Category: China

  • Will Central Banks of China and Turkey Doom Their Economies?

    Will Central Banks of China and Turkey Doom Their Economies?

    There is growing evidence that some of the world’s major developing economies might be overheating. China and Turkey in particular.

    china erdoganChina has been experiencing rapid economic growth for nearly the whole of the previous decade. The Shanghai composite index is up over 100% since 2005, and roughly 500% in the past 15 years.

    That growth may be coming at a cost. In May, the Chinese Consumer Price Index rose at an annualized rate of 5.5%. This was after the CPI declined in April to 5.3% from 5.4% in March.

    The Chinese have been struggling with containing food inflation for quite some time. In November of 2010, the price of 18 key vegetables rose at an annualized rate of 62.4%, according to Business Insider.

    Food inflation might harm the pocketbooks of Chinese consumers, but Ken Peng—an economist at Citigroup—is warning that wage increases might be behind the inflation, according to Business Day.

    If wages are the driving force behind the inflation, the Chinese economy might be in for a turbulent future, as wage price inflation could signal that Chinese economic agents are factoring in higher inflation expectations.

    Turkey is facing similar problems.

    In May, inflation in the Turkey rose at an annualized rate of 7.2%. Perhaps most alarming, however, was not the actual rate of inflation but rather the rate of increase—inflation was up 2.4% from April.

    Reuters reported that the International Monetary Fund was barred from releasing its full report on Turkey. The Turkish government stated that the report was written by an “inexperienced analyst.” Was this a valid critique, or is Turkey afraid to acknowledge the truth?

    Perhaps the economies of Turkey and China are overheating because the central banks of those countries are stubbornly refusing to enact the necessary reforms.

    The Central Bank of Turkey is attempting to fight inflation by increasing reserve rate requirements—the percentage of deposits a bank must hold as reserves—but refusing to hike interest rates. A policy CNBC described as “unorthodox.”

    The People’s Bank of China, on the other hand, has hiked interest rates and increased reserve requirements to no avail. Some economic commentators have stated that China should remove its currency peg to the dollar. In that case, the Chinese yuan may appreciate, and inflation in China might subside.

    There have been speculative announcements that the Chinese might do exactly that, but as of yet, no follow through.

    These economies may face significant hardships in the future if there central banks cannot get a hold on inflation. However, both economies appear to be growing for a reason, and that growth may continue over the longer term.

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    via Will Central Banks of China and Turkey Doom Their Economies? | Benzinga.com.

  • China admits ‘secret’ aircraft carrier is nearly ready for launch

    China admits ‘secret’ aircraft carrier is nearly ready for launch

    China admits ‘secret’ aircraft carrier is nearly ready for launch

    Officials suggest refurbished former Soviet vessel will operate in disputed waters including Taiwan Straits

    guardian.co.uk

    The rusty-looking Varyag aircraft carrier sold by the Ukraine to China passes through the Bosphorus near Istanbul in 2001 en route to Dalian where it has been refurbished to join the Chinese naval fleet. China initially claimed it was going to be a floating casino. Photograph: Kerim Okten/EPA
    The rusty-looking Varyag aircraft carrier sold by the Ukraine to China passes through the Bosphorus near Istanbul in 2001 en route to Dalian where it has been refurbished to join the Chinese naval fleet. China initially claimed it was going to be a floating casino. Photograph: Kerim Okten/EPA

    The rusty-looking Varyag aircraft carrier sold by the Ukraine passes through the Bosphorus

    China has moved a step closer to launching its first aircraft carrier with senior generals in the People’s Liberation Army finally confirming one of the world’s worst kept military secrets.

    Officers from the general staff acknowledged the existence of a carrier, which one of them described as a “symbol of a great nation”, amid reports that it could set sail within weeks.

    The vessel in question is a defunct Soviet-era carrier formerly named the Varyag that was bought in 1998 from Ukraine by a Hong Kong company on the pretext that it would be used as a floating casino off the shores of Macau.

