The United States is engaging in the same  practice it criticizes others for when it tries to push down the value  of the U.S. dollar against the Chinese currency, a renowned U.S. scholar  says.
Harry Harding, a top China specialist who is now dean of  Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy at the University of  Virginia, said in a recent interview with Xinhua that U.S. Treasury  Secretary Timothy Geithner at a congressional hearing warned people in  the financial and business communities of "a currency war", which he  defined as "competitive devaluation".
But the treasury secretary  did not realize, "or at least did not acknowledge," that the United  States was doing what it criticized others for doing when it pressured  China to revalue its currency. Revaluing the Chinese yuan equalled  devaluing the U.S. dollar, "and so, my point is simply that we are  engaging in the same practice, too," Harding said.
Meanwhile,  Harding downplayed the threat of trade wars as a result of economic  disputes among nations. Trade wars were far more difficult in today's  world because the World Trade Organization (WTO) made it difficult for  countries to impose tariffs or non-tariff barriers to protect their  industries, he said.
However, as there were no WTO equivalents to  govern investment or currency policies, "I think people are right in  saying" that economic wars in the 21st century, if there would be any  economic wars, would be currency wars, he said.
The U.S. was  pushing China to appreciate its currency mainly because of pressure from  the business sector to promote U.S. exports against the backdrop of  continued recession in the country, Harding said.
There were  basically three ways to stimulate the economy: by increasing government  spending, by increasing domestic consumption or by promoting exports, he  said.
In the U.S. case, "the government cannot buy anymore  because of the level of the fiscal debt, and consumers cannot buy  anymore, or at least the increase in consumption will be lower than  before," and, as U.S. President Barack Obama said, the "way out" is to  increase exports, Harding said.
Changing the value of the dollar  might be the quickest way to increase exports, but it would not change  the U.S. trade imbalance. The main problem of the U.S. economy was  over-consumption, he said.
  
The U.S. House of Representatives  recently approved a tax bill targeting China over its currency policies,  but Harding said there was a fairly low possibility that the bill would  become law.
The bill had to go to the Senate for approval and,  even if the Senate adopted it, unless it's exactly the same as the House  bill, it would be sent back to the House for reconsideration, Harding  said.
U.S. lawmakers were running out of time to get the bill  passed because this congress was to end soon and every piece of  legislation died when congress went out of session. When a new congress  came into session in January next year, they would start from the  beginning, Harding said.
Even if the bill became law, Harding  said, it would have limited impact because it simply instructed the U.S.  Commerce Department to take into account the devaluation of currency in  deciding on anti-dumping cases.
Harding accepted Xinhua's  interview on the sideline of a luncheon meeting with Houston business  leaders sponsored by the Asia Society Texas Center.
In a keynote  speech on U.S.-China relations delivered at the luncheon, Harding,  former Deputy National Security Adviser to the Clinton Administration,  used the word "resilient" to describe the current U.S.-China  relationship, instead of "fragile" he used in his 1992 book "A Fragile  Relationship: the United States and China since 1972".
Common  interests between the two countries, including mutual prosperity,  anti-terrorism, energy security and climate change, had brought the two  together, but because of the limits in their interests and differences  in approaching issues of common interests, the relations sometimes could  not run smoothly, he said.
The China specialist also used "frenemies", which meant both friends and rivals, to define the complex Sino-U.S. relations.
Elaborating  on why he thinks the U.S.-China ties now are "resilient" rather than  "fragile", Harding said "resilient" meant that, despite ups and downs,  the relations would not break up because they were too valuable for both  countries. 
Source: Xinhua
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Right, true hypocrite!
ReplyDeleteUS currency policy is competitive devaluation like many other countries do, a short term zero sum game!
ReplyDeleteUS trade deficit with China is mainly due to US's restrictions of technology exports to China. US only interested in selling soya-bean and corn.
ReplyDelete