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China Bashing: Junk Economics (Hudson)

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  • China Bashing: Junk Economics (Hudson)

    A Short Tour of Junk Economics

    America's China Bashing

    By MICHAEL HUDSON

    It is traditional for politicians to blame foreigners for problems that their own policies have caused. And in today’s zero-sum economies, it seems that if America is losing leadership position, other nations must be the beneficiaries. Inasmuch as China has avoided the financial overhead that has painted other economies into a corner, U.S. politicians and journalists are blaming it for America’s declining economic power. I realize that balance-of-payments accounting and international trade theory are arcane topics, but I promise that by the time you finish this article, you will understand more than 99 per cent of U.S. economists and diplomats striking this self-righteous pose.

    The dollar’s double standard gives America an international free ride

    For over a century, central banks have managed exchange rates by raising or lowering the interest rate. Countries running trade and payments deficits raise rate to attract foreign funds. The IMF also directs them to impose domestic austerity programs that reduce asset prices for their real estate, stocks and bonds, making them prone to foreign buyouts. Vulture investors and speculators usually have a field day, as they did in the Asian crisis of 1997.

    Conversely, low interest rates lead bankers and speculators to seek higher returns abroad, borrowing domestic currency to buy foreign securities or make foreign loans. This capital outflow lowers the exchange rate.

    There is a major exception, of course: the United States. Despite running the world’s largest balance-of-payments deficit and also the largest domestic government budget deficit, it has the world’s lowest interest rates and easiest credit. The Federal Reserve has depressed the dollar’s exchange rate by providing nearly free credit to banks at only 0.25 per cent interest. This “quantitative easing” (making it easier to borrow more) aims at preventing U.S. real estate, stocks and bonds from falling further in price. The idea is to save banks from more defaults as the economy slips deeper into negative equity territory. A byproduct of this easy credit is to lower the dollar’s exchange rate – presumably helping U.S. exporters while forcing foreign producers either to raise the dollar price of their goods they sell here or absorb a currency loss.

    This policy makes the dollar a managed currency. Low U.S. interest rates and easy credit spur investors to lend abroad or buy foreign assets yielding more than 1 per cent. This dollar outflow forces other countries to protect their currencies from being forced up. So their central banks do not throw the excess dollars they receive onto the “free market,” but keep them in dollar form by buying U.S. Government bonds. So the “Chinese savings,” “yen savings” and “Euro savings” that are spent on U.S. Treasury securities (and earlier, on Fannie Mae bonds to earn a bit more) are not really what Chinese people save in their local yuan, or what Japanese or Europeans save. The money used to buy U.S. Government securities consists of the excess dollars that the American military, American investors and American consumers spend abroad in excess of U.S. earning power. To pretend that these savings are “saved up” by foreigners (who save in their own currency, after all) is Junk Economics Error #1.

    By lowering U.S. interest rates to near zero, the U.S. Federal Reserve is doing what the Bank of Japan did after its financial bubble burst in 1990, when it helped Japanese banks “earn their way out of negative equity” by providing cheap credit to obtain a markup by lending to speculators and arbitrageurs to buy foreign bonds paying higher rates. This came to be known as the “carry trade.” Arbitrageurs borrowed yen cheaply and converted them into Euros, dollars, Icelandic kroner or other currencies paying a higher rate, pocketing the difference. This threw yen onto foreign-exchange market, weakening the exchange rate and hence helping Japanese automotive and electronics exporters.

    This is the easy credit policy that the Fed is following today. U.S. banks borrow from the Federal Reserve at 0.25 per cent, and lend to speculators at a markup of one or two percentage points. These speculators then look for companies, government bonds, corporate stocks and bonds and any other asset in a foreign currency that they believe may yield more than about 2 per cent (or that are denominated in currencies that may raise in price against the dollar by more than 2 per cent annually), hoping to pocket the difference.

