said it was impossible to continue, since no other country had done it before.

When China grew at double-digit rates for over 3 decades... well you get the idea.

No other country has sustained double-digit growth for so long, no other country has managed to lift 800 million people out of poverty over the course of only a few decades... it has never been done before, so to them it must be impossible.

In every analysis, they always ended up with "China CAN'T do this... it's not economically possible". But as we have shown, we can. We have a dire need to become a developed country, and the chorus of "China CAN'T" isn't enough to stop us from breaking all their preconceptions of what can and can't be done.
 
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Sorry to say, but China's economic growth is very similar to Japan's economic growth in the 1960s and 1970s, and South Korea's growth in the 1980s and 1990s. It's good that China is growing, but the concept of a unique and unprecedented Chinese economic model is not supported by the facts.

Initially China relied on exports and Foreign Direct Investment to stimulate their economy, but that has been shifting towards a domestic consumer based economy. The difference between SK and Japan is that America cannot force China to do things like they did with Japan to stagnant their economy, ie. Plaza Accord.
 
When China grew at double-digit rates for over a decade, they said it was unsustainable.

When China grew at double-digit rates for over 2 decades, they said it was impossible to continue, since no other country had done it before.

When China grew at double-digit rates for over 3 decades... well you get the idea.

No other country has sustained double-digit growth for so long, no other country has managed to lift 800 million people out of poverty over the course of only a few decades... it has never been done before, so to them it must be impossible.

In every analysis, they always ended up with "China CAN'T do this... it's not economically possible". But as we have shown, we can. We have a dire need to become a developed country, and the chorus of "China CAN'T" isn't enough to stop us from breaking all their preconceptions of what can and can't be done.

This is not at all related to what can be done and what can't be done.

I believe these self-proclaimed intellectuals are still carrying the centuries old "White Man's burden". They are so self-absorbed in their own propaganda that they cannot see through it. They cannot digest the idea of alternative world order in which the western world looses it's primacy.
 
Why do western intellectuals keep coming up with "Bust China" theories so frequently? What are they afraid of?

It takes a lot of mental contortions to call Yu Yongding a Western intellectual. Nice try, though.

Yu Yongding, a former president of the China Society of World Economics and director of the Institute of World Economics and Politics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, served on the Monetary Policy Committee of the People’s Bank of China from 2004 to 2006. He has also served as a member of the Advisory Committee of National Planning of the Commission of National Development and Reform of the PRC.

When China grew at double-digit rates for over a decade, they said it was unsustainable.

When China grew at double-digit rates for over 2 decades, they said it was impossible to continue, since no other country had done it before.

When China grew at double-digit rates for over 3 decades... well you get the idea.

No other country has sustained double-digit growth for so long, no other country has managed to lift 800 million people out of poverty over the course of only a few decades... it has never been done before, so to them it must be impossible.

In every analysis, they always ended up with "China CAN'T do this... it's not economically possible". But as we have shown, we can. We have a dire need to become a developed country, and the chorus of "China CAN'T" isn't enough to stop us from breaking all their preconceptions of what can and can't be done.

Why is every article of this type interpreted as an attack on China? This kind of analysis is meant to help China.
 
I kind of agree with the article, esp. with regard to resource misallocation. The article explained very well how small and medium enterprises suffer while export oriented companies gain unfair advantages. This might also explain why domestic market is so hard to grow and domestic commodity prices are steadily increasing.
 
Initially China relied on exports and Foreign Direct Investment to stimulate their economy, but that has been shifting towards a domestic consumer based economy. The difference between SK and Japan is that America cannot force China to do things like they did with Japan to stagnant their economy, ie. Plaza Accord.

@Chinese-Dragon and I were discussing this in another thread. The Plaza Accord was necessary because without it, the US would have probably fallen into a severe recession, which in turn would have dragged Japan down. Similarly, China will float the Renminbi because it needs to, not because someone forced it to.

I have to say, this continuing victim attitude on the part of so many Chinese is rather childish. China is soon going to be the largest economy in the world, and to continue growing, China must reform. Not because the big, bad US forces it to reform, but because its leaders know that such reforms are necessary to strengthen the economy.

Feel free to rant and rave about the US if it makes you feel better, though.
 
The Western economic model has not been wrong about China in the last 60 years, it's been correct. When China was full-bore communist, its economy was a basket case. When it embraced economic reform along the Western model under Deng Xiaoping and thereafter, its economy began to grow rapidly. China has been a total vindication of the Western economic model.

There we go again. It is the same misconception about history.

First of all, is Chinese economy "bad" before 80s? From growth perspective, it is not bad at all. The thing is, China or more specifically, PRC started out in 1945 with pretty much zero-infrastructure. It doesn't have the industry to support modern agriculture and it doesn't have the education to build an industry. Yet by 80s China already has a complete industrial base that is capable of manufacturing from aircraft, satellite to small things like electronics, vacuum tubes.