    Instead it has been upgraded at China’s Dalian naval shipyard with combat sensors and defensive weapons and painted in the colours of the People’s Liberation Army. For several years foreigners have been kept out of the area of Dalian where the work has taken place. But the existence of a 67,500 tonne vessel is not easily concealed and in recent months photographs have appeared in state-run media.

    Chen Bingde, the chief of China’s military general staff, has gone a step further in an interview published in the Hong Kong Commercial Daily (translated link), saying the 300m long carrier “is being built but has not been completed”.

    His assistant chief, Qi Jianguo, suggested the vessel was both a status symbol and a long-overdue strengthening of China’s naval defence. “All of the great nations in the world own aircraft carriers – they are symbols of a great nation,” Qi was quoted as saying. “It would have been better for us if we acted sooner in understanding the oceans and mapping out our blue-water capabilities earlier.”

    Referring to areas where territorial waters are disputed, he said that China faced “heavy pressure” in the South China Sea, East China Sea, Yellow Sea and the Taiwan Straits. But the carrier would never sail into the waters of other nations.

    No further details have emerged, leaving military experts to speculate whether the revamped hulk will indeed mark a significant projection of Chinese military power as a “blue water” force or the revamped hulk will hold only symbolic value, lacking the technology and operational experience to challenge the US navy.

    The commander of US Pacific forces, Admiral Robert Willard, told the Senate in April that he was not concerned about the carrier’s military impact but expected it would make a big impression on public opinion. “I think the change in perception by the region will be significant,” he said.

    In the past year the Chinese military has surprised many foreign observers with the speed of its weapons development – notably the test flight of a J-20 stealth fighter and a “carrier-killer” missile.

    China has yet to announce whether the carrier will be renamed. One report suggests it will be called Shi Lang, after a Qing dynasty admiral who conquered Taiwan – further fuelling unease about its impact on regional stability.

    • This article was amended on 9 June 2011. The original suggested that the carrier will be called Shi Lang, after a Ming dynasty admiral. This has been corrected.

    via China admits ‘secret’ aircraft carrier is nearly ready for launch | World news | The Guardian.

  • Turkey plans to open bank in China

    Turkey plans to open bank in China

    GÖKHAN KURTARAN

    ISTANBUL – Hürriyet Daily News

    The Turkish Central Bank and the Chinese Central Bank are negotiating to support trade in national currencies, says Turkish Deputy PM Ali Babacan (2nd L).
    The Turkish Central Bank and the Chinese Central Bank are negotiating to support trade in national currencies, says Turkish Deputy PM Ali Babacan (2nd L).

    Turkey plans to open a bank in China as a result of the developing trade and monetary relations between the two countries, according to a statement by Turkish Deputy Prime Minister and Economy Minister Ali Babacan.

    The Bank of China, the Asian county’s third-largest lender by market value, has received a license to open a branch in Istanbul, Babacan said while speaking at the Turkey China business forum held Thursday in Istanbul.

    The Turkish Central Bank and the Chinese Central Bank are negotiating to support trade in national currencies, the economy minister added. “We are pleased to see that the head of the branch has been assigned by the bank to operate in Istanbul,” he said.

    “We are also trying to open a Turkish bank in China as soon as possible,” Babacan said, noting that the Turkish government hopes to develop a long-term and multidimensional strategic partnership with China.

    The Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, or ICBC, has also been looking for opportunities to open branches in Turkey, Ning Zhang, the secretary-general of the standing committee of Shenyang Municipal People’s Congress, told the Hürriyet Daily News earlier. Chinese banks started to plan new branches in Turkey following a November meeting between Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao in Ankara, agreeing to use local currencies, the Turkish Lira and the yuan, in bilateral trade.

    More than 50 Chinese companies looking for investment and trade opportunities in the Turkish market joined Thursday’s event.

    Leading energy firms from the two countries agreed to invest nearly $120 million in a solar-energy business in Turkey, the top executive of Turkey’s Akfel Engineering told the Daily News during the forum.

    CEEG Solar Science & Technology, the largest solar-cell manufacturing company in China, will directly invest nearly $100 million in a new solar plant in southern Turkey, said Fatih Baltacı of Akfel. He added that his firm will invest nearly $20 million in the project.

