It seems like a momentous event. Unfortunately, it’s so
complicated and abstract that precious few media outlets are reporting it.
I will admit that I am not even remotely qualified to offer
a sage commentary, so I will report the information as I read it.
Columnist Robert Morley tells us that the China is trying to
make its currency, the yuan, a reserve currency. He then explains what that
means and why it matters:
This year may go down as a turning point in
United States economic history.
Reuters
reports that three high-level Chinese officials have confirmed thatChina will launch its long-awaited international payment system in
September or October. The system will allow foreign banks to conduct
transactions in yuan instead of dollars and transfer funds across international
borders without using America’s SWIFT payment system.
This
latest move by China is an effort to make the yuan a reserve currency. If
successful, the newly created China International Payment System (CIPS) will
remove the biggest hurdles to internationalizing the yuan. It will cut costs,
cut processing times, and simplify the transactions associated with obtaining
and using yuans. Apparently 20 Chinese banks and 13 foreign banks are currently
engaged in testing the system.
Purchasing
goods in yuan will soon be as simple and inexpensive as using the dollar.
Reuters compared the creation of CIPS to a “worldwide payments
superhighway” for the yuan.
Geopolitical
repercussions are inevitable. The dollar’s role as global reserve currency is
being challenged.
Loss of
reserve currency status would leave America without the freedom to create money
out of thin air to finance government spending. All things being equal,
interest rates would be higher, borrowing rates would fall, banking
profitability would shrink, consumer spending would constrict, corporations would
become less profitable, jobs would be cut, and stock prices would fall.
Additionally, America’s large debt and retirement obligations would become even
less likely to be paid.
In
short, America’s standard of living would trend toward the typical Chinese
person’s, while China’s would trend toward America’s.
If Morley is right our current prosperity is based largely
on the fact that the dollar is a reserve currency. If you are looking for
hegemony, that would be a good place to start.
If China can undermine the dollar’s status, we will have
more difficulty borrowing money to pay our burgeoning debt. We will be forced to trim government spending drastically. We will have to pay off debt with earnings.
The good news is that this is not going to happen tomorrow.
Morley is hardly alone in being alarmed. Harvard professor
Lawrence Summers has much the same view, and Summers is not some crank getting
messages from a crystal ball:
It’s
true that global yuan usage is still a fraction of the dollar’s, but China’s
move to create its own competetive version of America’s SWIFT system
is just one piece of infrastructure going into place to allow the yuan to grab
global market share from the dollar.
Another
even more significant piece of China’s attempt to dollarize the yuan is its new
Asia Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB).
Former
U.S. Treasury Secretary Larry Summers said the launch of this bank should be a “wake-up call” for America.
The
U.S. has protested strongly against the creation of this bank—which China
marketed as an alternative to the U.S.-controlled World Bank. Yet every single
U.S. ally except Canada and Japan have defied America’s wishes to join China.
“I can
think of no event since Bretton Woods comparable to the combination of China’s
effort to establish a major new institution and the failure of the U.S. to
persuade dozens of its traditional allies, starting with Britain, to stay out
of it,” wrote Summers.
It says
a lot about your standing when even your closest allies join your enemies.
Morley continues by quoting famed investor Jim Rogers:
The
U.S. is the largest debtor nation in the history of the world. Never has a
nation ever got into this much debt, and it’s getting higher and higher every
day.
Washington is spending and borrowing even more and not doing anything about it.
No nation would be able to get out of this without a crisis.
What will need to happen for the U.S. dollar to lose reserve status? More of
what is already happening—debts going higher .…
Even our friends are starting to say it is out of control. The [South] Koreans
do not have too much choice but are saying it is not going to work. … The
Chinese and the Russians … are looking for something to use besides the U.S.
dollar in their trades and in their reserves.
If you are looking for potential black swans, an
international payment system in yuan seems clearly to fit the criteria.
6 comments:
http://blog.mpettis.com/2014/12/my-reading-of-the-ft-on-chinas-turning-away-from-the-dollar/
Thank you for the link. It's good to have an alternative point of view.
This paper discusses innovation, institutions, and other factors as the driver of GDP growth.
http://faculty.insead.edu/fatas/wall/wall.pdf
According to the paper the US has been the leader of GDP growth with 1.85% trend rate for 130 years, but we went from a small central government and no central bank, to a larger federal government and now a large central bank over the period. Japan and Germany grew GDP rapidly after World War II. The UK and Japan both have Sovereign currencies with much higher debt to GDP ratios than the US.
I am still trying to understand the international payment mechanism. It seems international payment flows are swap agreements on the books of the largest banks in respective countries. However if a country runs a persistent trade deficit, as we do with China, then they ship us real goods and collect $ bank accounts in the form of Treasury securities based on swap agreements between central banks, if my hunch is correct. The central bank swaps take the load off the commercial banks when one country is importing and the other exporting in a persistent pattern.
China and Russia do not like the fact that US has the power to punish others via international bank interference.
I remember a picture in the local paper where a young man in Palestine is smiling and flashing a wad of $100 bills that had been smuggled into the country from Egypt in a suitcase to make government payroll after the US imposed banking sanctions. I thought this is a very interesting picture about the psychology of money.
For those who are interested here are two links to discussion that relate to GDP growth in Germany/Japan after world war 2, GDP growth in China, and the process China used to accumulate international reserves:
How Foreign Reserves Are Accumulated:
http://www.ecrresearch.com/how-foreign-reserves-are-accumulated
The End of Chimerica ():
http://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Publication%20Files/10-037.pdf
I'm not sure "The Philadelphia Trumpet", an online newsletter about biblical prophesy should be considered the "go to source" to world economic news.
But I'm curious. Hmmm...Wikipedia is kind of boring.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Philadelphia_Trumpet
How about rational wiki for the juicy version?
http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/The_Philadelphia_Trumpet
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The Philadelphia Trumpet is a religious magazine that covers world events and traces how they were foretold by the prophets of the Bible. It does a lot of shoehorning in order to make the news fit Herbert W. Armstrong's prophecies from 50 years ago. The magazine's editor-in-chief is self-appointed prophet, fundamentalist, and conservative Gerald Flurry of the Philadelphia Church of God (a break-off church of Armstrong's Worldwide Church of God). He also hosts a weekly television show, "The Key of David."
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Didn't we just have a blog topic arguing against the idealists fictional (facts fit the narrative) approach to reality?
Okay, here's one more from the Church about Robert Morley:
https://www.pcog.org/articles/78/profile-how-robert-morley-became-the-trumpet-s-economics-man
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His average workday consists of several hours watching the news, checking headlines from his go-to sources.
...
Morley said his passion for learning about finances and the economy actually began when he was an environmental scientist living in California from 2002 to 2005. He was newly married and had a lot of questions. He asked himself, “How do you get ahead? What do you do to be a good steward with what God has given you?” His wife challenged him to learn the financial field to make wise investments.
The challenge showed him he had no idea how to use money prudently, he says. He started off by printing out finance and economy articles and reading them during his 90-minute train commutes in and out of Los Angeles.
Morley says his lack of formal training in economics turned out to be a blessing in disguise. He avoided a mainstream education that would have engrained the principle of credit and instead learned a different approach.
“It’s one of those fields that’s trying to be a science, but it can’t,” he says. “The more I understand, the less I understand.”
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But never fear, he's trying very hard, several hours per day, to help us all understand less.
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