MARCH 24, 2009

China Takes Aim at Dollar

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123780272456212885.html



By 
<http://online.wsj.com/search/search_center.html?KEYWORDS=ANDREW+BATSON&ARTICLESEARCHQUERY_PARSER=bylineAND>ANDREW
 
BATSON

BEIJING -- China called for the creation of a new 
currency to eventually replace the dollar as the 
world's standard, proposing a sweeping overhaul 
of global finance that reflects developing 
nations' growing unhappiness with the U.S. role in the world economy.

The unusual proposal, made by central bank 
governor Zhou Xiaochuan in an essay released 
Monday in Beijing, is part of China's 
increasingly assertive approach to shaping the 
global response to the financial crisis.
<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123780272456212885.html#>
video
<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123780272456212885.html#>


<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123780272456212885.html#>China's a Bellwether

3:31

David Semple of Van Eck Emerging Markets Fund 
outlines opportunities in China's real-estate and 
retail sectors, along with greater stability in 
Russia. But the situation in Eastern Europe is 
still uncertain. Polya Lesova reports.

Mr. Zhou's proposal comes amid preparations for a 
summit of the world's industrial and developing 
nations, the Group of 20, in London next week. At 
past such meetings, developed nations have 
criticized China's economic and currency policies.

This time, China is on the offensive, backed by 
other emerging economies such as Russia in making 
clear they want a global economic order less 
dominated by the U.S. and other wealthy nations.

However, the technical and political hurdles to 
implementing China's recommendation are enormous, 
so even if backed by other nations, the proposal 
is unlikely to change the dollar's role in the 
short term. Central banks around the world hold 
more U.S. dollars and dollar securities than they 
do assets denominated in any other individual 
foreign currency. Such reserves can be used to 
stabilize the value of the central banks' domestic currencies.

Monday's proposal follows a similar one Russia 
made this month during preparations for the G20 
meeting. Like China, Russia recommended that the 
International Monetary Fund might issue the 
currency, and emphasized the need to update "the 
obsolescent unipolar world economic order."
[Dollar Dominated]


Chinese officials are frustrated at their 
financial dependence on the U.S., with Premier 
Wen Jiabao this month publicly expressing 
"worries" over China's significant holdings of 
U.S. government bonds. The size of those holdings 
means the value of the national rainy-day fund is 
mainly driven by factors China has little control 
over, such as fluctuations in the value of the 
dollar and changes in U.S. economic policies. 
While Chinese banks have weathered the global 
downturn and continue to lend, the collapse in 
demand for the nation's exports has shuttered 
factories and left millions jobless.

In his paper, published in Chinese and English on 
the central bank's Web site, Mr. Zhou argued for 
reducing the dominance of a few individual 
currencies, such as the dollar, euro and yen, in 
international trade and finance. Most nations 
concentrate their assets in those reserve 
currencies, which exaggerates the size of flows 
and makes financial systems overall more volatile, Mr. Zhou said.

Moving to a reserve currency that belongs to no 
individual nation would make it easier for all 
nations to manage their economies better, he 
argued, because it would give the 
reserve-currency nations more freedom to shift 
monetary policy and exchange rates. It could also 
be the basis for a more equitable way of 
financing the IMF, Mr. Zhou added. China is among 
several nations under pressure to pony up extra cash to help the IMF.
[Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of the People's Bank of China.]
  Reuters

Zhou Xiaochuan, governor of the People's Bank of China.

John Lipsky, the IMF's deputy managing director, 
said the Chinese proposal should be treated 
seriously. "It reflects officials' concerns about 
improving the stability of the financial system," 
he said. "It's interesting because of China's 
unique position, and because the governor put it 
in a measured and considered way."

China's proposal is likely to have significant 
implications, said Eswar Prasad, a professor of 
trade policy at Cornell University and former IMF 
official. "Nobody believes that this is the 
perfect solution, but by putting this on the 
table the Chinese have redefined the debate," he 
said. "It represents a very strong pushback by 
China on a number of fronts where they feel 
themselves being pushed around by the advanced 
countries," such as currency policy and funding for the IMF.

