Forgive me but I must digress. I recently was involved in a discussion on an article of misinformation that was doing the rounds. As you can tell by the overture on my website I am a big believer in US innovation and invention. Our trade relation in China is often misconstrued. Things are not quite as they seem. The following is my response and the source article by a veteran journalist, Eric Margolis, who wrote it for Pakistan's Dawn Newspaper is below the response.
My Response:
The article is quite biased and ignorant too. The US has been importing global production for decades, its nothing new. Right after the 2nd WW the US guaranteed an exchange on its currency against gold so that Europe and the world could use USD as practically gold reserves and re-build. It has also been very generous with import tarriffs - also to help stabilize countries by providing economic assistance given the sheer strength of its economy - something that Japan and now China have been unfairly escaping with. The US Fed deficit is a bad thing but it is also complicated. Despite a monsterous deficit, when the global recession hit in 1997, the safe-haven choice to park your money was the US. Particularly, US treasury bills that feed right into the deficit. Japan suffered from a lack of confidence in its economy as the its towering surpluses lead to grave inefficiences in its banking system that reported hundred of billion of dollars in losses. Even Australia tops Japan as an investment choice. The writer himself mentions that if China was to float its currency there would be a run to buy US Dollars. Why is that if China supposedly has a better economic system? This explains that money alone is not enough. The strong trade surplus that China has is directly agains the US meaning that its a product of US consumption of Chinese goods. And not just Chinese goods, American goods produced in China as Americans would rather have the Chinese make them cheaply and focus on hi-tech domains such as Internet, telecommunications, aerospace, semi-conductors, computer chips, capacitators, bio-tech research and others like it. Areas where China is still an outsider. Just because they are sent out to be produced in China does not mean they really made them.
And lastly, don't forget! The entire trade surplus that China and Japan have is almost instantly invested right back in US treasury bills to fund the deficit. There is no real power in this formula. You have a surplus yet your income and employment is dependant on your buyer. The buyer (US) likes it because they can get it done cheap and durable which helps their economics too. Hopefully, this keeps things stable. If anyone has the upper hand, it would be the buyer.
As for western devils, well that's another matter. Perhaps, Eric Margolis could use a lesson or two in finance, economics and history. He seems to be quite apt at devils and demons.
Chinese loans for the US
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By Eric Margolis
WHILE American voters were finally giving President George Bush and his southern-fried Republican Party a richly-deserved, long-overdue drubbing, I was off in China observing a nation that while rigidly authoritarian, is at least governed by capable, intelligent people. The same, alas, could not be said of the Bush administration that has saddled America with two lost wars, costing over eight billion dollars monthly, soaring budget deficits, and the intense dislike, if not downright hostility, of many people around the world.Here in Beijing for my umpteenth visit since 1975, I’ve seen the future, and it still says, ‘Made in China’. This gigantic metropolis of 25 million seems destined to become the world’s new capitol city — provided China’s economy, still surging at over 10 per cent per annum, remains strong, and political stability continues.Beijing’s massive new skyscrapers, huge government blocks, broad, traffic-clogged avenues and miasma of smog and dust give it the look of an imperial capital in a science fiction film.Recently, China staged a grandiose summit for 48 African leaders summoned to Beijing to receive $10 billion in aid from President Hu Jintao.Energy voracious China now gets 30 per cent of its oil from Africa. Angola just passed Saudi Arabia as China’s leading oil supplier. China is bent on securing the lion’s share of Africa’s supplies of oil and other strategic resources. China-Africa trade has surged 30 per cent to $50 billion in 2003. Interestingly, during the height of the Cold War in the late 1980s, the Soviet Union tried the same strategy, but was thwarted by the CIA and South Africa.China’s non-interference policy in foreign affairs means its trade and aid come without strings, a major plus for authoritarian or boycotted African regimes. But at least China is not hypocritical. While Washington boycotts Sudan and Zimbabwe over human rights, it cosies up to other African nations like Egypt, Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia that are routinely accused of serious violations by international rights groups.The summit was a lavish spectacle, with convoys of bigwigs in armoured limousines racing down the avenues, dancers, drummers, acrobats, small armies of tough security details, and regiments of China’s feared, ramrod-straight paramilitary police, the Wujing, scowling at everyone.This week, China announced a third quarter trade surplus of US $102 billion. Beijing’s monetary reserves have finally topped one trillion dollars, surpassing the former cash king, Japan. Much of China’s reserves remain in US dollars. Beijing continues to finance America’s spending binge by lending it billions, and keeping its reserves in dollars, though their value is under increasing pressure. Communist China, in effect, continues to prop up the capitalist dollar in the face of growing pressure for its devaluation.China’s mammoth trade surplus, and a rising flood of foreign investment, has swamped the nation’s banks with cash. This, in turn, has fuelled indiscriminate speculative investments, particularly in real estate and factories, and ignited a gold rush frenzy that often obscures China’s solid economic achievements.This flood of hot money poses a serious danger. Indiscriminate investment leads to overproduction, which then causes a deflationary crisis that could end in financial meltdown.China’s government has been struggling without much success to restrain this investment dragon. Beijing refuses, however, to allow its controlled, seriously undervalued currency, the yuan, to float, as its trade partners keep demanding.The undervalued yuan has given China its huge surplus, the motor of growth that has pulled the nation out of poverty. China still needs to deal with hundreds of millions of struggling farmers, state industry workers, and unemployed.So it refuses to allow the yuan to inch up by more than five per cent. If the yuan were allowed to float, say Chinese bankers, people would rush to convert to dollars, causing a dire financial crisis.Who would have ever imagined that it would take Chinese loans to keep the US financial system from imploding?US Republicans would do well to take pointers on capitalism from China’s communists who have beaten the western devils at their own game. — Copyright Eric S. Margolis 2006