The recent bailout package being approved in the US Congress needs to be viewed 
in the context of the spurt in the accumulation of forex reserves of China by 
about $500 billion in the last six months to about $2 trillion in aggregate.

This gargantuan build-up of forex reserves by China has strangely received very 
little attention of economists, policy analysts, currency traders and, of 
course, geo-strategists around the world.

Why is China engaged in this exercise? What could be its implications on the on 
going global financial crisis? Could China trip the bailout package announced 
by the US last week? Crucially what are the implications for the existing 
global order?

What is intriguing in the Chinese forex reserve build-up is that both trade 
surplus and foreign direct investment account only for a part of this 
gargantuan pile. After adjusting for all known sources of reserve accretion, 
experts conclude that approximately an excess of $200 billion could have flown 
into China as 'hot money' -- read inexplicable flow of funds -- in this period.

The Economist -- in one of its issue in recent months -- quotes Michael Pettis, 
an economist working in China, who explains how and why hot money flows into 
China. According to Pettis, hot money comes into China when companies overstate 
FDI and over-invoice exports.

But where is such money getting parked in China? The Chinese stock market, like 
many of its counter parts across the globe, continues to plunge. Hence, it may 
not be an attractive destination for hot money. Some experts suggest that it 
could have gone into property while the predominant view is that it could 
simply be the Chinese banks that offer interest rates in excess of 4 per cent 
on yuan deposits compared with a lower rate on dollars.

How a 2 per cent interest rate differential results in such cross-border flow 
of capital requires some explanation. What makes the dollar-yuan exchange rates 
central to any discussion on global finance is the fact that trade between the 
United States and China has burgeoned in the past decade or so. But this is not 
a two-way trade as would be commonly believed. Most of this is unilateral -- 
i.e. exports from China to the US.

In fact, this is the fundamental reason for the burgeoning current account 
surplus that in turn translates into China's forex reserves. In the process, 
over the years, the US has become extremely dependent on China not only for 
supplying cheap goods but also for the Chinese to fund such imports by parking 
their forex surplus within the US.

This twin-dependency on the Chinese for goods and money to finance its deficits 
has always engaged the attention of the US policy framers who till recently 
were not at all comfortable with this arrangement. And now added to this is the 
latest aggressive build-up of forex reserves by China surely has the Americans 
in a bind.

The economics behind Chinese yuan

Economists in the US till recently believed that a weak yuan implicitly 
subsidises the Chinese exports leading to such huge trade imbalances between 
the two countries. Consequently, they have been pointing out to the imperative 
need for a substantial appreciation of the yuan by a minimum of 20-25 per cent 
vis-a-vis the US dollar to remedy the situation. In the alternative they have 
suggested a countervailing duty of a similar scale on imports from China.

Further, economists are of the opinion that by constant intervention in the 
forex market not only does the Chinese Central Bank ensure a weak yuan it also 
causes competitive devaluation of various currencies in Asia.

The net consequence is a domino effect with the result that the US dollar is 
artificially valued at higher-level vis-a-vis most Asian currencies. Experts 
believe that a significant yuan revaluation will ensure a more realistic 
exchange rate mechanism in Asia as it could force other countries to follow 
suit.

It is in this connection that C Fred Bergsten of the Peterson Institute, in a 
testimony before the hearing on the Treasury Department's Report to Congress on 
International Economic and Exchange Rate Policy in early 2007, states: "By 
keeping its own currency undervalued, China has also deterred a number of other 
Asian countries from letting their currencies rise very much against the for 
fear of losing competitive position against China."

Naturally, in anticipation of a significant revaluation of the yuan, most 
experts believe given the uncertainty associated with the global financial 
markets that hot money is flowing to a relatively safe destination. After all, 
China not only offers higher return but also is virtually insured against any 
downward movement against the US dollar.

In effect, is this hot money flowing into China in anticipation of this 
revaluation of the yuan? Or is it a simple case of China maintaining trade 
competitiveness through a weak yuan? Or is there something more to it than 
meets the eye? Are the Chinese acquiring the dollars with some sinister motive? 
In effect, has the Chinese strategy of a weak currency over the years the 
un-stated policy of dynamiting the American economy?

Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD)

What is worrying the Americans is that China accounts for about one-fourth of 
the global forex surpluses and are the counterparts of the US current account 
deficit. Put simply, while China accumulates forex reserves, the US accumulates 
a corresponding debt. And the Americans are aware that it is the Chinese are 
the biggest accumulators of the US treasury bonds.

What is indeed intriguing is that a country -- the US -- that prides on being 
'independent' of other countries, especially in security affairs, is now caught 
in a quagmire as it has to be constantly in the good books of the Chinese 
government if it wants to avoid a sudden shock.

Countries that hold large US dollar denominated forex reserves have a powerful 
tool in their arsenal -- they could wreck American financial markets at a mere 
click of a mouse by selling their dollar holdings. Imagine China with a holding 
nearly $2 trillion worth of treasury bonds seceding to sell the same overnight.

And that could instantaneously dynamite the global financial system as it could 
suck out liquidity and cause interest rates to shoot through the roof. 
Remember, the $700 billion package announced last week by the US is precisely 
aimed at addressing the liquidity crunch within the US.

China, of course, might have no sinister intent, as this would be at a huge 
cost. But the Chinese know that no country can ever become a global superpower 
without a cost. As and when the Chinese decide to take a hit on their dollar 
holdings, global finance could indeed take a roller coaster ride.

Obviously, the Americans' borrowing from China and the Chinese supply of money 
to the US is indeed an intriguing geo-political game. Surely, this cannot be 
simple economics by any stretch of imagination.

Given this paradigm, till date experts opine that both are locked in a tight 
bear hug. According to Lawrence Summers, 'It is a new form of mutually assured 
destruction that has quietly emerged over the last few years. This implies that 
China needs the US (for its exports and to park its forex reserves) as much as 
the US needs China (for imports and borrowings).

So have the Americans played into the hands of Chinese?

Recent events in the US have turned this 'MAD paradigm' upside down. It is in 
this context that the recent bailout package needs to be viewed, which seeks to 
increase liquidity over a period of time by the US government taking over 
sub-prime assets from financial institutions. That, according to the American 
thinking, is expected to provide liquidity to the US economy.

But it is all these happenings within the US that makes this accumulation of 
forex reserves by China extremely interesting. It may be noted that the 
Chinese, unlike the others, have always questioned the global order with the US 
at the helm of affairs. And the Chinese accumulation of forex reserves is 
surely a strategy that perhaps has an ominous side to it.

All this is not pure economics as it is made out to be. Rather, it was and 
remains a well-planned economic, political and military strategy of the 
Chinese. And in a way it is the mirror image of the Star Wars programme that 
the then US President Reagan unleashed on the erstwhile USSR in the early 
eighties that eventually bankrupted the later within a few years as it engaged 
in competitive arms build-up with the former.

Statecraft is all about engaging other countries at one's own terms, pace, time 
and cost. This is what the US did to the USSR in the eighties and succeeded in 
dynamiting that country. And that is what China could do to a vulnerable US in 
the coming months. Crucially, if it doesn't, from the Chinese perspective it 
might well rue this moment forever.

The US till date was depending on the Chinese for imports and to finance them 
as well for such imports. Now they will have to be considerably dependent on 
the Chinese to protect their currency as well as to ensure liquidity in their 
money markets.  And that completely alters the existing global order. 

1 Chinese yuan = Rs 6.9160 
1 US dollar = yuan 6.8527 


http://www.rediff.com/money/2008/oct/06bcrisis1.htm

In an ant colony dew is a flood






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