"Chinese acrobats
Published: December 7 2008 18:30 | Last updated: December 7 2008 18:30
It would have taken a heart of stone not to smile at the spectacle of Hank Paulson, US Treasury secretary, receiving a lecture on economic stabilisation from Chinese officials. Zhou Xioachuan, governor of the Chinese central bank, blamed US over-consumption for the crisis, while Wang Qishan, the leader of the Chinese delegation, urged Mr Paulson to guarantee the safety of Chinese investments in the US. At a separate event in Hong Kong, the chairman of China’s sovereign wealth fund pointed out that many developing countries had clearer and more consistent economy policies than Mr Paulson did. Ouch."
Leave the humorous headlines and asides to me friends. Your part is as the Straight Man/Woman.
I think that the US Over-Consumption bit is BS. They love it. Can't get enough of it. But they don't like getting an earful about "Human Rights" all the time, and they feel it's time for a bit of payback. We have "Human Rights" Problems, but you have "Immorality" Problems. You fools can't save, can't leave other countries alone, produce art that's crap and feed it to every corner of the planet, etc. Oh, by the way, you owe us a bundle of greenbacks, so you might want to appear more like a supplicant in future.
"Yet just because Mr Paulson has stumbled badly in recent months does not mean that China is on the right track. Zhou Xioachuan is wrong to urge a higher savings rate in the US. The US consumer is in full retreat; were the retreat to become a rout, China’s factories would be among the first to be ruined. To commandeer Saint Augustine’s prayer: “Give us global rebalancing – but not yet.”Fine. It's fallacious to assume that because TARP defies common sense and good judgment, Paulson can't say anything that exhibits common sense and good judgment. Poisoning The Well and all that. I'd worry if I thought that Zhou really believed that, but he doesn't believe that we can stop spending, any more than he believes in Communism.
I think that you rephrased the prayer, since it's not a frigate. Lay off the Patrick O'Brian for a spell, or stop reading about those damned Somali Pirates.
"If the US has overconsumed, China suffers from the opposite malaise. The savings rate is close to 60 per cent of gross domestic product, and Chinese policy has centred on producing cheap products to sell to the US on credit. This cannot continue forever. China’s citizens deserve to enjoy more of the fruits of their labour, which means spending more and saving less. China’s concrete-pouring fiscal stimulus is unlikely to help. It should be handing cash to its own citizens and spending more on health, education and social security. China’s citizens save because they fear nobody will look after them in bad times – and bad times are coming."
Well, I can't disagree with that. The sooner that they become like us the better. Interesting that both of us could use a Helicopter Drop.
"A quick way to encourage domestic spending would be for China to allow the renminbi to appreciate. Until this summer, China had been doing that carefully. The appreciation has now stopped and last week the renminbi experienced its largest one-day fall against the dollar. Nobody should be surprised: China warned in October that this change in policy was on the cards. But it cannot be right for a country with such a huge surplus to resort to competitive devaluation. China’s main defence, for now, is that the renminbi is still appreciating against a trade-weighted basket of currencies. But if the dollar falls, the renminbi must not try to overtake it on the way down."
They're toying with us. It will appreciate. But they'll do it on their own schedule, and fiddle with Tibet, Taiwan, their Moslem Population, etc., while they're toying with us.
"China must walk a tightrope. Too sharp an export slowdown risks domestic unrest, and neither can it allow a dollar collapse. Let us hope that China’s leaders are acrobatic. The world cannot afford a trade war with Chinese characteristics."
True. And they're telling us that the days of long and tedious lectures are over.