    The total electricity-generation capacity of the solar plant will be nearly 50 megawatts, according to Baltacı. “Turkey plans to reach a total of 600 MW of energy generated through solar power plants within four years,” Baltacı said, adding that Chinese solar-energy companies, primarily CEEG, are looking for a bigger share of this market.

    “I believe that more investment will come to Turkey,” he said.

    “The Bank of China may fund the Chinese firm for the solar investment in Turkey,” Baltacı said, noting that the location of the investment has not yet been decided, but the negotiations are continuing between the companies.

    More firms eying Turkey

    The DAQQ Group, which has 23 subsidiaries and joint venture companies cooperating with Germany’s Siemens and Moeller, the U.S. firm Eaton and the Swiss firm Secheron, is meanwhile eyeing investments in hydropower stations in Turkey, the Daily News has learned.

    Huadong Electrical & Mechanical Engineering plans new investments in hydropower stations and renewable energy in Turkey, while Chinese manufacturers of construction equipment, including Jiangsu Jianhua Concrete Pile and Fuzhou Xia, aim to manufacture equipment in the Turkish market. The leading Chinese construction firms Shanghai Euro Sunshine Group and Zhongwei Real Estate are meanwhile among the companies looking for investment opportunities in Turkey’s rapidly growing property market.

    via Turkey plans to open bank in China – Hurriyet Daily News and Economic Review.

  • Turkey Aksa Developing Rapidly in China

    Turkey Aksa Developing Rapidly in China

    CHANGZHOU, China, May 26, 2011 /PRNewswire-Asia/ — Turkey Aksa is developing fast in Changzhou National Hi-tech District(CND), Jiangsu Province, China. Sales reached to RMB320 million from January to April and are predicted to rise to RMB1billion. Aksa Power Generation (Changzhou) Co., Ltd has been one of the leaders of China’s and the world’s diesel generator market.

    Aksa Power Generation (Changzhou) specializes in product gen-sets. Investment is USD$10 million, factory area is 10,518sqms. In 2007, sales were over RMB100 million during 6 months of operation. In 2008 Aksa sales were RMB438 million and benefit achieved was RMB49 million.

    On 13th April, 2009, Aksa decided to make additional investment in Changzhou National Hi-tech District and established Aksa Power Generation (China). This new project investment is USD$20,000,000 and registered capital is USD$10,255,400 for phase I specialized producing of power gen-sets and main parts. Annual output will be more than 20,000 units. The new factory is predicted to go into operation at the end of 2011 and annual sales will increase RMB 1 billion after operation totally.

    “Rapid development of China motivates the world economy, and the same to Aksa. Now Xi’an airport, many oil fields and Hainan 302 Hospital are using our gen-set. At present, with our excellent product quality, our products are occupying 50% of exports to Japan, USA and so on. Aksa is the only Chinese company providing power generators to Japan,” Domestic Sales Director Dogan Sarigul said.

    Aksa is incorporated under the name Kazanci Holding Group. Now this group is building the biggest generator factory, has 6,500 employees and sales reaching to 4.2 billion USD worldwide in 2010.

    Necati Baykal, the president & CEO of Aksa Power Generation said: “After our investment in CND, Aksa got much support from Changzhou government. Although financial crisis impacted all the world, Aksa (Changzhou) Company was still developing fast and got good return. The excellent investment environment of Changzhou made us confident to cooperate with the new district government. Our strategic development objective is be the greatest gen-set manufacturer in the world.”

    Changzhou Hi-Tech District has attracted many local and overseas investors such as Germany-based Lanxess, Leoni, BAERLOCHERGMBH, otto bock, hoerbiger, Linde Group, Switzerland-based Georg Fischer, Mettler Toledo, Rieter Textile Instrument, US-based Terex, Ashland Chemical, Kohler, Chart, Visteon, Magna Powertrain, V&M, Polynt Group, Kymco Motors, Komatsu, Nippon Steel Corp, OKI, Bridgestone, Fujitsu, Fuji Heavy Industry and so on.

