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China’s New Global Institutions

LeveragedBuyout

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My comment: Posting this even though I find it amateurish. Unlike the US reforms at the turn of the 20th century, which helped the US from a purely domestic standpoint, the Chinese institutions are meant to help China's foreign influence. China's major issue in reshaping the world order is that it lacks allies of substance, and only has allies of convenience. That's likely not enough to institute a new system that will replace the old.

China’s New Global Institutions | The Diplomat

China’s New Global Institutions
Beijing is seeking to shape international institutions to facilitate its emergence as a global power.

By Steven Keithley
July 25, 2014

In January 1907, The New York Times published “Defects and Needs of Our Banking System,” an essay that would have a significant impact on the financial world. Within the extended article, a German immigrant named Paul Warburg railed against the inherent vulnerability of a financial status quo that had forced Americans to rely heavily upon European banking systems, particularly that of England, to “take measures for the regulation of our own household.” Warburg also believed that “so long as it [the U.S. financial system] is not thoroughly reformed, it will prevent us from ever becoming the financial centre of the world.” Thus, for the sake of financial health and the future goals of the U.S., a rising power during the early twentieth century, Warburg argued for an entirely new banking institution. After the Panic of 1907, the Senate brought Warburg on as an economic reform consultant. Within fifteen years, the ideas expressed in his article turned into a concrete reality through the creation of the Federal Reserve.

More than a century later, in a year when periodicals are full of comparisons to the period before World War I, surprisingly few mentions are made of Paul Warburg, whose attitude towards global institutions is very much alive in today’s rising power, the People’s Republic of China.

Similar to how Warburg felt about the U.S. and its relationship with the global financial community at the turn of the century, Chinese President Xi Jinping and his colleagues seem to believe that current institutional arrangements are not ideal for China’s ambition to achieve superpower status. In response, over the past few years, Beijing has created and updated international organizations, bodies and forums with a fervor not seen since the Allies redesigned the global community in the mid-1940s.

The most recent, prominent, and coincidentally most Warburg-esque example of this phenomenon was last week’s announcement of the New Development Bank (NDB), established by China in conjunction with its BRICS partners: Brazil, Russia, India and South Africa. The NDB, created “with the purpose of mobilizing resources for infrastructure and sustainable development in BRICS and other emerging and developing economies,” conveniently serves as an alternative to the Western-dominated World Bank and International Monetary Fund, institutions which China has argued possess “increasingly evident signs of losing legitimacy and effectiveness” and, more relevant for the potential superpower, limits on the voting rights and input of the Chinese delegation. Although the NDB is supposed to be egalitarian, with participation on the basis of equal shares of $10 billion and equal voting rights, the fact that the bank will be headquartered in Shanghai and contains a Contingent Reserve Arrangement whereby China will provide the largest share of a $100 billion fund means that it is not unrealistic to assume that China can and will become the NDB’s senior partner. Now, rather than watching the Western countries that dominate the World Bank or IMF take credit for development projects in Africa, or Japan leading the Asian Development Bank in East Asia, China will be able to play a more significant role in global development through the NBD. The benefits to Chinese global influence are obvious.

Beijing’s work towards crafting institutions friendlier towards Chinese goals goes far beyond finance. Earlier this year, China decided to elevate an unknown security dialogue, the Conference on Interaction and Confidence Building in Asia (CICA), to a level of importance similar to APEC, the premier outlet for promoting economic ties across the Pacific. Why? Because even though CICA is not formally organized and still possesses a nascent mission statement, it offers facilitative potential for Chinese power in two ways, both of which have been acknowledged in some capacity. First, CICA’s role as a security forum, and the absence of Japan or the U.S. as members could ensure that Asian problems are, in Xi Jinping’s words, “solved by Asians themselves.” As the preeminent power within CICA, China would have a much stronger voice on security issues. The second potential gain is that CICA could serve as a nexus between China and Southeast Asia with an agenda much easier for Beijing to influence than the existing ASEAN-sponsored forums. These are likely the reasons behind Xi’s argument for an aggressive expansion of CICA last May. The Chinese President spent the bulk of his keynote speech before the 4th CICA Summit outlining plans to strengthen the group’s jurisdiction and abilities under Chinese chairmanship.

