http://www.economist.com/world/na/displayStory.cfm?Story_id=2404984

Let the dollar drop
Feb 5th 2004
>From The Economist print edition

Excerpt:

....Normally, when a government's budget deficit swells so fast (to
4.6% of GDP this year, from a surplus of 2.4% of GDP in 2000) and its
currency is falling, investors would demand higher bond yields to
compensate them for the increased risk. That penalty gives governments
both a warning and an incentive to borrow less. But Asian governments
are devouring American Treasury bonds with little regard for the usual
risk-return characteristics. As a result, bond yields are being held
artificially low, subsidising America's borrowing spree.

This has allowed the Bush administration to point misleadingly
to low bond yields as evidence that its budget deficit is not
harming the economy, and to think that cutting the deficit
is less urgent. President George Bush's plan, set out this
week in his budget, to halve the deficit over five years is
based on unrealistic assumptions and fantasy accounting (see
http://www.economist.com/world/na/displaystory.cfm?story_id=2410569 ). A
fiscal stimulus was justified when the American economy was on the brink
of a deep recession in 2001, but now that the economy is booming again,
borrowing needs to be cut.

Asia's game

In essence, Asian governments are buying American Treasury bonds in
order to ensure that Americans can afford to keep spending money on
Asian goods. This cannot go on forever. Despite their mercantilist
instincts, sooner or later Asia's central banks will have to face the
fact that they are holding far too many risky, low-yielding dollars. If
they stop buying, it could trigger a sharp fall in the dollar and a jump
in bond yields. Delaying the natural adjustment in the dollar and bond
yields is likely to mean that, when the inevitable correction comes, it
will be much more painful.

....

However, America must bear much of the blame for its failure to do
anything to curb household and government borrowing and so boost
saving.  Its easy monetary and fiscal policies are now beginning to look
reckless. The dollar's slide has rightly shifted some of the burden of
economic adjustment on to other economies. Sooner or later, though,
America will have to face up to its own responsibilities, too.


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