iHaveNet.com
World - Why on Earth Does America Want a Stronger Chinese Currency? | China
  • HOME
  • WORLD
    • Africa
    • Asia Pacific
    • Balkans
    • Caucasas
    • Central Asia
    • Eastern Europe
    • Europe
    • Indian Subcontinent
    • Latin America
    • Middle East
    • North Africa
    • Scandinavia
    • Southeast Asia
    • United Kingdom
    • United States
    • Argentina
    • Australia
    • Austria
    • Benelux
    • Brazil
    • Canada
    • China
    • France
    • Germany
    • Greece
    • Hungary
    • India
    • Indonesia
    • Ireland
    • Israel
    • Italy
    • Japan
    • Korea
    • Mexico
    • New Zealand
    • Pakistan
    • Philippines
    • Poland
    • Russia
    • South Africa
    • Spain
    • Taiwan
    • Turkey
    • United States
  • USA
    • ECONOMICS
    • EDUCATION
    • ENVIRONMENT
    • FOREIGN POLICY
    • POLITICS
    • OPINION
    • TRADE
    • Atlanta
    • Baltimore
    • Bay Area
    • Boston
    • Chicago
    • Cleveland
    • DC Area
    • Dallas
    • Denver
    • Detroit
    • Houston
    • Los Angeles
    • Miami
    • New York
    • Philadelphia
    • Phoenix
    • Pittsburgh
    • Portland
    • San Diego
    • Seattle
    • Silicon Valley
    • Saint Louis
    • Tampa
    • Twin Cities
  • BUSINESS
    • FEATURES
    • eBUSINESS
    • HUMAN RESOURCES
    • MANAGEMENT
    • MARKETING
    • ENTREPRENEUR
    • SMALL BUSINESS
    • STOCK MARKETS
    • Agriculture
    • Airline
    • Auto
    • Beverage
    • Biotech
    • Book
    • Broadcast
    • Cable
    • Chemical
    • Clothing
    • Construction
    • Defense
    • Durable
    • Engineering
    • Electronics
    • Firearms
    • Food
    • Gaming
    • Healthcare
    • Hospitality
    • Leisure
    • Logistics
    • Metals
    • Mining
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Newspaper
    • Nondurable
    • Oil & Gas
    • Packaging
    • Pharmaceutic
    • Plastics
    • Real Estate
    • Retail
    • Shipping
    • Sports
    • Steelmaking
    • Textiles
    • Tobacco
    • Transportation
    • Travel
    • Utilities
  • WEALTH
    • CAREERS
    • INVESTING
    • PERSONAL FINANCE
    • REAL ESTATE
    • MARKETS
    • BUSINESS
  • STOCKS
    • ECONOMY
    • EMERGING MARKETS
    • STOCKS
    • FED WATCH
    • TECH STOCKS
    • BIOTECHS
    • COMMODITIES
    • MUTUAL FUNDS / ETFs
    • MERGERS / ACQUISITIONS
    • IPOs
    • 3M (MMM)
    • AT&T (T)
    • AIG (AIG)
    • Alcoa (AA)
    • Altria (MO)
    • American Express (AXP)
    • Apple (AAPL)
    • Bank of America (BAC)
    • Boeing (BA)
    • Caterpillar (CAT)
    • Chevron (CVX)
    • Cisco (CSCO)
    • Citigroup (C)
    • Coca Cola (KO)
    • Dell (DELL)
    • DuPont (DD)
    • Eastman Kodak (EK)
    • ExxonMobil (XOM)
    • FedEx (FDX)
    • General Electric (GE)
    • General Motors (GM)
    • Google (GOOG)
    • Hewlett-Packard (HPQ)
    • Home Depot (HD)
    • Honeywell (HON)
    • IBM (IBM)
    • Intel (INTC)
    • Int'l Paper (IP)
    • JP Morgan Chase (JPM)
    • J & J (JNJ)
    • McDonalds (MCD)
    • Merck (MRK)
    • Microsoft (MSFT)
    • P & G (PG)
    • United Tech (UTX)
    • Wal-Mart (WMT)
    • Walt Disney (DIS)
  • TECH
    • ADVANCED
    • FEATURES
    • INTERNET
    • INTERNET FEATURES
    • CYBERCULTURE
    • eCOMMERCE
    • mp3
    • SECURITY
    • GAMES
    • HANDHELD
    • SOFTWARE
    • PERSONAL
    • WIRELESS
  • HEALTH
    • AGING
    • ALTERNATIVE
    • AILMENTS
    • DRUGS
    • FITNESS
    • GENETICS
    • CHILDREN'S
    • MEN'S
    • WOMEN'S
  • LIFESTYLE
    • AUTOS
    • HOBBIES
    • EDUCATION
    • FAMILY
    • FASHION
    • FOOD
    • HOME DECOR
    • RELATIONSHIPS
    • PARENTING
    • PETS
    • TRAVEL
    • WOMEN
  • ENTERTAINMENT
    • BOOKS
    • TELEVISION
    • MUSIC
    • THE ARTS
    • MOVIES
    • CULTURE
  • SPORTS
    • BASEBALL
    • BASKETBALL
    • COLLEGES
    • FOOTBALL
    • GOLF
    • HOCKEY
    • OLYMPICS
    • SOCCER
    • TENNIS
  • Subscribe to RSS Feeds EMAIL ALERT Subscriptions from iHaveNet.com RSS
    • RSS | Politics
    • RSS | Recipes
    • RSS | NFL Football
    • RSS | Movie Reviews
Why on Earth Does America Want a Stronger Chinese Currency?
Paul Kennedy

