[This is a modified version of a piece that appeared at Asia Times Online on October 18, 2013. It can be reposted if China Matters is credited and a link provided.]
Per my personal transcript of the October 17 NPR Marketplace, the
popular, liberal-leaning US radio business show, an exchange between
anchor David Brancaccio and Shanghai correspondent Rob Schmitz took as
its point of departure the temerity of a Chinese rating agency, Dagong,
in downgrading US debt:
Lead in: ... While it doesn’t have the stature of Moody’s or
Fitch, a credit ratings agency in China has downgraded the US even with
President Obama’s signature on the budget deal last night ...
DB: [in a tone of polite disbelief]: So this Chinese
credit agency downgrades the United States despite the fact that there
was the big deal in Washington?
RS: It’s a vulnerable time right now for the US economy,
and China and its rating agencies are in attack mode. Before the Dagong
downgrade, we saw a pretty vicious attack on America‘s role in the
world in an editorial written in Xinhua ... which declared an
[airquotes] end to the age of Pax Americana [close airquotes].
DB: We saw in fact this full on pitch this week via Xinhua for making the Chinese currency the world’s reserve currency ...
RD: Of course, that is a dream world. The US dollar will
remain the reserve currency of the global economy for the time being
... Third-quarter figures showed that China now has US$3.7 trillion in
foreign exchange reserves. This figure represented the highest
quarterly growth of Chinese investment in US debt in two years. While
China’s rating agency that few people have heard of and some in Beijing
are using this moment to go after the US economy, China remains more
committed than ever in investing in the US economy and it’s certainly
not putting its money where its mouth is in this instance. [1]
Wow. Defensive much?
A few things:
The offending piece in Xinhua was not an editorial, and not an op-ed; it
was a signed commentary by one "Xinhua writer Liu Chang". It seems
that Liu (if that’s his/her real name) has written occasionally on US
finance and represents Xinhua’s contribution to the near universal trend
to inject bloggy goodness into mainstream journalism. This article is
probably the most recent sign of the apocalypse: not the Gotterdammerung
of the US-debt fueled fiscal firestorm, but the Global Times-ization of
the Xinhua web presence.
Even so, the "viciousness" of the "attack" was somewhat oversold.
Liu did not declare an end to "Pax Americana". He simply stated that
"Pax Americana" was not delivering the goods - that is, the peaceful
world it promised:
[T]he US government has gone to all lengths to appear before
the world as the one that claims the moral high ground, yet covertly
doing things that are as audacious as torturing prisoners of war,
slaying civilians in drone attacks, and spying on world leaders.
Under what is known as the Pax Americana, we fail to see a world where
the United States is helping to defuse violence and conflicts, reduce
poor and displaced population, and bring about real, lasting
peace.Moreover, instead of honoring its duties as a responsible leading
power, a self-serving Washington has abused its superpower status and
introduced even more chaos into the world by shifting financial risks
overseas, instigating regional tensions amid territorial disputes, and
fighting unwarranted wars under the cover of outright lies. [2]
Liu’s proposed solution to the problem, while presented under the
infuriating label of "de-Americanization", was little more than the
traditional PRC remedy for the ills of the world: respect for
sovereignty, multipolarity, strengthened multilateral institutions, etc.
Second, the Marketplace team’s mockery of the Dagong downgrade contained a certain amount of whistling past the graveyard.
Certainly, some propaganda grandstanding is going on, but consider that
the budget deal only kicks the can down the road to next year. The Tea
Party is not sitting around criticizing its own ignorant presumption; it
is selling a dolchstoss ("stabbed in the back" for you
non-German speakers) myth to fuel its fundraising and, if it desires,
schedule a re-run of the whole mess next February.
In order to forestall another cave-in by the Republican leadership to
the Obama administration in the next confrontation, a right-wing radio
stalwart took the position that Treasury default would be a
nothingburger for holders of T-bonds and T-bills; according to this
self-serving narrative, bondholders could get paid off on time and in
full with tax proceeds, thus preserving government creditworthiness in
the financial markets.
Presumably, no one would mind if government contractors get paid in
scrip and social security and medicare beneficiaries just sucked it up
for a few weeks without benefits.
Third, has anybody seen a call by the PRC to establish the yuan as the
world’s reserve currency? Despite David Brancoccio’s observation, I
haven’t.
The Liu Chang piece concludes:
Apart from that, the world's financial system also has to
embrace some substantial reforms. The developing and emerging market
economies need to have more say in major international financial
institutions including the World Bank and the International Monetary
Fund, so that they could better reflect the transformations of the
global economic and political landscape.
What may also be included as a key part of an effective reform is the
introduction of a new international reserve currency that is to be
created to replace the dominant US dollar, so that the international
community could permanently stay away from the spillover of the
intensifying domestic political turmoil in the United States.
Of course, the purpose of promoting these changes is not to completely
toss the United States aside, which is also impossible. Rather, it is to
encourage Washington to play a much more constructive role in
addressing global affairs.
Just so we can get a few things straight, this is not calling for the
yuan to replace the US dollar as the "international reserve currency".
