Within four years of coming into power with a global scenario that the
strategic enemy is China, the Bush administration has made the
economic fortunes of the USA in hock to the Chinese.
The ironies of history!

The additional insight from this article for me is that if the yuan
remains tied to the dollar, then this compromise suits the Chinese:
while the dollar drifts down the Chinese continue to rise in their
influence on the world economy, since it also gives them advantages in
relation to Europe

Non-linear dynamics progress can sometimes progress faster than linear
dynamics. We may not be waiting for 2040 to find that China is a
dominant player on the world stage.

The Chinese have too long a history to laugh and no need for
schadenfreude.

Chris Burford
London

----- Original Message -----
From: "Devine, James" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, November 14, 2004 10:11 PM
Subject: [PEN-L] sliding dollar, rising dragon?


http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/front/la-fi-dollar14nov14,1,5997430.story?coll=la-headlines-frontpage

Dollar's Decline Is Reverberating

If foreign investors look elsewhere, interest rates could climb and
living standards could fall.

By David Streitfeld Times Staff Writer



November 14, 2004



During a routine sale of U.S. Treasury bonds in early September, one
of the essential pillars holding up the economy suddenly disappeared.



Foreigners have been regularly buying nearly half of all debt issued
by the U.S. government. On Sept. 9, for the first time that anyone
could remember, they stayed home.



"Thoughts of panic flickered out there," said Sadakichi Robbins, head
of global fixed-income trading at Bank Julius Baer.



The foreigners returned in force at the next Treasury auction, and
Sept. 9 was quickly dismissed as an aberration.



But the episode demonstrated how much the U.S. economy is dependent on
other countries to bankroll its free-spending ways. That fragility is
becoming even more precarious because of recent declines in the U.S.
dollar to multiyear lows, some economists say.



Amid worries about bulging U.S. budget and trade deficits, the
greenback dropped last week to a record low against the 5-year-old
euro, a 12-year low against the Canadian dollar and a nine-year low
against an index of major currencies. Many analysts don't see anything
that will stop the decline.



A cheaper dollar reduces the value of American securities, making them
less attractive to foreign investors. That could eventually
precipitate what Robbins called "the doomsday scenario" - Japan and
China not only refusing to buy U.S. bonds, but selling some of their
$1.3 trillion in reserves.



The only way Uncle Sam could then find new customers for its IOUs
would be by raising interest rates. And although higher rates are good
for savers, they would be disastrous for a country weaned on cheap
credit.



"Sometime soon, the falling dollar is going to show up in rising
inflation, rising interest rates and a falling standard of living,"
said Harry Chernoff, an economist with Pathfinder Capital Advisors.
"The housing and mortgage markets, which benefited the most from
declining interest rates over the past few years, are likely to feel
the most pain."



Not everyone agrees that suffering is imminent. The National Assn. of
Manufacturers calls the dollar doomsayers "all but hysterical."
Manufacturers and produce growers like a cheap dollar because it makes
their products more affordable in foreign markets.



Even some foreigners like the low dollar. China has pegged its
currency to the dollar. A weak greenback means a weak yuan, making
Chinese goods cheaper in foreign markets and fueling the nation's
economic boom.



To most American consumers, a falling dollar is more an annoyance than
cause for alarm. It raises the price of a cup of coffee to outlandish
levels during a Paris vacation, and may cause second thoughts about
buying a more expensive Volkswagen.



But a number of economists and academics say there are real reasons
for concern. If the dollar falls too far too quickly, they say, those
all-important foreign investors will abandon the U.S. in favor of
stabler places.



Indeed, there are signs that such an exodus might have already
started.



In August, the most recent period for which there's data, foreign
private investors sold $2 billion more in U.S. stocks than they
bought, the Treasury said. Meanwhile, they dumped $4 billion more in
government bonds than they purchased.



"A run for the exits could happen any day, that's for sure," said C.
Fred Bergsten, author of "Dollar Overvaluation and the World Economy"
and director of the Institute for International Economics, a
Washington think tank.



Such a prospect creates a tricky balancing act for policy makers. As
long as the dollar devalues in a slow and orderly way, and doesn't
trigger panic selling of American securities, Bush administration
officials appear to be comfortable with the fall. As they see it, the
benefits of boosting the economy through higher exports outweigh the
drawbacks.



The administration approach could work out fine in the short run,
economists say. But eventually the slide must stop. Few countries can
maintain strong economies with a debased currency.[????]