The modification of CICA and the announcement of the NDB are merely the most recent developments in a much longer trend of adapting international arrangements to suit Chinese goals. Beijing continues to tout the importance of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), a twelve-year-old political, economic and military group unquestionably controlled by China and used to set the agenda and even shape the domestic policy of several Central Asian member states. At last year’s SCO summit, Xi even stated that “China presents a model of development” for all members. Simultaneously, the creation of an annual BRICS summit has allowed China to have an even greater voice in international affairs, especially regarding global finance (i.e., the NDB). BRICS summits have the opportunity to rival G7 meetings in the international press, and by claiming to be “the voice and representation of emerging economies,” they provide far greater advocacy than previous institutions toward policies that are inevitably friendly to Chinese interests.

Whether these developments will lead to the successes China has envisioned is yet to be seen. There are still at least two significant questions that must be answered. First, how will China reconcile a demonstrated reluctance to embrace multilateralism (see the South China Sea issue) with a desire to strengthen and legitimize multilateral institutions beneficial to Chinese goals? Second, does China have the clout required to make international organs like the NDB truly rival the two created at Bretton Woods in 1944? The World Bank and IMF were readily accepted partly because of the unprecedented goodwill towards the powers that designed them. While Beijing is favorably viewed across the developing world, tensions over territorial disputes and disruptive “great power” rivalries remain just beneath the surface.

These issues aside, what China has been doing is novel. Much like Washington more than a century ago (thanks to men like Paul Warburg), Beijing has recognized that the future it desires cannot be achieved within the current status quo, and has taken significant steps to alter the current circumstances. There is a common saying that China seems to have reversed, “if you can’t beat them, join them.” Having tried the latter for many decades, China has now finally embraced that former. If history can repeat itself, Xi and his successors have much to look forward to.

Steven Keithley is a graduate of the Asian Studies Program at Georgetown University.
 
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Naahhh... It does not work.

You need gold standard. International financial institution must strictly follow the idea that gold is real money.
From there, you get god's leveled ground for every nation to play merchant fairly.

Only god's created money can humanity give long term trust.
Any Fiat Currency created by Human is error prone because of human greed.
Otherwise, their will be a group of people who can inflate/deflate economy for their own benefit, and destroy the credibility of the reserve currency in the progress.
 
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Naahhh... It does not work.

You need gold standard. International financial institution must strictly follow the idea that gold is real money.
From there, you get god's leveled ground for every nation to play merchant fairly.

Only god's created money can humanity give long term trust.
Any Fiat Currency created by Human is error prone because of human greed.
Otherwise, their will be a group of people who can inflate/deflate economy for their own benefit, and destroy the credibility of the reserve currency in the progress.

Out of curiosity, why do you think no major country has pegged its currency to the gold standard, if it's so beneficial?
 
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China has no intention of replacing the thuggish imperial power. China is merely providing an alternative and ending the monopoly of the imperial power when it comes to loaning out money to poor countries. The thuggish imperial power uses its loans from World Bank and IMF as a foreign policy tool to control governments and people of poor countries. With the BRICS establishing an alternative source of getting funds, China and the BRICS have ended the monopoly of the thuggish regime.

The thuggish regime uses its economic, financial, technological and military monopolies as a foreign policy tool and turns other countries into allies of the thug. Other countries are not true allies of the thug but its easier to go with the thug than to resist (Iran, North Korea, Syria, Libya, Iraq, Yugoslavia) the thug.

The thug just considers other countries as its 'allies' because they have no alternative.

Once an alternative is there, the bond of those 'allies' won't be as strong as the thug cannot impose its bullying tactics on others.
 
