Good job Keith.   Do you have anything to say about the migration of the
Wealthy Chinese from China to America as Harry pointed out recently?

 

REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Keith Hudson
Sent: Thursday, June 16, 2011 5:25 AM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, , EDUCATION; D and N
Subject: [Futurework] China's Emergency Plan C

 

Natalie,

As you were kind enough to ask me, here are a few more comments for you to
chew over. (I was tired last night and  my bed was calling me!)

While Europe and America are proceeding towards their respective train
crashes (unpayable governmental debts) China is now quietly proceeding with
Plan B as fast as it can.

But what was Plan A?  This was the naive belief on the part of the Chinese
government in the past few years that they could persuade America by
rational argument to take part in founding a new world trading currency. I
am, of course, not privy to the details of what the new world currency would
be based on. The Chinese Politburo might have conceived it to be based on
the free market price of gold. Or on the price of grain. Or on the price of
energy. Or on a balanced package of existing national currencies. Who knows?
It scarcely matters, so long as it was on a basis that alters only slowly
from year to year. 

No matter. The US Treasury (the true masters of US financial policy)
repeatedly sent the Chinese packing with a flea in their ear. This has been
public knowledge for the past two years or so. (The Chinese were probably
trying privately for several years previously. In my opinion, ever since
Deng Xiaoping's launched China's free-market reforms in the 1980s.) Anyway,
it looks as though the Chinese have now given up on this hopeless quest. As
they watch the printing presses (or digital keyboards) of the US Federal
Reserve or the European Central Bank -- and many other central banks --
churn out more of their national currencies they must be saying to
themselves: "Those whom the Gods wish to destroy, They first make mad."

So what is Plan B?  It is to promote the renminbi (yuan) to world class
status as a universal trading currency. This would displace the dollar and
the euro from their present 55% and 40% duopoly.  This has been public
knowledge (to the observant) for about two years now, ever since the Chinese
government enrolled about a dozen major Western banks, such as HSBC and
JPMorganChase as their associates. Their job is to acquire enough renminbi
in their cash reserves so they can give credits to any of their customers
which are negotiating trade transactions which could be carried out in
renminbis. At a higher level, the Chinese government are now making more
formal agreements (actual trading floors at both ends) with other
governments so they can more directly exchange their national currencies
with the renminbi, rather than going through the dollar or the euro as
intermediaries (with their risks of daily fluctuations due to speculators). 

So far, at various stages of fruition, these arrangements involve Russia,
Brazil and about a dozen more countries. After about a year of Plan B, the
renminbi accounted for 1% of world trade. A year later, this reached 7%. By
now it's probably at least 10% and heading towards 20%. Given no financial
catastrophes in Europe or America (on which China still depends as export
markets) then the renminbi will probably reach about 30%, this being the
size of the trading market which Chinese firms (governmental and private)
presently have -- directly -- with other emergent countries. Overall, this
would then approach the "multipolar" trading currency of something like
30:30:30 (dollars, euros, renminbis) that some economists are already
forecasting.

But this doesn't take into account that the emergent countries already
occupy about 55% of world trade and is still growing relative to the
advanced countries. Within that, the direct trade between China and the
emergent world would also be growing. Within a few years the multipolar
currencies could easily arrive at a 20:20:60 ratio. But this also assumes
that there'll be no shocks to the dollar or the euro along the way. If the
US Bond market in America, or the Eurozone collapses (either would also trip
off the other) then the ratio could become 0:20:80 or 20:0:80 overnight. Or
at least within a few days, depending on whether China decides to save
America or Europe. Either would probably give just enough export market (in
addition to the emergent countries) for China to barely survive. China would
not be able to afford to save both (as it is helping to do at present by
holding a large part of American government debt) and would have to save one
or the other because it, too, would be in desperate circumstances. (My guess
is that China would save America and also a German-northern European
detachment from the ex-Eurozone.)

I'm sure that China does not have a Plan C as such, any more than America
had in the years before the Bretton Woods 'Agreement' of 1944 when, as a
by-product, it displaced the pound as the predominant world trading currency
and replaced it with the dollar. It was "all for the best in the best
possible world" as Dr Pangloss would have said. So it would be with
Emergency Procedure C. The renminbi would perforce have to take the place of
the dollar and/or the euro.

China's Plan B can't be avoided. But what about Emergency Procedure C? This
could be avoided. Western and European governments could do what the Chinese
government always does. This is to establish total control over its banks by
insisting on sufficient reserves. In its own inflationary difficulties from
time to time, the Chinese government not only adjusts its interest rates but
also its banks' reserves (governmental and private), thus preventing undue
credit expansion. American and European governments haven't done this for
20/30/40 years. They've been running on 0% for several years now even though
the Bank for International Settlements (the central bank for central banks)
has been telling them how foolish they have been. In effect, the banks and
the financial sector have been in control. No wonder the credit-crunch
finally found them out (that is, both governments and banks). Even now,
knowing what must be done, they are still largely only talking about it,
with only feeble nods in that direction. 

Keith  



Keith Hudson, Saltford, England http://allisstatus.wordpress.com/2011/06/
  

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