Untenable, unsustainable, indefensible,
unsound<http://www.annaly.com/blog/?cat=news&id=1340638>March
12, 2010

We don’t much trust statistics that come from China, just like we didn’t
trust information that came from behind the Iron Curtain back in the Cold
War days. But there’s been a lot of news from China in the past few weeks,
and it has painted a picture of economic recovery and strength. At 8.7%, GDP
growth was faster than expected in 2009. Production, exports and fixed-asset
investment in urban areas are up 20.7%, 31.4% and 26.6%, respectively, in
the first two months of 2010 versus the same year-ago period. M2 money
supply grew at a 25.5% clip and consumer prices rose 2.7% in February.

Believe those numbers at your peril, haircut them as you see fit, but there
is one number with regard to China that is unassailable and that makes their
growth miracle possible: *6.83*. The pegging of the yuan at this
artificially low exchange rate is the cornerstone of the Chinese economic
miracle. It is the modern-day mercantilist tool, a replacement for tariffs
and taxes. In so doing, it allows the country to run an export-driven
economy that competes on price, depends on foreigners’ propensity to
consume, and builds up huge structural surpluses with which to keep its
currency peg. It’s the Walmart of countries, the big box store and category
killer that no local shopkeeper wants in his neighborhood. It is the other
side of the coin from the United States and Europe at this stage in the
global economic cycle - - consumer-based societies that are running huge
structural deficits. Despite the obvious economic wisdom of letting the
currency float, and the ample cover for doing so that the latest data
provide, it is unlikely that China will significantly alter its dollar-peg
policy any time soon.

This is a global macroeconomic issue, but for China it is a domestic
issue: There
is a labor shortage in
China<http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/cndy/2010-03/11/content_9570417.htm>,
and those workers want to be paid. “Migrant workers are a lot more fussy
than before,” He Suwei, chairman of Hangzhou Weibang Airflow Spinning Co in
Zhejiang province, told China Daily. “They don’t just talk money; they talk
about working environments, holidays and other fringe benefits we have not
even heard of before. Workers have more say than us now because they have a
wider choice.” Workers at the factory are now being paid about $270 per
month, up 40% from the beginning of the global recession. At a nearby
textile mill, the owner came back from the Lunar New Year holidays to find
that many of his skilled workers didn’t return to work. He reluctantly had
to raise wages. “I had no choice but to raise the salaries of my less
experienced workers from 750 yuan a month to 960 yuan,” said the owner, Cao
Yakun. “Also, to make sure the workers who did return stayed, I boosted my
skilled workers’ pay by 10 to 15 percent.”

The irony here about the exploited proletariat wanting better treatment from
the bourgeoisie factory owners is historically mindboggling. All we can say
to the Communist Party bureaucrats is ‘Welcome to capitalism.’ The genie is
out of the bottle and you can’t put it back. You can’t raise salaries on
your working class because margins are too low, you can’t raise prices to
raise margins because you’ll be less competitive and you can’t let your
currency float because your exports will decline and slow economic growth.

The other irony: the modern Chinese miracle would never have occurred
without the US Dollar as a reserve currency. As Hugh Hendry has
pointed out<http://www.scribd.com/doc/22606253/Hugh-Hendry-Eclectica-Nov09>,
for the Chinese, US Dollars were nothing less than the modern-day equivalent
of the relief from a too constrictive gold standard that William Jennings
Bryan decried in 1896. Imagine if back then the supply of gold had been as
unlimited as dollars. The fact is, in modern economies either all trading
partners of more or less equal size should be linked to a similar standard,
like gold, or they should all be free floating and competing. A hybrid
situation like we have now just leads to hazardous imbalances.

If history is a guide, however, economic growth and a free floating currency
are not incompatible. The graph below shows the exchange rate of the
Japanese yen; Japan eventually let it float and they recovered from World
War II to become the second largest economy in the world. It’s only when the
Bank of Japan began to sizably intervene to manage their currency that the
country ended up with a lost generation of productivity. China, take note.


-- 
Best Regards,
Jay Shah, FRM

"Expect The Unexpected"
Blog: http://fuzylogix.blogspot.com/

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