"Above the fold
- Posted by:
- Economist.com | WASHINGTON
- Categories:
- Morning memo
A DAILY round-up of econonomic news:
Chinese premier Wen Jiabao is "worried" about the safety of American Treasuries. Hey, if I owned a trillion dollars worth of something, I'd be worried about it, too. But China can't be too worried. They're still buying Treasuries by the bucketload.
Speaking of China, the American trade deficit hit a six-year low in January at $36 billion. While purchases of imported consumer goods have fallen, falling purchases of and prices for oil made up the bulk of the decline. Still, the news isn't good for exporters to America, or exporters in America, for that matter. The deficit came down despite falling exports.
Battle lines are being drawn ahead of the upcoming G20 summit. Tokyo has sided with American officials in arguing that efforts to address the weak global economy, including coordinated stimulus, should take precedent over attempts to remake the global regulatory apparatus. Paris and Berlin, on the other hand, are united in their belief that the conference should address regulation, and that current spending in Europe is sufficient. Wonderful.
And American household wealth fell an estimated 18% in 2008 as housing and stock prices shrank. The Federal Reserve suggested that some $11 trillion in wealth was lost during the year, which erased gains back to 2004. The loss of wealth has cast household debt burdens in a new and troubling light, and has led to saving and deleveraging, contributing to the sharp drop in consumer demand."
Me:Don the libertarian Democrat wrote:
I see the Wen Jiabao comments as an attempt to intervene in our current debate about bondholders of banks. He wants them guaranteed. If we default on them, he's saying that the focus will shift to US Treasuries, and he doubts that we'd like that.
http://blogs.cfr.org/setser/2009/01/29/read-dean-areddy-and-ng-on-the-ma...
“It turns out that one of China’s main criticism of US policy is simple: the government didn’t stand by institutions that China expected the US to support. Lehman. Wamu. And the Reserve Primary Fund. Dean, Areddy and Ng:
“Leaders in China, the world’s third-largest economy, have been surprised and upset over how much the problems of the U.S. financial sector have hurt China’s holdings. In response, Beijing is re-examining its U.S. investments, say people familiar with the government’s thinking. …
Chinese leaders have felt burned by a series of bad experiences with U.S. investments they had believed were safe, say people familiar with their thinking, including holdings in Morgan Stanley, the collapsed Reserve Primary Fund and mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.”
I think they understand that they're threatening a kind of financial version of MAD, but they don't like the default trend line, and they're reminding us that we're dependent on them, just as they are on us.

































