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Bluezoo
04-20-2005, 12:57 PM
The China Mess
By Larry Kudlow, NRO’s Economics Editor, is host of CNBC’s Kudlow & Company

What are we thinking?

There’s a lot of bad political and economic blood developing between China and Japan, and China and the U.S. None of it is going to lead to any good.


Anti-Japanese demonstrations have broken out in Shanghai and Hong Kong, with Chinese authorities looking on with winks and nods. The Chinese want Japan to apologize for aggression in the 1930s and 1940s, although Japan has done so about forty times in recent years. The Chinese also claim not to like Japan’s newly revised history textbooks on the subject. Then there’s the ongoing squabble about oil and gas reserves on some offshore islands and the matter of Japanese membership in the U.N. Security Council.

But the problems here run much deeper. China doesn’t much like the fact that Japanese Prime Minister Koizumi is pulling his country even closer to the U.S. in the world terror war. This renewed U.S.-Japan alliance also implies that a free and democratic Taiwan will be protected against Beijing’s new “anti-secession” law.

Japan is also firm in supporting U.S. efforts to stop North Korea’s military and nuclear buildup. China dominates North Korea, so it could really put the pressure on Kim Jong Il to renegotiate a nuclear agreement. But China only says it will help with the North Korea problem and never seems to do very much.

China shows its two faces all the time. It praised the late Pope John Paul II upon his passing and then promptly jailed a Catholic bishop and a priest. It has been liberalizing its economy and reforming local government, but it is still a dictatorship without free national elections. Though it has taken steps to join the community of nations, it now appears to be launching a newly militant program of nationalism, with a sizeable military buildup. Japan may be the proximate target, but one ultimately suspects that all this is aimed at the U.S.

The U.S., however, isn’t helping matters by threatening to launch a currency- and trade-protection war against China. The U.S., Japan, and the rest of the G-7 nations are putting the heat on China to revalue, or “up-value,” the yuan and end its peg to the U.S. dollar. This is allegedly to correct global trade imbalances and stop “cheap” Chinese exports from flooding U.S. and European markets. But any meaningful currency adjustment would have to be a yuan revaluation of at least 25 percent. That would require significant tightening of Chinese monetary policy, which, in turn, would cause a big slowdown in Chinese economic growth.

Is that what we really want?

The threat of a currency war could be an unnoticed factor in the recent U.S. stock market plunge. A much slower China economy would take a percentage point or two off U.S. economic growth, especially in areas like commodities, cyclical industries, tech, transportation, shipping, and trucking. These are the exact market sectors that are getting hammered on Wall Street.

Have the U.S. Treasury, the G-7, and the IMF forgotten the recent history of misbegotten currency manipulation? When several Asian currencies were forced to de-link from the U.S. dollar in the 1990s, world deflation followed. Floating exchange rates were a big mistake then, and could be a big mistake now.

Treasury man John Snow insists on floating rates worldwide, but he forgets that emerging-country currencies don’t float — they sink. Aren’t we yet persuaded that nations cannot devalue their way to prosperity? Or that currency stability is better than currency chaos?

China, remember, has a shaky banking system plagued with bad state-sponsored loans made to failing nationalized companies. A floating yuan might rise in the short run, but it could crash in the medium term as foreign investors withdraw their capital flows for fear of instability.

Fortunately, when Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice visited China recently, she avoided any mention of forcing a currency change. But John Snow, encouraged by congressional Republicans, keeps pressing the unpopular point. Where’s the policy coordination inside the U.S. government?

Protectionist pressure on the Chinese is also rising. A trade-opening textile agreement has resulted in a temporary burst of Chinese clothing exports to the U.S. American clothing makers have had years to prepare for this, but instead they’re suing the U.S. government on so-called “anti-dumping” grounds. The Chinese government is meanwhile accusing the U.S., and rightly so, of reneging on the free-trade textile deal.

Why is the U.S. threatening economic warfare against China? Currency protection and trade protection not only blunt economic growth, they sour international political relations.....

For the full article, please go to:
http://www.nationalreview.com/kudlow/kudlow200504191337.asp

Durandal
04-21-2005, 10:24 AM
Interesting article.

platform389
04-21-2005, 10:39 AM
The threat of a currency war could be an unnoticed factor in the recent U.S. stock market plunge. A much slower China economy would take a percentage point or two off U.S. economic growth, especially in areas like commodities, cyclical industries, tech, transportation, shipping, and trucking. These are the exact market sectors that are getting hammered on Wall Street.