HOME > WORLD

 

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend

Let us begin with a few abstract matters. Suppose there is Country A, which has its own denominated currency and trades with many other nations, including Country B, which has its separately denominated currency. Suppose the former complains that the latter's currency is undervalued, thus unfairly hurting the export trades of Country A and making imports to its insatiable citizens unreasonably cheaper than they should be. Then -- a big leap of faith here -- suppose the currency value of Country B alters, and gets stronger, and stronger, and stronger. What happens then?

Resist an immediate turn to President Obama's recent two-hour meeting with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao in New York, where Obama pressed for the renminbi's rise, and stay firmly with the abstract. What happens when Country B's currency gets stronger and stronger in international exchanges, a move encouraged by, indeed urged on by, Country A's government? Well, Country B's exports get more expensive, and Country A's exports get less expensive -- and Country A's politicians and businessmen go jumping for joy in the streets. What a triumph. Such statesmanship.

Is that all? Well, unfortunately, no, and for various reasons. The first is that Country B may possess materials like rare ores than Country A desperately needs and cannot find elsewhere in the world -- so it now pays more for the same amount of such imports. And Country A may no longer possess firms that manufacture items such as children's toys and bicycle gears and high-class binoculars, so it still needs to buy those goods from Country B, unfortunately at a higher price. Perhaps, over time, Country A may find entrepreneurs who will start manufacturing bicycle gears at home, but how long is "over time"? Ten years?

Secondly, and even more importantly in a rough-and-tumble world where nations are not just trading units but power-and-influence units as well, a country with a weakening currency starts to feel the consequences on the international stage. The first is the impact upon its international purchasing power, something that most American economists steadfastly decline to bring into their policy prescriptions, perhaps because they grew up in a dollar-denominated world and think only of domestic purchasing power. But that way of thinking is out of date.

Suppose, for example, a certain African country possesses deposits of vital minerals such as tungsten, manganese and cobalt, all of which are needed for state-of-the-art communications systems, including modern weaponry. These are minerals acutely necessary to America's economy, but no less so to the economies of China, India, Japan, the European Union and other purchasers. What happens, then, when the value of the dollar sinks on international exchanges, and that of the renminbi rises? Alas and alack, that tungsten becomes more expensive for American industry, and much cheaper for a Chinese military-industrial complex whose appetite seems to grow every day. A weakened American dollar is a weakened America. Thank heavens this is all in the abstract!

