As China Slowly Dumps the Dollar
Posted by slowsmile November 15, 2008
In my last blog about the dollar - China and Russia to De-Emphasize the World Trade Dollar I discussed the meeting that occurred between these two countries over two weeks ago. I stated that it was their avowed intention - more or less - to topple the dollar's top position as the World Reserve Currency. In another article I showed how Mr Paulson and the Treasury had blatantly manipulated the currency markets to prop up the dollar value, buying $630 billion worth of foreign currencies via credit default swaps. This action has rapidly and artificially increased the strength of the dollar as well as depressed the value of commodities such as oil. All manipulated, all temporary. Paulson did this to ultimately manipulate US market confidence so that he could say, "Hey look guys, the dollar is now really strong…See, there's no need to worry about the dollar now !!" as a nicely timed defense strategy at the G20 Summit which is ongoing now. These credit default swaps purchased by Mr Paulson's brotherhood will expire in 84 days from October - which means that shortly after Xmas or New Year the US dollar will crash big as the world currency markets will become flooded - once again - by that worthless and over-inflated piece of paper known as the dollar. And therefore, as a result of its clever timing and set-up, this 'hot potato' will be conveniently passed to the new President-elect Obama in January, just in time for Bush Jnr to wave goodbye and laugh, now completely blameless for all these and future events that he has helped - and so effortlessly it seems - to create through his truly dumb, voodoo-economic policies.
Meanwhile here is more related bad news from China. This article was from today's Motley Fool and its content shows how China is responding to the weak and globally hurtful dollar. Of course the Chinese have clocked what Paulson's brotherhood is up to, and their greatest wish seems to be - together with Russia - to slowly destroy the dollar. They will do this by unloading and spending all their dollar reserves domestically, and they will obviously stop buying US debt. Read on:
Brazil's President Lula told his country in September, "People ask me about the [financial] crisis, and I answer, go ask Bush. It is his crisis, not mine."
Fifty days later, British Treasury Secretary Stephen Timms told a conference of G-20 nations gathered in Sao Paulo, Brazil: "We are in extraordinary times, the global economy is facing shocks which are wholly without precedent and we need a new approach. … It is a global crisis. It therefore requires an international response."
In other words, what goes around, comes around. Global schadenfreude toward a stupid and greedy United States and its subprime mortgage meltdown has rapidly become global concern about how to rescue the world from an all-encompassing financial disaster.
And if that were not enough, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) recently lowered its outlook for the entire global economy.
One country's plan to step up
Against that backdrop, China announced a 4-trillion-yuan ($586 billion) stimulus package for its domestic economy this past Sunday. It plans to fund extensive infrastructure construction, aid poor farmers, and cut export taxes.While China's plan has clear beneficiaries, and should help keep more laborers in their jobs and prop up domestic consumer spending, the most important (and underreported) aspect of the plan is how it will fundamentally change the economic relationship between the U.S. and China.
Here's how it was
One of the big debates over the past half-decade was whetherChina had reached a point in its economic development at which its internal economic gravity would allow it to "decouple" from the global economy. If so, it could continue along its fantastic growth trajectory, even as growth in the U.S. or Europe ceased or reversed.
That may sound like gobbledygook, but it's important. The U.S. has a $20 billion monthly trade deficit with China. It's funded by China's willingness to hold U.S. treasuries in its Central Bank (essentially, we're borrowing the money). China manages the arrangement by pegging its currency (the yuan) to the dollar at an artificially low rate, and by not worrying so much about certain niceties like environmental regulation and labor protection.
It's a mutually beneficial arrangement — a weak yuan supports Chinese exporters, helping the country industrialize and quickly integrate rural migrants into its urban workforce, with the salutary effect of keeping inflation and potential political unrest low. For its part, the U.S. has gotten dirt cheap financing, by virtue of China parking more than a trillion dollars in U.S. government securities. That has supported the dollar and allowed the Federal Reserve to fuel consumer spending by keeping interest rates low.
China's stimulus package heralds the unwinding of this relationship.
Here's how it will be
This is why the decoupling argument matters. Many analysts have pointed to the thousands of factories that have shut down in China in these past few months as evidence that a slowdown in American spending will cause a depression in China — potentially even leading to regime change. But in fact, our trade imbalance with China is artificially preserved by the aforementioned currency peg, and by the decision of China's state-run banks to make uneconomic loans to businesses it deemed worth propping up.China has paid heavily for this relationship. Rather than invest its surplus cash in its own country, the Chinese poured money back into the U.S. to further spur our debt-fueled consumption. (Put less artfully, some poor Chinese guy in Shaanxi province was essentially helping you pay your mortgage.)
The announced stimulus package reverses that. Hundreds of billions of dollars that would have gone to propping up the greenback are now being reinvested in China, helping it to transition from its reliance on exports to a self-sustaining economy. So while China isn't yet decoupled from its export markets, this new spending plan will help it along that path.
What you need to do to survive
China's huge currency reserves are about to be put to use, and while there will be some real and perhaps severe bumps along the way, the China that comes out on the other side will be a heck of a lot stronger, more independent, and more decoupled than the one we've seen up to now.Chinese premier Wen Jiabao called his country's stimulus the "biggest contribution to the world." We don't know whether that's true, but we do know that China's ability to reach deep into its huge coffers to finance further growth gives it a significant advantage over the rest of the world's struggling economies. This is why we continue to believe in the Chinese miracle, and why we think more American investors should be taking advantage of this current temporary downturn to diversify their portfolios into previously expensive Chinese stocks.




China had reached a point in its economic development at which its internal economic gravity would allow it to "decouple" from the global economy. If so, it could continue along its fantastic growth trajectory, even as growth in the U.S. or Europe ceased or reversed.
