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'China cannot really dump the dollar'
China's recent call for an alternative to the US dollar as a global reserve currency are motivated by political rather than economic, considerations, feels Michael Pettis, a professor at Peking University's Guanghua School of Management, and a specialist in Chinese financial markets.
In an interview to DNA, Pettis, who has worked on Wall Street in trading, capital markets and corporate finance, and has additionally been involved in sovereign advisory work, argues that doomsday scenarios about China "dumping the dollar" are exaggerated. "It's one of the things that keep us awake at night unnecessarily... It looks like an atom bomb, but there's nothing in it."
Excerpts from an interview:
China persists with its calls for an alternative to the US dollar as a reserve currency, but many economists say it's infeasible. What does China hope to achieve?
Much of it is for political purposes, internationally and domestically. Domestically, there's been criticism of mismanagement of investments abroad. There's rising concern about the hoards of dollars the People's Bank of China (the country's central bank) has... The (Chinese) government feels the need to indicate domestically that it's concerned about the value of these reserves and that it will do something about them.
But it's not clear what that means.
If you think US fiscal expansion will weaken the dollar, weaken it against what?
The euro and the yen? Currencies of countries that are seeing slower growth, more fiscal expansion and higher levels of debt? I don't think they've thought too carefully about what they mean because the purpose is not really to provide an alternative. It's to indicate domestically that we are doing something.
When they make comments that are unexpected, the dollar weakens. But since the Chinese are going to be holding on to these reserves not just for the next few weeks but for many years, the short-term impact of these comments on the dollar don't really matter. All this talk can't cause such a significant collapse in the value of the dollar that it starts feeding on itself and so, becomes a permanent collapse.
That's not going to happen?
This is mostly short-term noise. We hear this every decade or so -- with the Deutschemark, the yen, the euro, and now we're hearing it with the renminbi. If China wanted to hold special drawing rights (SDRs), there was nothing to prevent it. It could have accumulated reserves in the same proportion as in the SDR. Why didn't it do so?
The reason was that for trade reasons it was impossible.
China accumulated dollars because to generate massive employment growth, it needed to force its trade surplus, and the only place it could do so is the US economy. That's why they accumulated dollars, not because anyone put a gun to their head.
Do you see a consistency in China's stand in what it wants of the dollar?
A lot of people don't understand basic balance-of-payments arithmetic. All kinds of nonsense comes out. For instance, many people believe that the decision to lend dollars to the US government is an independent decision made by the PBoC. The confusion exists not just in the Chinese government but in the US government as well.
China's recent call for an alternative to the US dollar as a global reserve currency are motivated by political rather than economic, considerations, feels Michael Pettis, a professor at Peking University's Guanghua School of Management, and a specialist in Chinese financial markets.
In an interview to DNA, Pettis, who has worked on Wall Street in trading, capital markets and corporate finance, and has additionally been involved in sovereign advisory work, argues that doomsday scenarios about China "dumping the dollar" are exaggerated. "It's one of the things that keep us awake at night unnecessarily... It looks like an atom bomb, but there's nothing in it."
Excerpts from an interview:
China persists with its calls for an alternative to the US dollar as a reserve currency, but many economists say it's infeasible. What does China hope to achieve?
Much of it is for political purposes, internationally and domestically. Domestically, there's been criticism of mismanagement of investments abroad. There's rising concern about the hoards of dollars the People's Bank of China (the country's central bank) has... The (Chinese) government feels the need to indicate domestically that it's concerned about the value of these reserves and that it will do something about them.
But it's not clear what that means.
If you think US fiscal expansion will weaken the dollar, weaken it against what?
The euro and the yen? Currencies of countries that are seeing slower growth, more fiscal expansion and higher levels of debt? I don't think they've thought too carefully about what they mean because the purpose is not really to provide an alternative. It's to indicate domestically that we are doing something.
When they make comments that are unexpected, the dollar weakens. But since the Chinese are going to be holding on to these reserves not just for the next few weeks but for many years, the short-term impact of these comments on the dollar don't really matter. All this talk can't cause such a significant collapse in the value of the dollar that it starts feeding on itself and so, becomes a permanent collapse.
That's not going to happen?
This is mostly short-term noise. We hear this every decade or so -- with the Deutschemark, the yen, the euro, and now we're hearing it with the renminbi. If China wanted to hold special drawing rights (SDRs), there was nothing to prevent it. It could have accumulated reserves in the same proportion as in the SDR. Why didn't it do so?
The reason was that for trade reasons it was impossible.
China accumulated dollars because to generate massive employment growth, it needed to force its trade surplus, and the only place it could do so is the US economy. That's why they accumulated dollars, not because anyone put a gun to their head.
Do you see a consistency in China's stand in what it wants of the dollar?
A lot of people don't understand basic balance-of-payments arithmetic. All kinds of nonsense comes out. For instance, many people believe that the decision to lend dollars to the US government is an independent decision made by the PBoC. The confusion exists not just in the Chinese government but in the US government as well.