    Accusations that Japan, South Korea and Taiwan are “making their currencies cheaper” by recycling their dollar inflows into U.S. Treasury securities simply means that they are trying to maintain their currencies at a stable level. Even so, the yen’s exchange rate has risen as international borrowers pay off their carry-trade debts by re-converting the Euros, dollars and other currencies they borrowed in yen to play the arbitrage game. Paying back these foreign currency loans raises the yen’s price. To prevent this from pricing Japanese exporters out of world markets, Japan’s central bank is trying to stabilize the yen/dollar exchange rate by recycling these payments into the purchase of U.S. Treasury securities – exactly what U.S. officials accuse China of doing. It is how most central banks throughout the world are responding to the global dollar glut. They are increasing their international reserves by the amount of surplus free credit” dollars that the U.S. payments deficit is pumping out. To pretend that China is “manipulating its currency” by doing what central banks have done for over a century is Junk Economics Error #2. Back in the early 1970s, U.S. officials told OPEC governments that if they did not do this, it would be deemed an act of war. And Congress has refused to let China buy U.S. companies – so China can only recycle its dollar inflows by buying Treasury securities, thereby financing the U.S. federal budget deficit.

    Every currency is managed by recycling dollars to avoid distorted exchange rates

    To pretend that exchange rates are determined mainly by international trade is Junk Economics Error #3. International currency speculation and investment is much larger than the volume of commodity trade. The typical currency bet lasts less than a minute, often being computer-driven by arbitrage swap models. This financial fibrillation has dislodged exchange rates from purchasing-power parity or prices for export and imports.

    The largest payments imbalances have little to do with “market forces” for imports and exports. They are what economists call price-inelastic – money spent without regard for price. This is true above all for military spending and maintenance of America’s vast network of foreign bases and political maneuverings to control foreign countries. During the 1960s and ‘70s U.S. military spending accounted for the entire balance-of-payments deficit, as private sector trade and investment remained in balance. Escalation of America’s oil war in the Near East and Pipelinistan, and the hundreds of billions of dollars spent to prop up America-friendly regimes, end up in central banks – whose main option, as noted above, is to send them back to the United States in the form of purchases of U.S. Treasury bills – to finance further federal deficit spending!

    None of this can be blamed on China. But any nation that succeeds economically is assumed to be doing so at America’s expense if they do not let U.S. investors siphon off the entire surplus. This attitude that other countries should sacrifice themselves is sweeping Congress, whose China bashing is reminiscent of the Japan-phobia of the late 1980s. The United States convinced the Bank of Japan to raise the yen’s exchange rate in the 1985 Plaza Accord, and then to turn Japan into a bubble economy by flooding it with credit under the 1987 Louvre Accord. Tokyo was humorously referred to as “the 13th Federal Reserve district” for recycling its export earnings in U.S. Treasury bills, becoming the mainstay of the Reagan-Bush budget deficits that financed U.S. global military spending while quadrupling the public debt.

    U.S. strategists would not mind seeing China’s economy similarly untracked by letting global speculators bid up the renminbi’s exchange rate – by enough to let Wall Street speculators make hundreds of billions of dollars betting on the run-up. “Free capital markets” and “open financial markets” are euphemisms for setting the renminbi’s exchange rate by U.S. and European currency arbitrage and capital flight. The U.S. balance-of-payments outflow would increase rather than shrink, thanks to the ability of American banks to create nearly “free” credit on their keyboards to convert into Chinese or other currencies, gold or other speculative vehicles that look to rise against the dollar.

    “In a world awash with excess savings, we don’t need China’s money,” writes Prof. Krugman. After all, “the Federal Reserve could and should buy up any bonds the Chinese sell.” It’s all just electronic credit. From reading such diatribes, or President Obama’s exchange with Prime Minister Wen Jiabao at the United Nations on September 23, one would not realize that Chinese savers have not sent a single yuan of their own money to the United States.