But of course it isn't. President Obama's well-meaning administration, sniped at by trade unions on the one hand and Tea Party irresponsibles on the other, is pressing Beijing to revalue (that is, strengthen) China's currency, and everyone in the United States appears to think that is a good idea. America will sell more to China, China will sell less to America, the trade imbalance will be corrected -- and pigs might fly. Of course, there will be a U.S. company here or there that will benefit should the renminbi's value rise by 20 percent. But I suspect that on the whole, the American economy will benefit far less because so much of it is structurally founded upon Chinese imports. What doth it profit America if, say, Walmart's $8 made-in-China T-shirts rise to an epic $10 apiece? My naive non-economist's hunch is that it profits America not at all; it just adds to the trade deficit.

But the largest reason why the United States should not welcome the steady strengthening of China's international currency value is geopolitical and, more crudely, military. For the historical fact is that no one nation's currency (thus, purchasing power) has ceded ground to another's without a consequent cession of international power and influence. As the coins exchanged by the merchants of Tuscany gave way to trades in the Dutch guilder, and that in turn to the French franc, and that to the pound sterling, and that to the U.S. dollar, so also did the wheels of world history turn, with currency traders ever seeking the next note and coin of strength. Currency traders have, of course, no loyalties. Now they are turning to Beijing; a few of them must have advised the Malaysian government recently to buy renminbi-based bonds, rather than the old, tattered dollar. The Gulf states are following suit. Just note, in general, the U.S. dollar's diminished share of total global foreign-currency holdings compared with 25 years ago. It is not a pleasant story.

Reduced dollars means reduced influence. Forget about the whinings of the U.S. middle classes as they emerged from their French and Italian cafes this summer with a considerable hole in their dollar-denominated credit-card accounts. That is not the point here. The point is that the more the dollar weakens (or other currencies increase in value, which is the same thing), the more that America's international heft diminishes. You can't possess international strength on a slipping currency. For decades, Japanese nationalists had a slogan something like "Strong Army, Big Country!" To paraphrase for today, the saying might be "Healthy Currency, Influential Nation!" Weakness or strength in one aspect of national power usually translates into the next.

In 1945, America stood at the apex of its relative power in world affairs. Almost everywhere else was in wartime devastation, or colonial backwardness, or economic doldrums. The United States possessed almost all of the world's gold and foreign currency reserves, and everyone was screaming for dollars. Today that is no longer the case. At first, western Europe and Japan caught up. More recently, the rest of Asia, including the massive states of China and India, have been catching up. American manufacturing has been in a 50-year secular decline, but the American consumer still wants his furniture, linens, garden tools, toys, kitchenware -- all made in China. And the U.S. Treasury still needs to sell its notes to Asia.

Pressing the Chinese to revalue their currency is a fool's errand. Beijing will simply despise America all the more, and look with amazement at the strong poker hand it has been dealt. Either the Yankees' request will be politely brushed away, which is always an agreeable thing to happen, or the renminbi will rise, and the greenback weaken further, and then currency traders -- and, more importantly, the national governments of Asia, Africa and Latin America -- will take note and begin to un-tether their foreign currency holdings from an increasingly dodgy dollar.

But will anyone in Washington, or at the Fed, listen? Right now, they seem prepared to give a further stimulus (sic) to the troubled economy by further outpourings of federally printed notes, like some desperate Latin American treasury in the 1970s. And look what happened to them.

Clearly, there is no easy option for a beleaguered Fed or a beleaguered White House, and a non-economist like myself feels it would be false to offer policy prescriptions. But the strategist and historian feels deeply uneasy at the idea of a much stronger Chinese currency, and in consequence of a much weakened dollar. That would seem like pushing a whole lot of your remaining poker chips across the table, to the guy who already holds a lot more chips than you do. It is not a good idea.

 

Paul Kennedy is Dilworth Professor of History and director of International Security Studies at Yale University; and the author/editor of 19 books, including "The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers."

SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend

 

Available at Amazon.com:

The End of the Free Market: Who Wins the War Between States and Corporations?