    SOURCE Changzhou National Hi-Tech District

    via Turkey Aksa Developing Rapidly in China — CHANGZHOU, China, May 26, 2011 /PRNewswire-Asia/ –.

  • Arab League condemns broad bombing campaign in Libya

    Arab League condemns broad bombing campaign in Libya

    ALBy Edward Cody,

    CAIRO—The Arab League secretary general, Amr Moussa, deplored the broad scope of the U.S.-European bombing campaign in Libya on Sunday and said he would call a new league meeting to reconsider Arab approval of the Western military intervention.

    Moussa said the Arab League’s approval of a no-fly zone on March 12 was based on a desire to prevent Moammar Gaddafi’s air force from attacking civilians and was not designed to embrace the intense bombing and missile attacks—including on Tripoli, the capital, and on Libyan ground forces—that have filled Arab television screens for the last two days.

    “What is happening in Libya differs from the aim of imposing a no-fly zone,” he said in a statement on the official Middle East News Agency. “And what we want is the protection of civilians and not the shelling of more civilians.”

    Moussa’s declaration suggested some of the 22 Arab League members were taken aback by what they have seen and wanted to modify their approval lest they be perceived as accepting outright Western military intervention in Libya. Although the eccentric Gaddafi is widely looked down on in the Arab world, Middle Eastern leaders and their peoples traditionally have risen up in emotional protest at the first sign of Western intervention.

    A shift away from the Arab League endorsement, even partial, would constitute an important setback to theU.S.-European campaign. Western leaders brandished the Arab League decision as a justification for their decision to move militarily and as a weapon in the debate to obtain a U.N. Security Council resolution two days before the bombing began.

    As U.S. and European military operations entered their second day, however, most Arab governments maintained public silence and the strongest expressions of opposition came from the greatest distance. Presidents Hugo Chavez of Venezuela, Daniel Ortega of Nicaragua, Evo Morales of Bolivia and Fidel Castro of Cuba condemned the intervention and suggested Western powers were seeking to get their hands on Libya’s oil reserves rather than limit the bloodshed in the country.

    Russia and China, which abstained on the U.N. Security Council resolution authorizing military intervention, also expressed regret that Western powers had chosen to get involved despite their advice.

    In the Middle East, the abiding power of popular distrust against Western intervention was evident despite the March 12 Arab League decision. It was not clear how many Arab governments shared the hesitations voiced by Moussa. But so far only the Western-oriented Gulf emirate of Qatar has announced it would participate despite Western efforts to enlist Arab military forces into the campaign.

    The Qatari prime minister, Hamad bin Jassem Al-Thani, told reporters Qatar made its decision in order to “stop the bloodbath” that he said Gaddafi was inflicting on rebel forces and civilians in rebel-controlled cities. He did not describe the extent of Qatar’s military involvement or what the mission of Qatari aircraft or personnel would be alongside U.S., French and British planes and ships that have carried out the initial strikes.

    Islam Lutfy, a lawyer and Muslim Brotherhood leader in Egypt, said he opposed the military intervention because the real intention of the United States and its European allies was to get into position to benefit from Libya’s oil supplies. “The countries aligned against Libya are there not for humanitarian reasons but to further their own interests,” he added.

    But the Muslim Brotherhood and its allies in the Youth Coalition that spearheaded Egypt’s recent upheavals took no official position, busy instead with Saturday’s referendum on constitutional amendments designed to open the country’s democracy. Similarly, the provisional military-run government took no stand and most Cairo newspapers gave only secondary space to the Libya conflict.

    When the Arab League approved imposition of a no-fly zone, only Syria and Algeria opposed the league’s decision, according to Egyptian officials. The Syrian Foreign Ministry on Thursday reiterated Syria’s opposition, as diplomatic momentum gathered for the U.S.-European operation.

    “Syria rejects all forms of foreign interference in Libyan affairs, since that would be a violation of Libya’s sovereignty, independence and the unity of its land,” it said in a statement.