Second, Chinese never used the western model in any of its development stage. The US and European model has legacy in its long feudal history where local nobility holds land independent of the central authority. Industrial revolution simply switched nobility to business owners. While the socialism revolutions in the early 20th century added in many socialist elements to the western economic system, it is still fundamentally the same one that can trace its roots back to Europe's feudalism history. Chinese, on the other hand, has its roots in absolute monarchy where local rulers are merely non-hereditary civil servants selected and empowered by the central government. This characteristic is one of the reason China accepted communism so readily. The philosophy is already there with the Chinese for over a thousand years before Karl Marx is even born.

The economy transition from China in the 80s is merely an intermediate step from a long-series of economy reforms that started in the early 60s and lasted all the way to the present day and private business existed in China ever since the 60s. The reform in the 80s was more obvious because economic development has reached a critical mass. For all these decades, the state owned enterprises has been the instrument the Chinese government used to lead the economy tide as well as anchoring social stability in the troubled times. This is drastically in contrast with the western business which is never controlled by the government since their conception in industrial revolution.

Internet is funny thing. People actually believes that China is capitalistic or follows western economic model. If you actually bother to make in depth analysis of the details Chinese economy model. you will see it is has always been a socialist model. Its "free market" characteristic doesn't make it capitalism because all socialist model besides communism incorporate large percentage of private, profit oriented organizations.

BTW, text book definite of free market economy involves a market without any regulation and interference from government and it doesn't exist except in the 1800s because people quickly figured out a market without rules is just asking for trouble.
 
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I kind of agree with the article, esp. with regard to resource misallocation. The article explained very well how small and medium enterprises suffer while export oriented companies gain unfair advantages. This might also explain why domestic market is so hard to grow and domestic commodity prices are steadily increasing.

I have some reservation on the issue. While resource allocation can certainly have an effect, it has more to do with the business cycle in certain field. More specifically, it is the cycle of:
1. New Market emerge
2. Many Businesses Merge to take advantage of the market
3. Competition begin to eliminate weaker businesses/stronger business absorb weaker ones and barrier for entry rise preventing too many new business from emerging
4. Only a few large business left in the market and the barrier to entry is high enough that the market reach equilibrium.

Take steel industry for example. Notice that steel industry in China is NOT export oriented and primarily depend on domestic consumption.

In the past few years, China saw a large increasing steel demand due to infrastructure development. In fact it is producing more steel per year than the next 30 countries combined. This is step 1 of the cycle, a new market merges.
Next is step 2, because of the rising demand many small to medium sized steel mills emerge across the country to take advantage of the rising steel price.
Step 3, as the market saturates, the steel mills begin to compete with each other for business. Tougher environmental regulations also increased production cost for the companies. Since the large business such as Baogang (宝钢) has technical expertise for more efficient production, higher quality production and more environmental friendly production, their manufacturing cost is lower than the small steel mills and begin to drive them out of business or force them to merge into larger entity to remain competitive.
Step 4, China is a few years from this stage as far as steel industry is concerned. Right now we have seen the bankruptcy of many small steel mills that couldn't remain competitive and larger steel mills prosper due to their better technical skills and having more capital to invest into research. In a few years of time the market to reach equilibrium or the next set of infrastructure expansion starts, then the cycle will start anew.
 
There we go again. It is the same misconception about history.

First of all, is Chinese economy "bad" before 80s? From growth perspective, it is not bad at all. The thing is, China or more specifically, PRC started out in 1945 with pretty much zero-infrastructure. It doesn't have the industry to support modern agriculture and it doesn't have the education to build an industry. Yet by 80s China already has a complete industrial base that is capable of manufacturing from aircraft, satellite to small things like electronics, vacuum tubes.

Second, Chinese never used the western model in any of its development stage. The US and European model has legacy in its long feudal history where local nobility holds land independent of the central authority. Industrial revolution simply switched nobility to business owners. While the socialism revolutions in the early 20th century added in many socialist elements to the western economic system, it is still fundamentally the same one that can trace its roots back to Europe's feudalism history. Chinese, on the other hand, has its roots in absolute monarchy where local rulers are merely non-hereditary civil servants selected and empowered by the central government. This characteristic is one of the reason China accepted communism so readily. The philosophy is already there with the Chinese for over a thousand years before Karl Marx is even born.

The economy transition from China in the 80s is merely an intermediate step from a long-series of economy reforms that started in the early 60s and lasted all the way to the present day and private business existed in China ever since the 60s. The reform in the 80s was more obvious because economic development has reached a critical mass. For all these decades, the state owned enterprises has been the instrument the Chinese government used to lead the economy tide as well as anchoring social stability in the troubled times. This is drastically in contrast with the western business which is never controlled by the government since their conception in industrial revolution.

Internet is funny thing. People actually believes that China is capitalistic or follows western economic model. If you actually bother to make in depth analysis of the details Chinese economy model. you will see it is has always been a socialist model. Its "free market" characteristic doesn't make it capitalism because all socialist model besides communism incorporate large percentage of private, profit oriented organizations.

BTW, text book definite of free market economy involves a market without any regulation and interference from government and it doesn't exist except in the 1800s because people quickly figured out a market without rules is just asking for trouble.

China is very special, and has created a unique economy, never seen before in history.

National champions - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Zaibatsu - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Keiretsu - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Chaebol - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Economy of Singapore - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fannie Mae - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia / Freddie Mac - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

China's development really bears no resemblance to any other economic development model used before. Congratulations.
 

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