China's Foreign Currency Reserves
In 1994, China had less than $25 billion of foreign currency reserves.[1] Since then, Chinas enormous trade surplus and the inflow of foreign investment have helped boost its foreign exchange reserves to U.S. $1.76 trillion by the end of April 2008 with reserves said to be growing by U.S. $100 million per hour. Whereas many economists tend to think that a countrys foreign reserves should be sufficient to pay for 3-6 months of imports, Chinas reserves can pay for a year and half of imports leading many to conclude that Chinas foreign reserves are unnecessarily large.[2] Critics point to these astounding figures as a further example of how out of balance Chinas trade with the rest of the world is.
How Chinas Foreign Exchange Reserves Got So Large
Increased Exports: The reserves started growing when China pegged its currency (the renminbi or yuan) to the U.S. dollar in 1994, with the intention of keeping the yuans value low and steady, thereby allowing Chinese products to remain low cost and affordable to overseas buyers. This in turn boosted exports, which allowed the Chinese economy to grow at the torrid rate of around 9%-10% it has in the last decade or so (with some exceptions during a regional-wide Asian Financial Crisis in the late 1990s). As Chinas economy surged ahead in the last 5-10 years, but the exchange rate remained pegged to the dollar, dollars have stacked up in the Chinese banking system as the government has withdrawn the foreign currency from circulation.
Sterilization: When foreigners buy products made in China, they pay in foreign currency usually the U.S. dollar which Chinese manufacturers take to the bank to exchange for RMB to pay their workers and other costs. Whereas banks in many countries can decide what to do with the dollars to achieve the highest return, Chinese banks cannot and must send the dollars to the Peoples Bank of China (PBoC - Chinas version of the Federal Reserve) to be sterilized for yuan. The PBoC in turn reverts the dollars to the State Administration for Foreign Exchange (SAFE), which decides what to do with the huge, ever expanding foreign exchange reserves.[3]
Overexpansion: Chinas inflexible and undervalued currency regime has locked the country into a situation whereby the large trade surpluses and capital inflows have led and continue to lead to domestic monetary expansion as the excess capital is reinvested in industrial production; this creates over-expansion and over-investment. Since production outpaces consumption, the trade surplus naturally increases, which feeds monetary expansion, starting the cycle all over again.
Greater Productivity: Besides the growth in exports, China has also seen a burst of manufacturing productivity (from the restructuring and privatization of a number of Chinas inefficient state enterprises), investment and credit, which have all contributed to the excess liquidity in the economy.
Impact of large foreign exchange reserves on China
Inflation: In China, all the dollars from exports that need to be converted to RMB is causing inflation: as demand for the yuan increases, rather than let the value of the yuan rise too quickly, Beijing is printing up new money instead. Even with bonds, Chinas monetary system cannot absorb all the extra cash, so prices have risen as a result and the stock and real estate markets have become inflated. China has tried to slow its accumulation of reserves by cutting export subsidies so as to decrease its trade surplus, by letting the yuan appreciate against the U.S. dollar (by 20%), and by encouraging domestic firms to invest abroad, but all to no avail[4] so far as the reserves keep increasing.
What does China do with all of its foreign exchange reserves?
For many years, SAFE has parked about 70% of its reserves in government-backed securities primarily U.S. Treasury bills with the rest in Euros and Japanese Yen. In the last several years, though, as the dollar has declined in value relative to the yuan, the Chinese government has indicated a desire to diversify its investments in order to get a better return. In recent years, however, with a host of other domestic problems besetting the country, the Chinese people are starting to question why their government is financing another countrys spending spree instead of using some of the large reserves to address the countrys domestic needs.
Impact of Chinas foreign exchange reserves on America
The United States has welcomed Chinas investment of its excess foreign reserves in U.S. Treasury bills, which has effectively helped to finance the U.S. current account deficit the result of a low savings rate and government spending that far exceeds its income. This massive loan from China has effectively helped the U.S. government to do everything from waging wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, to paying Congressional salaries (including those of politicians criticizing China), to rebuilding roads in New Orleans, and writing Social Security and Medicare checks. In turn, China has had a safe place to park its excess dollars.