    But that is the point! Krugman should have reminded his readers that the balance of payments consists of much more than just the trade balance in today’s world swamped by financial speculation and military spending. What China “invests” in the United States are the dollars thrown off by the U.S. payments deficit. China would take a loss on the yuan-value of these dollars if it revalues its currency – as it has lost on the dollars it has turned over to Blackrock in the hope of making more than the minimal 1 per cent available on U.S. Treasury securities.

    Describing China as “deliberately keeping its currency artificially weak. … feeding a huge trade surplus,” Krugman adds that “in a depressed world economy, any country running an artificial trade surplus is depriving other nations of much-needed sales and jobs.” In his reading the problem is not that America has let easy bank credit bid up housing prices for its workers and loaded down their budgets with debt service that, by itself, exceeds the wage levels of most Asian workers. This financialization is largely responsible for the U.S. trade balance moving into deficit (apart from food and arms exports). Homeowners typically pay up to 40 per cent of their income for mortgage debt service and other carrying charges, 15 per cent for other debt (credit card interest and fees, auto loans, student loans, etc.), 11 per cent for FICA wage withholding for Social Security and Medicare, and about 10 to 15 per cent in other taxes (income and excise taxes). To cap matters, the financial burden of debt-leveraged real estate and consumption is aggravated by forced saving pension set-asides turned over to money managers for financial investment in these debt-leveraged financial instruments, and “financialized” wage withholding for Social Security. All these deductions are made before any money is left to buy food, clothing or other basic goods and services.

    Chinese currency appreciation would make its exports cost more. But would this spur America rebuild its factories and re-employ the workforce that has been downsized and outsourced? To imagine that long-term investment responds to immediately is Junk Economics Error #4.

    The same is true of international commodity trade. “An undervalued currency always promotes trade surpluses,” Krugman explains. But this is only true if trade is “price-elastic,” with other countries able to produce similar goods of their own at only marginally different prices. This is less and less the case as the United States and Europe de-industrialize and as their capital investment shrinks as a result of their expanding financial overhead ends in a wave of negative equity. To assume that higher exchange rates automatically reduce rather than increase a nation’s trade surplus is Junk Economics Error #5. It is a tenet of the free market fundamentalism that Krugman usually criticizes, except where China is concerned.

    Krugman urges the United States to do what it “normally does” when other countries subsidize their exports: impose a tariff to offset the supposed subsidy. Congress is increasing the drumbeat of accusations that China is violating international trade rules by protecting itself from financialization. “Democrats in Congress are threatening to … slap huge tariffs on Chinese goods to undermine the advantages Beijing has enjoyed from a currency, the renminbi, that experts say is artificially weakened by 20 to 25 percent.” The aim is to make China “lift the strict controls on its currency, which keep Chinese exports competitive and more factory workers employed.” But such legislation is illegal under world trade rules. This has not stopped the United States in the past, but the believe that it might succeed internationally is Junk Economics Error #6.

    This kind of propaganda does not see the United States as guilty of “managing the dollar” by its quantitative easing that depresses the exchange rate below what would be normal for any other economy suffering so gigantic and chronic s payments deficit. What makes this situation inherently unfair is that while the Washington Consensus directs other countries to impose austerity plans, raise their taxes on consumers and cut vital spending, the Bush-Obama administration blames China, not the U.S. financial system or post-Cold War military expansionism.

    The cover story is that foreign exchange controls and purchase of U.S. securities keep the renminbi’s exchange rate low, artificially spurring its exports. The reality is that these controls protect China from U.S. banks creating free “keyboard credit” to buy out its companies or load down its economy with loans to be paid off in renminbi whose value will rise against the deficit-prone dollar.

    The House Ways and Means Committee is demanding that China raise its exchange rate by 20 per cent. This would enable speculators to put down 1 per cent equity – say, $1 million to borrow $99 million and buy Chinese renminbi forward. The revaluation being demanded would produce a 20,000 per cent profit, turning the $100 million bet (and just $1 million “serious money”) into making $2 billion. It also would bankrupt Chinese exporters who had signed dollarized contracts with U.S. retailers. So it’s the arbitrage opportunity of the century that lobbyists are pressing for, not the welfare of workers.