    Al Qaeda, which could be expected to oppose foreign intervention in an Arab country and embrace Gaddafi’s qualification of the campaign as a new crusade, made no immediate comment. This likely was due in part to the Qaeda leadership’s difficulty in communicating without revealing its position. But it also was a reminder of Gaddafi’s frequent assertions that Al Qaeda was behind the Libyan revolt and that he and the West should work hand-in-hand to defeat the rebels.

    Iran and its Shiite Muslim allies in Lebanon’s Hezbollah, reflexively opposed to Western influence in the Middle East, also were forced into a somewhat equivocal position, condemning Gaddafi for his bloody tactics but opposing the Western military intervention.

    “The fact that most Arab and Muslim leaders did not take responsibility opened the way for Western intervention in Libya,” declared Hassan Nasrallah, the Hezbollah leader, in video speech Sunday to his followers. “This opens the way for foreign interventions in every Arab country. It brings us back to the days of occupation, colonization and partition.”

    At the same time, Nasrallah accused Gaddafi of using the same brutality against his opponents as Israel has used against Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza.

    The Iranian Foreign Ministry, which previously criticized Gaddafi’s crackdown, on Sunday expressed “doubts” about U.S. and European intentions. Like the Latin American critics, it suggested the claims of wanting to protect civilians were just a cover for a desire to install a more malleable leadership in Tripoli and make it easier to exploit Libya’s oil.

    Gaddafi has been on the enemies’ list of Shiite activists in the Middle East since 1978, when Lebanon’s paramount Shiite leader, Imam Musa Sudr, disappeared during a fund-raising visit to Tripoli. His fate has never been officially cleared up but Palestine Liberation Organization investigators determined that he was probably killed by Gaddafi’s security agents after they misunderstood an order from Gaddafi to “get rid of” Sudr and his pestering for money.

    codyej@washpost.com

    www.washingtonpost.com, 20 March 2011

  • DOLLAR-YUAN CURRENCY WAR

    DOLLAR-YUAN CURRENCY WAR

    By Fred Schmid

    [This article published in: isw report 83/84 “China crisis as a chance” is translated from the German on the Internet,

    .
    The Institute of Social-Economic Research is in Munich.]

    The Yuan is completely undervalued and therefore harms the US economy. That is the aggressive reproach of the US government.

    As long as US citizens could indulge their consumer orgy financed by China’s credit, the US economy flourished somewhat and the Yuan exchange rate was hardly a theme. A scapegoat for the misery is now sought in the crisis with the highest US unemployment in decades. The “manipulated” and “artificially under-valued” Yuan price is the reason for the Chinese export success destroying jobs in the US and making difficult US exports to China.

    First of all, no one can be certain or prove whether a currency is under- or over-valued because there is no objective criterion or standard. Even exchange rates that supposedly are freely formed on the market are politically manipulated by interventions of states, state debt acceptance and fixing key interest rates. These exchange rates are distorted by market forces and by potent financial speculator5s who speculate on a devaluing or upgrading of the currency. Currency speculation is the main business of the financial fraudsters today.

    Since the fall of 2008, the Yuan price has been bound in a firm relation to the dollar and neither upgraded nor devalued. When exchange rates deteriorate in trade for the US, this means firstly the productivity-development of the US economy has worsened compared to China. China cannot be punished for that. Whether the foreign trade situation would improve substantially for the US with an upgrading of the Yuan is doubtful. The export miracle hoped for by the US did not occur during a first upgrading phase between July 2005 and June 2006. Although the Renminbi rose 21 percent compared to the dollar, the US balance of payments deficit in trade with China hit a record high in this time period at 39 percent. (The Yuan was upgraded around 58% between January 1994 and the end of 2010.)

    With the beginning of the financial crisis, the Chinese government suspended the gradual adjustment. Its currency should not fall in the turbulences of the financial crisis which at the start hit the export industry hard and cost millions of jobs. 67,000 businesses of the export industry declared bankruptcy. Therefore the Chinese government saw no need for additional action in the matter of upgrading. The Yuan was firmly coupled to the US dollar at a rate of 6.83.