The PRC has been calling for a reduction in reliance on the United
States as an international reserve currency for a few years. Currently
about two-thirds of global central bank reserves are held in US dollars.
The idea is not to replace the US dollar with the yuan; it is to
denominate reserves using a particular currency basket represented by
the International Monetary Fund's Special Drawing Right, or SDR.
This idea is a favorite of left-leaning economists and
financiers such as Joseph Stieglitz and George Soros; in 2009 it also
attracted the positive interest of the Bank of China’s Zhou Xiaochuan,
who is revered in Western financial circles as China’s God of Wealth.
(See China discovers value in the IMF, June 10, 2009).
The
idea is not that the yuan is ready for prime time; it is that the logic
of growth (in the BRICS - Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) and debt
and the danger of default (in the United States and European Union) make
it prudent to reduce reliance on the US dollar and denominate
transactions in a unit of exchange that reflects the overall, changing
character of the world economy.
For that matter, the PRC isn’t even in the SDR yet.
Right now, the US dollar accounts for a little over 40% of the SDR; the
euro, the Japanese yen, and the British pound account for the rest. [3]
Since the dollar actually accounts for over 60% of foreign currency
reserves held by central banks, one can take the 40% weighting as a
back-handed acknowledgment that there are already too many dollars out
there compared to the weight of the US in the world economy.
The United States accounts for 16% of the IMF’s funding quota (since IMF
decisions require 85% approval, this gives the US a veto); the
aggregated EU countries have something along the order of 25%; the China
has a 10% share. Japan and the UK, which are probably hearing Chinese
footsteps and wondering how long they can hold on to their share of the
SDR basket, account for 6% and 4% respectively.
What’s holding back China from taking a share of the SDR basket is the
fact that the PRC hasn’t decontrolled its capital markets sufficiently
to make central banks comfortable holding yuan reserves. If/when the
capital account is decontrolled and the PRC can issue creditworthy,
tradable government bonds suitable for parking the reserves of foreign
central banks, the PRC can make a case for getting in the SDR basket,
maybe at a 10-15% level, maybe at the expense of the US share, maybe by
sticking it to the UK or Japan.
Maybe that’s a long way off. But, maybe it isn’t, per Associated Press [4]:
Beijing agreed Tuesday to make London a center for handling investment denominated in China's tightly controlled currency ...
Investors in London will be allowed to apply for licenses to invest yuan
directly into China, Osborne announced. He said the Chinese central
bank set an initial quota for London of 80 billion yuan (US$12.7
billion).
Finally, Schmitz beats NPR’s "China seeking to replace US$ with yuan as
international reserve currency" straw man by accusing the PRC of "not
putting its money where its mouth is" hypocrisy, since "third-quarter
figures showed that China now has $3.7 trillion in foreign exchange
reserves. This figure represented the highest quarterly growth of
Chinese investment in US debt in two years."
I do wonder where he got that "investment in US debt" number. Chinese
foreign exchange holdings are going up sharply again after two years’
pause, ironically since the PRC is apparently acquiring "Asian safe
haven" status compared to the other local economies that don’t have
tight capital controls and expect to get pummeled by capital flight
when the QE taper eventually kicks in. But those holdings don’t all get
invested in US debt.
The most recent Treasury numbers I could find go up to July 2013 and
show that official Chinese holdings of securities have declined since
they reached their peak in April 2013, at around $1.3 trillion. Even
allowing for the slop of incomplete reporting and the routing of some
transactions through the Cayman Islands, there is no picture of
heightened Chinese enthusiasm for placing their forex holdings in US
Treasuries. [5] [Subsequently, I saw some reporting of a recent spike in Treasury purchases by all Asian buyers, not just the PRC, for the ironic reason that Asian central banks were stocking up out of fear of a dearth of Treasuries in case of default.]
As the Western and Chinese financial press have reported ad nauseum, the
PRC plows its money into US Treasuries, not as a vote of confidence in
American fiscal management and economic vitality but simply because a
viable alternative hasn’t yet emerged.
At the same time, of course, China is entering into currency swap
agreements with many of its non-US trading partners (200 billion yuan
with the UK, 350 billion yuan with the EU) to take the US dollar out of
the equation and establish a basis for foreign holding of the yuan - and
reduce the trade surplus-related increase in the PRC’s gigantic US
dollar reserves.
In an unintended consequence of US sanctions, China has also been able
to exploit Iran’s predicament by paying for some energy imports with
yuan instead of with US dollars. It is also buying gold and scouting
the world for reasonably plausible non-Treasury debt, equity, and
resource plays for its forex.
As to where this is all going, I expect that China’s high-profile
demands that the United States get its house in order represent a
planned one-two propaganda punch as the US phases out quantitative
easing 2 and the PRC presents itself to the Asian democracies as a
counterpoint to the US - a stable, responsible, and well-heeled
practitioner of the arts of fiscal management and international finance -
and the best-qualified partner for bilateral trade and multilateral
regional finance and trade agreements, including the $100 billion BRICS
rescue fund for emerging markets that China is pushing as an alternative
to the IMF.
It’s going to take more than misdirection, mockery, and indignant bluster in the US media to turn that situation around.
"De-Americanization! Bonfire of the Straw Men"
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