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China has no intention of replacing the thuggish imperial power. China is merely providing an alternative and ending the monopoly of the imperial power when it comes to loaning out money to poor countries. The thuggish imperial power uses its loans from World Bank and IMF as a foreign policy tool to control governments and people of poor countries. With the BRICS establishing an alternative source of getting funds, China and the BRICS have ended the monopoly of the thuggish regime.

The thuggish regime uses its economic, financial, technological and military monopolies as a foreign policy tool and turns other countries into allies of the thug. Other countries are not true allies of the thug but its easier to go with the thug than to resist (Iran, North Korea, Syria, Libya, Iraq, Yugoslavia) the thug.

The thug just considers other countries as its 'allies' because they have no alternative.

Once an alternative is there, the bond of those 'allies' won't be as strong as the thug cannot impose its bullying tactics on others.

Nothing personal, but since I don't have time to deal with irrational hatred, it's probably best that I put you on my ignore list. Have fun.
 
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Out of curiosity, why do you think no major country has pegged its currency to the gold standard, if it's so beneficial?
U.S currency _was_ Gold standard. (am i right?)
That made U.S world no.1 economy.
Why do children of a great nation abandon the principle which their forefather made them great nation?
 
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U.S currency _was_ Gold standard. (am i right?)
That made U.S world no.1 economy.
Why do children of a great nation abandon the principle which their forefather made them great nation?

It's very complicated, and the Bretton Woods Wikipedia article does a thorough job of exploring the issue, but in short:

The dollar was pegged to gold, and all other currencies were pegged to the dollar, but gold and the dollar traded separately. That meant that whenever the price of gold spiked, the US would have to buy gold to support the convertibility of the dollar. After WWII, once the US started running trade deficits, it was no longer financially possible for the US to buy such massive quantities of gold (which would have caused the trade deficit to explode). As the saying goes, what cannot be sustained, will end. So the US eventually broke convertibility under Nixon, and introduced the modern day free-floating exchange rate regime.

What are other reasons that a gold standard is bad?
1) It is naturally deflationary, which inhibits consumption
2) It promotes a mercantilist system, which essentially destroys free trade and causes tariffs to be erected in order to protect a trade surplus
3) A country on the gold standard loses independent monetary sovereignty, and thus has no control over the money supply or interest rates

In other words, the gold standard just doesn't work. The proof of this is that no country has returned to the gold standard, because if it worked as well as believers in the gold standard posit, then it would be a competitive advantage for a country to use the gold standard. But since it's actually a disadvantage, no country uses the standard.
 
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In other words, the gold standard just doesn't work. The proof of this is that no country has returned to the gold standard, because if it worked as well as believers in the gold standard posit, then it would be a competitive advantage for a country to use the gold standard. But since it's actually a disadvantage, no country uses the standard.

Well said.
 
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After WWII, once the US started running trade deficits, it was no longer financially possible for the US to buy such massive quantities of gold (which would have caused the trade deficit to explode).


Where is U.S. WW2 won gold? Fort Knox?
U.S won WW2 and get a lot of gold from losers.
Is it sound like propaganda that U.S will bankrupt, should she continue gold convertibility,
given the fact that U.S has been the world no.1 gold hoarder since WW2?



Even now U.S is still world 1st gold reserve.

Currently U.S does want deficit. Because it is the trade deficit that could propagate the US dollar out. How can US dollar be the world reserve currency when other country does not have US dollar to reserve? Therefore the current imbalance in financial system is created -because of- USD reserve currency status.

Therefore, If you want U.S to return to surplus, it is the mercantilist policy that gives you the surplus. If you let loose dollar from world reserve currency status, the great inflation will follow, and the price of USD when compare to other currency become lower. This is very painful for American families. However, after this change, US can become mercantillist and draw back all its off-shore manufacturing plants (a lot here in Thailand eg. Seagate). US will be able to control the dollar value w.r.t other currencies, just like all of other countries.

Choose Ron Paul's policy. That is what U.S want for the cure of trade imbalance. The trade imbalance is because of USD world reserve currency status. Trust me.
 