Is this a tenable situation for America?
Although both the United States and China have benefited from this arrangement, many experts and observers believe this is not a tenable situation in the long run. According to economists at the Petersen Institute of International Economics, in early 2008, the U.S. government was running a global current account deficit of almost $800 billion, the largest it has ever been. In order to finance this deficit and its own foreign investments, the U.S. must import about $1 trillion of foreign capital every year or more than $4 billion every working day, which is simply unsustainable in the long run.[5] After all, at some point, foreign appetite for dollar assets will wane.
As average Americans become more aware of the reality that they are relying on money controlled by a foreign government and that never in Americas history has she been so deeply in debt to another country (as of early 2008, foreigners now control over 40% of the U.S. national debt[6]), especially one with whom America shares an ambivalent relationship, and who America has at times blamed for taking away job, fear is setting in about how long this imbalance will continue and about what might happen should China decide to pull its massive reserves out of the U.S. economy. Moreover, long-term U.S. interest rates are driven by the buying and selling of bonds, making these interest rates effectively at the control of foreign central banks, especially those of China and Japan.[7] In short, Chinas excessive foreign exchange reserves are causing some Americans to fear that control of their economy is increasingly at the mercy of China.
What would happen if China switched from dollar assets to other assets?
Moving from dollar assets to other assets will cause the dollar to depreciate, as the dollar will be worth less. At the same time, the bulk sale of U.S. treasury bills (short term bonds) could cause U.S. bond prices to drop and therefore yields to increase. Since government bond yields determine mortgage rates, this will result in higher long-term interest rates, which could make borrowing for a home more difficult, which would in turn further decrease already-dampened demand for housing and cause even more of a decline in the value of American real estate.[8]
How likely is China to exercise this economic nuclear option of withdrawing its reserves?
While China has in fact been looking to diversify its forex reserves by investing abroad, it will likely do so very gradually and in relatively small amounts, for otherwise they would stand to lose a lot with a bulk sale of U.S. treasuries as the value of the government bonds they dont sell would decline. Hence, any moves toward diversification should have minimal impact on the value of the dollar. And although the value of the dollar is weak, there is no more stable alternative right now for Chinas vast sums. Most economists agree that barring any unforeseen or major incident between the two countries, China will not exercise this economic nuclear option as China already has its own set of domestic problems to contend with at home as a result of its enormous forex reserves.
Looking Ahead
China: The yuans slow appreciation does not seem to have had much of an impact in reducing Chinas reserves, hence some economists believe China will have to allow for an even faster appreciation, though that may hurt exporters. China will also likely face higher inflation, which the government may try to offset by using some of the reserves to give subsidies to the poor, though it has to be careful not to exacerbate inflation in the process.[9] Some experts think Chinas foreign exchange reserves will not continue to grow exponentially as some have feared because there is pressure to use some of it on Chinas infrastructure needs and on education and health for the poor.
United States: Many economists, such as those at the Petersen Institute of International Economics, think that correcting the U.S. global current account deficit is the highest priority for U.S. foreign economic policy. Proposals for the useful short-term remedy include sizably reducing the U.S. budget deficit; generating greater domestic savings than greater output, thus expanding U.S. net exports; expanding domestic demand in other major economies such as China, Japan, and Europe to absorb U.S. exports; and the continuing gradual realignment of exchange rates.[10] While the U.S. can continue to pressure foreign economies to shoulder more responsibility for global consumption (China has a savings rate of about 50%[11]), these autonomous sovereign nations in the end will act in their own self-interest. The only part that the U.S. has any real control over is in regards to its own spending habits. Unfortunately, the likelihood of the U.S. reducing its budget deficit in lean times and during an election year is not very high. Expect American politicians unwilling to get their own house in order (undoubtedly at some cost to the American public) to continue to put the blame and responsibility on foreign countries and to threaten protectionist responses.
http://www.aasc.ucla.edu/uschina/trade_currency.shtml
U.S.-China Media Brief
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