Running Out of Water: The Looming Crisis and Solutions to Conserve Our Most Precious Resource

Bottled and Sold: The Story Behind Our Obsession with Bottled Water

Water: The Epic Struggle for Wealth, Power, and Civilization

The Great Gamble

At War with the Weather: Managing Large-Scale Risks in a New Era of Catastrophes

The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers

 

  • Economic Woes Put Brittle Nations on Edge
  • A Divided and Insular European Union
  • Do not Expect China to Budge on the Yuan
  • Why on Earth Does America Want a Stronger Chinese Currency?
  • Nuclear Club Has Yet Another Applicant
  • Nuclear Armament Still Our Central Issue
  • Embattled Islam
  • 'Europe Looks East' Hints at the Future
  • Choosing Between the Evil of Two Lessers In Afghanistan
  • Chavez Lost Ground but Will Fight Back
  • Education Too Important to Be Left in Government Hands
  • Latin America In Denial About the Quality of Its Schools
  • Millennium Development Goals for Women Largely Unmet
  • North Korean Succession Plans Are Shrouded in Mystery
  • Rogue BFFs North Korea and Iran Make Quite a Pair
  • American Role in Israeli-Palestinian Talks Is a Problem
  • Iraq Reluctant to Pay Its Fair Share of Security Costs
  • Iran's 'Shaky' Ahmadinejad
  • United States Could Be Alone as Europe Turns Inward
  • Hugo Chávez May Lose Even if He Wins
  • Brazil Needs Dose of Constructive Paranoia
  • Latin American Commodity Exporters Need to Diversify
  • Stoned on Righteousness
  • Our Man in Moscow
  • Widening Divide in American-Chinese Commercial Interests
  • The New Old World Order
  • Global Human-Rights Cause Gets a Shot in the Arm
  • Obama's Foreign Policy Performance
  • New Russia Takes Root in Saint Petersburg and Moscow
  • Dismantling Worst-Case Proliferation Scenarios
  • A Numbers Game in the Middle East
  • Middle East Peace Talks: Here We Go Again
  • Obama and Clinton Revive Middle East Peace Talks
  • Guess Who's Coming to the Table
  • Iraq: Unanswered Policy Questions on U.S. Troops
  • Iraq: Implications of a Pointless War
  • Iraq: Book Review
  • Iraq: No Drums and No Bugles: None Dare Call It Victory
  • Pakistan's Leadership Sustains Flood Damage
  • A French Leftist Ritual Takes on Sarkozy
  • United States Losing Latin America Market Share
  • The Power of Being Multilingual
  • Chavez's Obsession With Past Turns Creepy and He's Not Alone
  • Obama Could Help Stop Mexico's Bloodshed
  • Interdependency Theory: China, India and the West
  • The Dangerous Dog Days of Summer
  • The Next 500 Years
  • A New Plan For Nuclear Postures
  • Strengthening the Political - Military Relationship
  • Hydraulic Pressures: Into the Age of Water Scarcity?
  • South Korea: Prosperity and Anxiety
  • China Wealthy? That's Rich!
  • Islamism Unveiled: From Berlin to Cairo and Back Again
  • Beyond Moderates and Militants: Charting a New Course in the Middle East
  • Middle East Peace Talks: Pointless Talks
  • Why Israel Can't Rely on Deterrence Against Iran's Nuclear Program
  • How to Handle Hamas
  • Bringing Israel's Bomb Out of the Basement
  • Iraq: Anxious Iraqis Look at Uncertain Future
  • Iraq: U.S. Combat Troops' Departure Leaves Uncertainty in its Wake
  • Iraq: A Promise Kept?
  • An Unlikely Trio: Can Iran Turkey and the United States Become Allies?
  • Staying Power: The U.S. Mission in Afghanistan Beyond 2011
  • Long Road Ahead for Afghan Security Forces
  • Afghanistan's Dirty Little Secret
  • Russia's New Nobility
  • Mexico Needs U.S. Help But Not Troops