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Choose Ron Paul's policy. That is what U.S want for the cure of trade imbalance. The trade imbalance is because of USD world reserve currency status. Trust me.



Ron Paul's isolationist policy will defer American interests abroad, and thus the reason why a pure constitutionalists / pure libertarian will never win the U.S Presidency or direct policy.

Therefore, If you want U.S to return to surplus, it is the mercantilist policy that gives you the surplus. If you let loose dollar from world reserve currency status, the great inflation will follow, and the price of USD when compare to other currency become lower. This is very painful for American families. However, after this change, US can become mercantillist and draw back all its off-shore manufacturing plants (a lot here in Thailand eg. Seagate). US will be able to control the dollar value w.r.t other currencies, just like all of other countries.

This will never happen, the United States is , like most developed nations, a service-oriented economy. Manufacturing and production capabilities are seen, but is not a major backbone of the US economy. Overseas expansion is the trend.

Think to yourself: Why would multi-billion dollar corporations seek to bring manufacturing back to the 'states when they earn so much more when they are abroad? In fact, it would be poor business sense.
 
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Ron Paul's isolationist policy will defer American interests abroad, and thus the reason why a pure constitutionalists / pure libertarian will never win the U.S Presidency or direct policy.



This will never happen, the United States is , like most developed nations, a service-oriented economy. Manufacturing and production capabilities are seen, but is not a major backbone of the US economy. Overseas expansion is the trend.

Think to yourself: Why would multi-billion dollar corporations seek to bring manufacturing back to the 'states when they earn so much more when they are abroad? In fact, it would be poor business sense.

I don't know his other policies. I mean "Choose Ron Paul's financial policy"
 
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I don't know his other policies. I mean "Choose Ron Paul's financial policy"

Ron Paul has no financial policies, he is a retired senator who tried running for presidency, but failed on multiple accounts.
 
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Ron Paul's isolationist policy will defer American interests abroad, and thus the reason why a pure constitutionalists / pure libertarian will never win the U.S Presidency or direct policy.



This will never happen, the United States is , like most developed nations, a service-oriented economy. Manufacturing and production capabilities are seen, but is not a major backbone of the US economy. Overseas expansion is the trend.

Think to yourself: Why would multi-billion dollar corporations seek to bring manufacturing back to the 'states when they earn so much more when they are abroad? In fact, it would be poor business sense.

Ron Paul Economic policy:
Ron Paul’s economic plan - The Washington Post

"United States is a service-oriented economy"
I don't think so, friend. U.S is a Strong Manufacturing country.
- Fashion brands like Nike. -> You will say OEM in China. I think this is manufacturing without having plants.
- CPUs , Hard disks, chipsets : Their plants are here Asia, but there stake holders still American.
- Catapillar heavy machinaries.
- Military hardware
- Software: google android, etc etc.
- etc. etc

when Seagate, and the like plants go back to U.S, US surplus sure shows up.
 
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As long as the BRICS bank removes the monopoly position of the thuggish regime, then I think the civilised world will support it. World Bank and IMF have been used as a foreign policy tool by the fascist regime by attaching political strings to the loans and currency reserves given out. The despotic regime uses the IMF and World Bank to control poor nations and bring them under the control of the fascists. Anglo-Saxon fascism must be checked and the BRICS bank is just one component of it.
 
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Ron Paul Economic policy:
Ron Paul’s economic plan - The Washington Post

"United States is a service-oriented economy"
I don't think so, friend. U.S is a Strong Manufacturing country.
- Fashion brands like Nike. -> You will say OEM in China. I think this is manufacturing without having plants.
- CPUs , Hard disks, chipsets : Their plants are here Asia, but there stake holders still American.
- Catapillar heavy machinaries.
- Military hardware
- Software: google android, etc etc.
- etc. etc

when Seagate, and the like plants go back to U.S, US surplus sure shows up.


a_new_view_of_international_trade_figure5.jpg


03ecoact_031407-2.gif


:-)
 
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