La, La, La... Never mind the growing threat to regional stability and world peace this communist (...remember what those are...?) totalitarian regime represents. How Wall Street will be impacted is of paramount importance! :roll:

This is exactly the reason the US is fading as a world power. Basing national policy decisions on factors such as the above is short sighted and stupid. One hopes Japan rearms and begins to flex muscle in the regional as an effective counterbalance to the Communists and their expansionistic tendencies. It is clear we are no longer up to the job!

http://instagiber.net/smiliesdotcom/otn/angry/fix27.gif

Durandal
04-21-2005, 07:56 PM
I know this is a small nit pick, but drop the communist. They aren't.

A totalitarian state, evil state, yes, but not communist.

Clarsachier
04-21-2005, 08:23 PM
Nice article. Seems to me l to be locked right onto the real issues FWIW.

('hopefully' adds National Riview to 'Favorites'.)

Pandy
04-21-2005, 09:04 PM
I know this is a small nit pick, but drop the communist. They aren't.

A totalitarian state, evil state, yes, but not communist.

They're communist for 8 hours a day... you have 16 hours to do whatever the hell you want... well, not whatever but it's your time from communism.

Durandal
04-21-2005, 09:12 PM
I know this is a small nit pick, but drop the communist. They aren't.

A totalitarian state, evil state, yes, but not communist.

They're communist for 8 hours a day... you have 16 hours to do whatever the hell you want... well, not whatever but it's your time from communism.

rofl

platform389
04-21-2005, 10:17 PM
I know this is a small nit pick, but drop the communist. They aren't.

A totalitarian state, evil state, yes, but not communist.

CIA doesn't agree with you...

http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos/ch.html#Govt


Political parties and leaders:
Chinese Communist Party or CCP [HU Jintao, General Secretary of the Central Committee]; eight registered small parties controlled by CCP


In late 1978 the Chinese leadership began moving the economy from a sluggish, inefficient, Soviet-style centrally planned economy to a more market-oriented system. Whereas the system operates within a political framework of strict Communist control, the economic influence of non-state organizations and individual citizens has been steadily increasing. The authorities switched to a system of household and village responsibility in agriculture in place of the old collectivization, increased the authority of local officials and plant managers in industry, permitted a wide variety of small-scale enterprises in services and light manufacturing, and opened the economy to increased foreign trade and investment. The result has been a quadrupling of GDP since 1978. Measured on a purchasing power parity (PPP) basis, China in 2003 stood as the second-largest economy in the world after the US, although in per capita terms the country is still poor. Agriculture and industry have posted major gains especially in coastal areas near Hong Kong, opposite Taiwan, and in Shanghai, where foreign investment has helped spur output of both domestic and export goods. The leadership, however, often has experienced - as a result of its hybrid system - the worst results of socialism (bureaucracy and lassitude) and of capitalism (growing income disparities and rising unemployment). China thus has periodically backtracked, retightening central controls at intervals. The government has struggled to (a) sustain adequate jobs growth for tens of millions of workers laid off from state-owned enterprises, migrants, and new entrants to the work force; (b) reduce corruption and other economic crimes; and (c) keep afloat the large state-owned enterprises, many of which had been shielded from competition by subsidies and had been losing the ability to pay full wages and pensions. From 80 to 120 million surplus rural workers are adrift between the villages and the cities, many subsisting through part-time, low-paying jobs. Popular resistance, changes in central policy, and loss of authority by rural cadres have weakened China's population control program, which is essential to maintaining long-term growth in living standards. Another long-term threat to growth is the deterioration in the environment, notably air pollution, soil erosion, and the steady fall of the water table especially in the north. China continues to lose arable land because of erosion and economic development. Beijing says it will intensify efforts to stimulate growth through spending on infrastructure - such as water supply and power grids - and poverty relief and through rural tax reform. Accession to the World Trade Organization helps strengthen its ability to maintain strong growth rates but at the same time puts additional pressure on the hybrid system of strong political controls and growing market influences. China has benefited from a huge expansion in computer internet use. Foreign investment remains a strong element in China's remarkable economic growth. Growing shortages of electric power and raw materials will hold back the expansion of industrial output in 2004.

The Chinese Communists think they are going to mix in just enough capitalism to breath life into the failed communist system. Unfortunately that is tantamount to mixing fire and water and the results will be the same.

But make no mistake, by any measure they are Red thru and thru.

http://instagiber.net/smiliesdotcom/contrib/aahmed/biggrin.gif