  • Mexico's Narco Problems Are Our Problems, and Vice Versa
  • No 'I' in 'Team,' but Plenty of 'I' in India
  • Afghanistan - There Can Be No Graceful Exit
  • Afghanistan Timetable Remains a Factor of Uncertainty
  • We Are Playing Fidel Castro's Game
  • Has the Time Come to Legalize Drugs?
  • Handling Tensions on the Korean Peninsula
  • Richard C. Holbrooke: Pakistan Aid Inadequate
  • Afghanistan Leaks Answer Few Questions
  • Afghanistan & The Karzai Problem
  • Afghanistan - Winds of Changing Policy
  • Obama's Juggling Act in the Middle East
  • Defusing Lebanon's Powder Keg
  • Germany's Good Fortune Tips the Scales Against its Neighbors
  • End Poverty: Export Capitalism
  • Haitian Quake Hasn't Dislodged Status Quo
  • Why We Go Back to Haiti
  • Iraq - Mission Accomplished II
  • The Fight Escalates Against Fake Drugs
  • China's Coal Addiction
  • Afghanistan: The Pentagon's Lost War
  • Afghanistan: The Cost of Nation Building
  • Afghanistan: Pentagon Papers Redux?
  • Behind Iraq's Long Political Indecision
  • Venezuela - Colombia Spat to Pass, Return
  • Will China Rule the World?
  • NATO's Future Involves More Global Partnerships
  • Gloom Awaits U.S. Climate Diplomacy
  • U.S. - U.K.: Difficult Duet in Afghanistan
  • 'Pariah of the Pacific' Has Ham-handed Grip on Fiji
  • Turkey Takes the Veil
  • For Israel a Two-State Proposal Starts With Security
  • Is It Too Late to Stop Iran
  • The Middle East's Private Little War
  • Reality and Reform for How the EU Keeps Its Peace
  • Chancellor Angela Merkel's Sinking Support
  • The Real Reason Why Afghanistan Is a Lost Cause
  • The War Drones On
  • When the 'Right War' Goes Wrong
  • The Afghanistan Paradox
  • Pakistan's Gambit in Afghanistan
  • Obama Wasting Opportunities in Latin America
  • Stopping Nuclear Proliferation Before It Starts
  • Veiled Truths: The Rise of Political Islam in the West
  • Steps to Stop Iran From Getting a Nuclear Bomb
  • Iran: The Nuclear Containment Conundrum
  • Iran: The Right Kind Of Containment
  • China Is the Key to Handling Nuclear North Korea
  • Coping With China's Financial Power
  • What China's Currency Reform Means For Investors
  • Russian-American Obstacles Overshadow Obama-Medvedev Meeting
  • Russia's Courtship of Silicon Valley
  • Ukrainian Blues: Viktor Yanukovych's Rise and Democracy's Fall
  • Russia: Prisoners of the Caucasus
  • The Afghan Challenge Is Far Tougher
  • New Guard, Old Policy on Afghanistan
  • Fear and Uncertainty in Afghanistan
  • Afghanistan: Bribing the Enemy
  • Afghanistan Poses Difficult Challenges
  • Defining Success in Afghanistan
  • Sad Stan, Famous Petraeus
  • The Challenge of Reconciliation in Kenya
  • The Tyranny of Unity in Zimbabwe
  • Mexico: The New Cocaine Cowboys
  • Under Santos Colombia Could Rise to the Next Level
  • Autocrats' Latest Weapon: Indirect Censorship
  • Latin America's Rich Should Be More Generous
  • Castrocare in Crisis

 

(C) 2010 Paul Kennedy

 

Recommend

Search Powered By Google

Google Search   

ADVERTISEMENT

Advertisement

Advertisement

ADVERTISEMENT

Job & Career Search

career & job search                    job title, keywords, company, location
  • HOME
  • WORLD
  • USA
  • BUSINESS
  • WEALTH
  • STOCKS
  • TECH
  • HEALTH
  • LIFESTYLE
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • SPORTS

World - Why on Earth Does America Want a Stronger Chinese Currency? | Global Viewpoint

  • Services:
  • RSS Feeds
  • Shopping
  • Email Alerts
  • Site Map
  • Privacy