    The value of the Yuan is not the cause for the US trade and balance of payments deficits. The reasons are the high state indebtedness (armaments/wars and tax gifts to the rich) and the indebtedness of private households caused by stagnating or declining real incomes of the masses (income distribution in favor of profits and interest income). In the words of Stephen Roach, Asian president of Morgan Stanley, “If the US (state and private households) continues to save, the US will be less dependent on financing by Chinese savers. American consumers would no longer overspend and buy cheap Chinese goods. Which came first, the surplus or the deficit? Did the Chinese development strategy force Americans to blow their savings? Or did American greed, living beyond their means, force the Chinese to supply them with cheap capital and bargain-priced goods?” (HB. 4/14/2010). Over 60 percent of the articles offered by the largest US discounter Walmart come from China. The products are voluntarily acquired by Americans. If China did not offer them, other cheap producers would quickly take over this role. The US has a trade deficit with 90 countries. The US must accuse all these countries of currency manipulation as in the case of China. Investors in developing countries urged a firm dollar-bond early on. They wanted to prevent profits transferred from their countries from losing value.

    The essential reason for the imbalances in US trade is that the American economy is no longer competitive in relation to these 90 countries. In the course of militarization (imperial overstretch, “Homeland Security” mania) and financialization, the US economy increasingly became a waste economy with rising deficits in infrastructure and education. In addition, a process of de-industrialization has been carried out in the US in the last decades. US transnational corporations have largely shifted their production sites abroad, above all to China. Stephan Roach explains: “US corporations produce cheaply in China and thus their profits, stock prices and the wealth of many shareholders are blown up. This was basically an upward spiral for Americans driven by virtual purchasing power” (HB, 4/14/2010). What previously was a manifestation of the imperial power and strength of the US, namely living at the expense of the rest of the world, now suddenly changes into weakening and consumption of the economic substance.

    “GET TOUGH ON CHINA”

    The production transfers to China have led to exporting industrial goods with low or medium technological standards by US or other western corporations from China to the US. US high-tech products that China would like to import are subject to the politically-defined US embargo. 20 product categories are blocked for export to China. In 2001, 18.3% of Chinese high-tech imports came from the US. Through the restrictions of the Bush administration, this share fell to eight percent in 2008 (chd, 3/6/2010).

    In the US, the debate around the Yuan among economists is very controversial. While Nobel Prize winner Paul Krugman accuses China of keeping the Yuan price artificially low and urges “getting tough on China,” Nobel Prize winner Robert Mundell does not agree. Nobel Prize winner Joseph Stiglitz urges loosening high-tech restrictions to facilitate a more even trade balance (cf. chd, 3/22/2010). The economist Peter Schiff, well-known for his exact prediction of the 2008 crisis, writes: “It is all a PR-maneuver that our leaders could `get tough’ with the Chinese. They know very well where their bread is buttered. They depend on the Chinese buying our debts and providing our citizens with cheap products that our unproductive economy cannot produce. When China buys our debts, it uses its own savings. To purchase a trillion dollars in US Treasury bonds, the Federal Reserve must increase our money supply a corresponding amount leading to a sharp decline of the dollar” (chd, 3/20/2010). Schiff warned that a falling dollar would lead to consumer prices rising by leaps and bounds, to quickly soaring interest rates and to a collapse of US living standards. This would mean the end of Krugman’s “Get tough on China” policy, he added. Other experts point out that China has contributed enormously to the revival of the global economy and not only finances US debts and supplies US consumers with cheap consumer goods. Finally China has reduced its balance of payments surplus in the last three years by rapidly increasing imports. It decreased imports more slowly than exports in the crisis year 2009.

    The reproach of currency manipulation is not new and is always raised by Americans against states when they are at as competitive disadvantage in trade policy. In 1971 the US government accused Germany and Japan of currency manipulation and forced them to upgrade their currencies. On August 15, 1971 President Nixon put a temporary surcharge on imports. The remark of Nixon’s Treasury secretary John Connally, full of arrogance of power, was the monetary motto of the superpower: “The dollar is our currency but your problem.” In the 1980s when the US had gigantic deficits in trade with Japan, Washington forced the Asian power to drastically upgrade the Yen in the 1985 Plaza agreement. The US balance of trade did not improve as a result. Billions in speculations streamed to Japan and pumped up the trade- and real estate bubbles until they burst and gave the country its “lost decade.”