A spokeswoman for the U.S. Treasury Department 
declined to comment on Mr. Zhou's views. In 
recent weeks, senior Obama administration 
officials have sought to reassure Beijing that 
the current U.S. spending spree is a short-term 
effort to restart the stalled American economy, 
not evidence of long-term U.S. profligacy.

"The re-establishment of a new and widely 
accepted reserve currency with a stable valuation 
benchmark may take a long time," Mr. Zhou said. 
In remarks earlier Monday, one of his deputies, 
Hu Xiaolian, also said the dollar's dominant 
position in international trade and investment is 
unlikely to change soon. Ms. Hu is in charge of 
reserve management as the head of China's State 
Administration of Foreign Exchange.

Mr. Zhou's comments -- coming on the heels of Mr. 
Wen's musing about the safety of China's dollar 
holdings -- appear to be a warning to the U.S. 
that it can't expect China to finance its spending indefinitely.
[The Haves and Have Mores]


The central banker's proposal reflects both 
China's desire to hold its $1.95 trillion in 
reserves in something other than U.S. dollars and 
the fact that Beijing has few alternatives. With 
more U.S. dollars continuing to pour into China 
from trade and investment, Beijing has no 
realistic option other than storing them in U.S. debt.

Mr. Zhou argued, without mentioning the dollar by 
name, that the loss of the dollar's de facto 
reserve status would benefit the U.S. by avoiding 
future crises. Because other nations continued to 
park their money in U.S. dollars, the argument 
goes, the Federal Reserve was able to pursue an 
irresponsible policy in recent years, keeping 
interest rates too low for too long and thereby 
helping to inflate a bubble in the housing market.

"The outbreak of the crisis and its spillover to 
the entire world reflected the inherent 
vulnerabilities and systemic risks in the 
existing international monetary system," Mr. Zhou 
said. The increasing number and intensity of 
financial crises suggests "the costs of such a 
system to the world may have exceeded its benefits."

View Full Image
China Global Currency

Reuters

People past the headquarters of the central bank 
of the People's Republic of China in Beijing Feb. 16, 2009.
China Global Currency

China Global Currency


Mr. Zhou isn't the first to make that argument. 
"The dollar reserve system is part of the 
problem," Joseph Stiglitz, the Columbia 
University economist, said in a speech in 
Shanghai last week, because it meant so much of 
the world's cash was funneled into the U.S. "We 
need a global reserve system," he said in the speech.

Mr. Zhou's idea is to expand the use of "special 
drawing rights," or SDRs -- a kind of synthetic 
currency created by the IMF in the 1960s. Its 
value is determined by a basket of major 
currencies. Originally, the SDR was intended to 
serve as a shared currency for international 
reserves, though that aspect never really got off the ground.

These days, the SDR is mainly used in the IMF's 
accounting for its transactions with member 
nations. Mr. Zhou suggested countries could 
increase their contributions to the IMF in 
exchange for greater access to a pool of reserves in SDRs.

Holding more international reserves in SDRs would 
increase the role and powers of the IMF. That 
indicates China and other developing nations 
aren't hostile to international financial 
institutions -- they just want to have more say 
in running them. China has resisted the U.S. push 
to make an immediate loan to the IMF because that 
wouldn't give China a bigger vote. Ms. Hu said 
Monday that China, which encourages the IMF to 
explore other fund-raising options, would consider buying into a bond issue.

The IMF has been working on a proposal to issue 
bonds, probably only to central banks. Bond 
purchases are one way for the organization to 
raise money and meet its goal of at least 
doubling its lending war chest to $500 billion 
from $250 billion. Japan has loaned the IMF $100 
billion and the European Union has pledged another $100 billion.
­Terence Poon in Beijing, James T. Areddy in 
Shanghai, and Bob Davis and Michael M. Phillips 
in Washington contributed to this article.

Write to Andrew Batson at <mailto:[email protected]>[email protected]


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