    The Internal Revenue Service treats such trading gains as “capital gains” and taxes them at only 15 per cent, much less than the tax rate on earned income that wage-earners must pay. The Brazilian real has risen by about 25 per cent against the dollar since January 2009. Last week, Brazil’s state oil company, Petrobras, issued $67 billion in shares to exploit the nation’s new oil discoveries. Foreigners have been swamping Brazil’s central bank with a reported $1 billion per day for the past two weeks – about 10 times its daily average in recent months – but this was largely to absorb money entering the country to take part in last week’s issue by the national oil company.

    The U.S. and foreign economies alike are suffering from the idea that the way to get rich is by debt leveraging, and that the wealth of nations is whatever banks will lend – the “capitalization rate” of the available surplus. The banker’s dream is to lend against every source of revenue until it ends up being pledged to pay interest. Corporate raiders use business cash flow to pay bankers for the high-interest loans and junk bonds that provide them with takeover credit. Real estate investors use their rental income to service their mortgages, while consumers pay their disposable income as interest (and late fees) to the banks for credit cards, student loans and other debts.

    But Paul Krugman and Robin Wells blame China for Wall Street’s junk mortgage binge. Instead of pointing to criminal behavior by the banks, brokerage companies, bond rating agencies and deceptive underwriters, they take the financial sector off the hook: “Just as global imbalances – the savings glut created by surpluses in China and other countries – played an important part in creating the great real estate bubble, they have an important role in blocking recovery now that the bubble has burst.”

    This sounds more like what one would hear from a Wall Street lobbyist than from a liberal Democrat. It is as if the real estate bubble didn’t stem from financial fraud, junk mortgages, NINJA loans or the Federal Reserve flooding the U.S. economy with credit to inflate the real estate bubbles and sending electronic dollars abroad to glut the global economy. It’s China’s fault for running large trade surpluses “at the rest of the world’s expense.” The authors do not explain how it helps China or other economies to let foreign investors buy their companies at a 20 per cent return and pay in dollars that must be recycled to the U.S. Treasury earning just 1 per cent. And Congress won’t let the Chinese buy U.S. companies. It blocks such inflows, managing the economy ostensibly on national security grounds – in practice a structural payments deficit.

    Wall Street’s idea of “equilibrium” is for foreign countries to financialize themselves along the lines that the United States is doing, then global equilibrium could be restored. But the most successful economies have kept their FIRE-sector costs of living and doing business within reasonable bounds, and are not remotely as debt-leveraged as the United States. German workers pay only about 20 per cent of their income for housing – about half the rate of their U.S. counterparts. German practice is not to make 100 per cent mortgage loans, but to require down payments in the range of 30 per cent such as characterized the United States as recently as the 1980s.

    The FIRE sector’s business plan has priced U.S. labor out of world markets. There seems little likelihood of making Chinese and German workers pay rents or mortgage interest as high as the United States? How can American economic strategists force them to raise the price of their college and university tuition so that they must take on the enormous student loans of the magnitude that Americans have to assume? How can they be persuaded to follow the high-cost U.S. practice of adding FICA-type wage withholding to the cost of living to save up pensions, Social Security and medical insurance in advance, instead of the pay-as-you-go basis that Germany quite rightly follows?

    Such suggestions are a cover story for America’s own financial mismanagement. The U.S. idea for global equilibrium is to demand that that the rest of the world follow suit in adopting the short-term time frame typical of banks and hedge funds whose business plan is to make money purely from financial maneuvering, not long-term capital investment. Debt creation and the shift of economic planning to Wall Street and similar global financial centers is confused with “wealth creation,” as if it were what Adam Smith was talking about.