    China will not fall in the same trap as Japan at that time. Washington wants to force Peking to abrupt upgrading through sanctions and a trade war if necessary. The past concessions of the Chinese leadership are not enough for the US government. China recently suspended the dollar bond just before the G20 summit in June 2010 in Toronto. Since then, it couples its currency to a basket of currencies that better reflects trade relations. The Euro will be given more weight in setting the Yuan price. The Yuan was slightly upgraded three percent from July to the mid-November G20 summit in Seoul but that was not enough for the US government.

    On September 29, 2010 the US House of Representatives passed a bill against “currency manipulation” directed first of all against China. It can first become law after passage by the Senate and President Obama’s signature. Afterwards penal duties and other sanctions will take effect quasi-automatically. The American Chamber of Commerce in China representing 1200 firms appealed to the Senate to kill the bill. As reasons, it said significant US job growth would probably not be generated by the law and American exporters would be hurt. “Censuring China will not help the US economy. This legislation could cost American jobs,” the president of the Chamber of Commerce, John D. Watkins, declared (quoted according to chd 10/1/2010).

    CURRENCIES AS WEAPONS

    Now and then the monetary skirmish between the US and China threatens to change suddenly into a world currency war. The US has a trade deficit problem with many countries, with the export powers Germany6, Japan and not only with China. They urge these countries to do more in expanding their domestic markets and thus equalize their trade balances and reduce the imbalances in world trade. At the same time the US manipulated its currency downwards when the US Federal Reserve after the G20 summit announced and implemented buying $600 billion in US Treasury bonds in the next six months. This measure is tantamount to starting up the money printing machine.

    A cheapening or devaluation of the dollar will make difficult exports to the US and will favor US exports. For want of mass purchasing power on the domestic market, all capitalist metropolis countries want to export out of the crisis and compensate their weak domestic demand through greater exports on the world markets. Only Germany was successful with this strategy. Since there will be no global import vacuum any more4 like the United Consumer States of America, the trade conflicts intensify and the danger of a devaluation-race threatens like the worldwide economic crisis 80 years ago.

    Presently the US is mired in a credit crunch like Greece and Ireland – only in other dimensions and with other options. Annually it must fork out $500 billion for its gigantic debt mountain. The US state debt-maker now has an additional problem. Its most reliable and largest creditor turns off its money-pump. For a year Peking has not purchased any US bonds. Within a year, the Chinese reduced their portfolio in treasuries from $938 billion (at the end of September 2009) to $884 billion (at the end of September 2010), that is $54 billion (GT 11/17/2010; chd 5/19/2010). Previously from 2008 to the fall of 2009, they purchased $17 billion of state bonds every month. We can o9nly puzzle over the motives of the Chinese. Firstly they buy Euros and other currencies for reasons of risk-scattering to partly offset the dollar decline. That is also the reason for the fluctuations in holdings of Treasuries on the backdrop of a downward trend. Secondly, it seems to be a certain answer to the China-bashing driven by the US government for a year in the question of Yuan upgrading. In the meantime, China has become confident enough to strike back with the weapon of the economy. The USA again tries to make a virtue out of its money-distress and recoin it to its advantage.

    With the additional dollar flood, the upgrading pressure on the currencies of threshold countries increases which could again limit their export-capability to the US. More “hot money” sloshes around on their stock- and real estate markets. The danger of bubbles in these countries increases. Like the Japanese Yen, the dollar becomes the profitable source for carry-traders, golden times for US and international financial capital. If the bubbles on the stock exchanges and real estate markets of threshold countries burst, these countries pay for the US debt policy.

    The dollar flood brings the advantage for the US that its foreign debts are devalued as the dollar is devalued. Greece and Ireland would be afraid to balance their deficits with Euros they print themselves. Everything is allowed the powerful.