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Now, Will China Get It? Published: November 13, 2010 American economic leadership

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Now, Will China Get It?


Published: November 13, 2010


American economic leadership seems to be on its heels. At the meeting of 20 leading economies in Seoul last week, China resisted Washington’s demands to stop manipulating its currency and rallied Germany and Brazil to criticize the Federal Reserve’s plan to inject billions into the economy. G-20 leaders also shrugged off an American proposal to set targets to reduce trade surpluses and deficits, calling instead for vague guidelines.

Summit meetings rarely produce breakthroughs. And despite these seeming defeats, the Obama administration may be close to achieving one of its core objectives. Internal economic pressure may finally force Beijing to let the value of its currency rise. That would be good for the United States economy, the global economy and China’s economy. The cheap renminbi that helped build China into the world’s export powerhouse is now overheating its economy. Despite the bluster in Seoul, some Chinese officials are suggesting the country could better manage these pressures if it let the currency rise.

A cheap renminbi doesn’t just increase the price of imported goods for Chinese consumers. To hold down the value of its currency, the central bank must print renminbi to buy all the dollars flowing in. This is fueling inflation and bubbles in housing and stocks.

Trying to cool things down, the central bank raised interest rates last month for the first time since 2007. Last week, it told banks to hold more money in reserve and lend less. A rising renminbi would lower the price of imports and give the central bank more control over its money supply.

China has successfully followed this policy before. From 2005 to 2008, the renminbi rose a fifth against the dollar. This helped contain inflation as commodity prices rose around the world. It increased domestic consumption. The growth of China’s trade surplus slowed. And China continued to grow by double digits until the financial crisis slammed the brake on the world economy, leading Beijing to abruptly reverse policy.

Reviving such a policy today would also do the world economy enormous good, taking pressure off countries whose manufacturers are struggling to compete with artificially cheap Chinese exports. It would create space for them to combat their own inflationary pressures by letting their own currencies rise.

Whether China’s political leaders — always nervous about anything they can’t fully control — get it is not clear. But no amount of bluster, or fearfulness, can paper over the damage caused by the cheap renminbi policy.
 
Hey, how about to stop scapegoating China and look at yourself?

Reevaluate the currency won't solve any jobless issue in America, because Americans are overconsumed parvenu which eventually crushes themselves with massive debt. The only solution is working harder and saving more money for the future.
 
Hey, how about to stop scapegoating China and look at yourself?

Reevaluate the currency won't solve any jobless issue in America, because Americans are overconsumed parvenu which eventually crushes themselves with massive debt. The only solution is working harder and saving more money for the future.

Unfortunately Americans will not get it and it would be easier to blame the Chinese than solve their own economic mess.
 
The fact that Obama's plan met rejections from other countries in the G-20 speaks volumes about what the rest of the world think about revaluing the renminbi.

USA already manipulated her currency by MASS PRINTING
them and flooding the world with them.

20-dollar-bill-toilet-paper-232x300.jpg
 
USA already manipulated her currency by MASS PRINTING
them and flooding the world with them.

20-dollar-bill-toilet-paper-232x300.jpg

Haha, at least toilet paper can use to wipe butt, but it would get all dirty ink when using the yankee paper. :rofl:
 
What does US savings have to do with China's currency policy? I hope those who post in this thread know the basics. It just shows ur stupidity!
 
What does US savings have to do with China's currency policy? I hope those who post in this thread know the basics. It just shows ur stupidity!

You're joking right?

The US has a large deficit because they are spending too much on imports. Their imports are much larger than their exports, hence a deficit.

One way to reduce this deficit, is to reduce imports... i.e. stop spending so much, and start saving instead.

The entire issue over currencies here, is that the US thinks their deficit is too high. If they stopped spending so much on imports, and starting saving instead, that would reduce their deficit.
 

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