Indeed, if a weak currency was the prescription for long-run economic
health, countries like Argentina and Mexico - which have suffered
massive currency devaluations in the last decade - would be financial
titans.



Ultimately, these economists say, the solution is for the U.S.
government to reduce its massive budget deficit. [???] That would curb
the need for Uncle Sam to issue so many Treasury notes. And the dollar
would rise on its own, because the deficit is the main reason it
continues to fall.



Having China decouple the yuan from the dollar also could help,
economists say. It's a step the Bush administration has sought from
Beijing, with little progress.



Under the best scenario, economist Bergsten sees China acceding to
American pressure and easing or dropping the yuan-dollar peg by the
end of the year.



Allowing the yuan to float upward would raise the price of Chinese
goods in this country and reduce the U.S. trade deficit with the new
Asian powerhouse, estimated to be $150 billion this year.



But if the Chinese resist, the euro will rise even further. It could
move up from last week's $1.30 to $2, Bergsten said. Three years ago,
it was worth 84 cents.



That ascent would upset the Europeans, whose exports would suffer and
whose economies are already struggling. Central bankers usually speak
in measured tones, but European Central Bank President Jean-Claude
Trichet was moved last week to call the euro's rise "brutal" and "not
welcome."



Neither the dollar nor the deficits became a hot-button issue during
the presidential campaign, for obvious reasons. No politician has ever
won an election by telling people their standard of living is going to
go down, particularly at a moment when it's so easy to get a loan.



"The insidious thing about deficits is that they go on as long as the
markets allow them to go on," said Maurice Obstfeld, an economics
professor at UC Berkeley and author of many works on global capital
markets.



"So people get lulled into the certainty they'll always be able to
borrow at low rates, and that this is right and normal and an
endorsement of their behavior," he said. "But it has to stop at some
point."



A slump in the dollar also has been providing immediate benefits for
some businesses, particularly multinationals but also smaller firms.



"There's all this scare stuff about the falling dollar, but it's
allowing us to compete in the marketplace more effectively," said
Stephanie Harkness, chief executive of Pacific Plastics & Engineering
in Soquel, Calif.



Eighteen months ago, Pacific Plastics built a plant in Bangalore,
India. It now employs 48 people there and 86 in Soquel.



"Our customers can save 50% when we produce molds for them in India
rather than here," Harkness said. "My ideal scenario is not to have a
plant in California at all."



If Pacific Plastics' bottom line is improving, the government's is
steadily getting worse. The gap between what it spent and what it took
in during the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30 was $413 billion, a
record.



This week, Congress will have to raise the government's $7.4-trillion
debt ceiling so it can borrow more money. According to the nonpartisan
Congressional Budget Office, by 2008 nearly 10% of the budget will be
devoted to interest payments.



President Bush has pledged to halve the deficit by 2008. Many
economists say that will be difficult, if not impossible, without
raising taxes, something Bush has pledged not to do.



In his postelection news conference, the president said the economy
could grow its way out of trouble.



"As the revenue streams increase, coupled with fiscal discipline,
you'll see the deficit shrinking," he said.



The stock market soared on Bush's remarks, but the currency markets
rendered a different verdict. The dollar continued to fall.



It's not only the government that is profligate. The U.S. current
account deficit - the broadest measure of international trade,
including exports, imports, services and investments - rose in the
second quarter to $166 billion, up 13% from the first quarter.



Much of the second-quarter shortfall was in goods: for every $20 in
products American manufacturers sent overseas, U.S. consumers bought
$36 in foreign electronics, cars and other items.



The current account deficit has risen from 1% of gross domestic
product in 1990 to 5.4%.



That doesn't seem like much, and in the short term it isn't, said
James Gipson, chairman of the $7-billion equity mutual fund Clipper
Fund, in a letter to shareholders. But just like credit card debt, it
compounds over the long term.



"A slowly and likely growing share of our output of goods and services
will go to provide comfortable retirements for the residents of Tokyo,
not Topeka," Gipson wrote.



One trouble with owners in Tokyo is that they may decide they want to
own something in India or China instead.



That's why the Sept. 9 auction prompted concern.



Usually indirect bidders, which include foreign governments, are heavy
buyers at Treasury auctions. This time, their purchases were less than
3%. Traders speculated that Japan was finally calling it quits.



What happened was never explained, but neither was it repeated.



"It turned out to be a fluke," said Kim Rupert, managing director for
global fixed-income analysis at Action Economics, a consulting firm.
"But at first blush, it was 'Oh my gosh.' "





Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://myweb.lmu.edu/jdevine

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