The Great U.S. China Romance
Politics / Global Economy Nov 20, 2009 - 01:54 AM GMTBy: Bill_Bonner
The newspapers are a-buzz with stories of  Obama’s trip to China. The Financial Times tells us what “he should  have said.” According to the FT, the American president should have  told the Chinese that he wasn’t going to put the US into depression just to  protect the value of China’s dollar holdings.
‘We didn’t ask you to stock up all those dollars,’ as Obama  might have put it. ‘It’s not our fault if the dollar goes down and you lose  money.’
  Perhaps Mr. Obama should have quoted the immortal words of  a former US Secretary of the Treasury, John Connolly. “It may be our dollar,  but it’s your problem.”
Over at USA Today, the editors are more concerned  about human rights. The paper must imagine itself back in the days of Woodrow  Wilson or George W. Bush, when the US nobly embarked on a mission to raise all  of mankind out of sin and error. In effect, Mr. Obama said that all people have  ‘universal rights,’ including the right to a free press. China figured this was  just the sort of opinion that its people didn’t need to hear. So, it killed the  story in its own press. The American president might as well have been talking  to himself.
China is today’s big story. Throughout the world’s media  there is much buzz and blather about the “romance”…the “historic  relationship”…between the two titans. Some reporters see love. Some see  jealousy. Some see rivalry.
Here at The Daily Reckoning we are suckers for  romance. Give us some “a cigarette that bears a lipstick’s traces…an airline  ticket to romantic places…” and we are moonstruck. But we don’t see much  romance in the US and China hook up. What we see is the sort of things that  delight psychologists and bore everyone else – perversion, co-dependency, and  enabling.
On the surface, the two giants bicker over money like any  other couple. The US accuses China of being a tightwad…holding its currency  down and saving too much. China accuses the US of being a spendthrift,  destroying its own purchasing power by wanton and reckless expenditures.
“US president’s currency call breaks with script,” says a  headline in The Financial Times today. US economists think China  should raise the value of the yuan. This would immediately lower the value,  domestically, of the trillion(s?) worth of US-dollar assets China holds as  reserves. It would also make Chinese products less competitive on the world  market.
Mr. Obama wasn’t supposed to say anything about it on his  trip. It would be like bringing up your husband’s drinking problem on your  wedding anniversary; it would spoil the occasion.
Apparently, Obama couldn’t help himself. Or maybe he just  thought the folks back home would like to hear him give the Chinese a piece of  his mind.
But how does the American president know what price to put  on the yuan? A sinking dollar is good for the goose over in the US. Why isn’t  it okay for the gander in the Middle Kingdom?
A strong yuan would help the world economy “rebalance,” say  economists who think they know what they are talking about. In a nutshell, the  Chinese produce too much; Americans consume too much. A higher yuan would come  down on the high side of the scale – giving the Chinese more purchasing power  (thus increasing consumption in the Peoples’ Republic)…and making Chinese  exports more expensive (thus decreasing consumption across the Pacific). With a  stronger yuan, the Anglo-Saxon economies would be able to produce and sell more  things to the Chinese…thus tilting the US economy more towards capital  formation and production.
Chinese authorities are no dopes. They know they have a  “floating” population of some 150,000 million people who are looking for work.  They know that if they don’t find some way to keep these people occupied they  are likely to cause trouble. Trouble is the thing China’s leaders most don’t  want.
“You think you’ve got trouble,” Premier Hu Jintao might  have replied to Mr. Obama. “Did you know that there are something like 200  million Chinese who still get by on as little as a dollar a day? Let’s face  facts. You’re sitting there in Washington, comfortably talking about how much  free health care and unemployment benefits to give the American people. We  don’t have the time…or the money for those kinds of things. Too many Chinese  people. They don’t earn enough to afford the kind of cradle-to-grave bribes you  give your people. We have to keep them working; there’s no other way.
“Besides, we don’t quite see why we should pay for your  mistakes. It wasn’t our economy that blew up. It wasn’t our financial industry  that sold houses to people who couldn’t afford them. It wasn’t our consumers  who spent more than they had and went too deeply into debt.
“It’s the debtor who’s supposed to pay, not the lender.  We’re the lender!”
Behind all the superficial arguing, accusing and kvetching, however, is a sick relationship. It has give and take. But the US is all take.
China is all give. And now, on both sides, public authorities make the same mistake. In the US, they try desperately to prod Americans to take more…to continue doing what they were doing wrong. They offer incentives of every sort to lure consumers to consume even more.
And their solution to the debt overhang  is to hang on even more debt.
In China, meanwhile, the authorities desperately prod their  people to give more…to produce more. Or, at least to build more plant and equipment  with which to turn out more goods.
In the US, consumer spending is about 70% of the economy.  In China, fixed capital formation is estimated to have made up 70% of China’s  growth in 2008 and as much as 90% in the first half of this year.
Is this a formula for a happy marriage? Over the last two  years, this co-dependent relationship has broken down. Paul Krugman wrote in The  New York Times that we’ve seen “the greatest collapse in world trade in  history.”
But neither side has learned a thing. The taker now  proposes to take more. The giver now proposes to give more.
They don’t need counseling. They need a divorce.
Bill Bonner
  Daily Reckoning
The Great US-China  Romance was originally published in the Daily Reckoning on 11/19/2009
Bill Bonner [send him mail] is the author, with Addison Wiggin, of Financial Reckoning Day: Surviving the Soft Depression of The 21st Century and Empire of Debt: The Rise Of An Epic Financial Crisis and the co-author with Lila Rajiva of Mobs, Messiahs and Markets (Wiley, 2007).
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