    A Proposal

    China is trying to help by voluntarily cutting back its rare earth exports. It has almost a monopoly, accounting for 97 per cent of global trade in these 17 metallic elements. These exports are “price inelastic.” There is little known replacement cost once existing deposits are depleted. Yet China charges only for the cost of digging these rare metals out of the ground and refining them. They are used in military and other high-technology applications, from guided missile steering systems and computer hard drives to hybrid electric automobile batteries. This has prompted China to recently cut back its exports to save its land from environmental pollution and, incidentally, to build up its own stockpile for future use.

    So I have a modest suggestion. If and when China starts re-exporting these metals, raise their price from a few dollars a pound to a few hundred dollars. According to a theory put forth by Paul Krugman and the U.S. Congress, this price increase should slow demand for Chinese exports. It also would help promote world peace and demilitarization, because these rare metals are key elements in missile guidance systems. China should build up its national security stockpile of these key minerals for the future – say, the next prospective five years of production. Let this be a test of the junk paradigms at work.

    Michael Hudson is a former Wall Street economist.

    http://www.counterpunch.org/hudson09292010.html

  • #2
    Re: China Bashing: Junk Economics (Hudson)

    Krugman continues the destruction of his own reputation.

    The Nobel Prize in economics, much as the Nobel Peace Prize, appears to be a reward rather than an award.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: China Bashing: Junk Economics (Hudson)

      Of course, this is precisely how the Anglo-American banking parasites make money off the rest of the world. I was thinking last night about how London and New York are a bit like a cancer that has infected a host body. As the cancer metastasizes and grows it consumes an ever greater share of the host's productive capacity to stay alive. Finally, it simply kills the host off along with itself after the rotting out the life sustaining systems of the host body.

      In our case, this cancer has infected the brain (i.e. our government) and other state apparatuses like defense and intelligence for the purpose of directing ever greater amounts of wealth to itself even as the host nation lies in the gutter gasping its last breath. For the American body politic, few options remain. We do not have a populist progressive as a leader who was willing to take on the Wall Street Money Machine during the last depression. The government is effectively insolvent and will be able to do nothing when the next crisis hits in the coming months ahead. We will be unable to borrow ourselves out of the hole like the government did in the 1930's through WWII. When the next crisis does occur, it will be a currency crisis and all the paper will go up in flames. Please tell me, how will America defend her interests overseas using worthless paper printed into existence by Uncle Ben? America's military requires fuel bought overseas and contracts out the majority of its shipping transport to fleets of ships registered in foreign countries. There will be no "appropriating" the needed resources from domestic sources because they no longer exist. Brave soldiers trapped in hostile foreign lands will become little more than target practice for enraged local populations as they run out of food, ammo, and a way out. A collapse of America's military might would mean the death knell to her economic empire built up over the last century and with it a political upheaval not seen since the American Civil War. I pray that none of this happens. That the cancer sees that killing the host means destroying itself in the process. But I fear that the sociopaths at the top won't recognize the danger until it is too late.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: China Bashing: Junk Economics (Hudson)

        Hard Times - Effective Oppositional Leadership = Xenophobia

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: China Bashing: Junk Economics (Hudson)

          Like I said before “debt processing plant “ moved to Asia.
          Pressures build as dollar holders seek alternative placement other than US debt. Welcome to the “Resource Theater” and I hope you can get in front of the flow.
          As far as China's REE, JPM set the trap on that one and he’s in town.
          http://www.lynascorp.com/content/upl...ork__FINAL.pdf

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: China Bashing: Junk Economics (Hudson)

            Great article that exposes the real empire builders - The United Banks of America.
            It's the Debt, stupid!!

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: China Bashing: Junk Economics (Hudson)

              Jesus that is hard to follow. Clear as mud.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: China Bashing: Junk Economics (Hudson)

                Originally posted by don View Post
                “In a world awash with excess savings, we don’t need China’s money,” writes Prof. Krugman. After all, “the Federal Reserve could and should buy up any bonds the Chinese sell.” It’s all just electronic credit. From reading such diatribes, or President Obama’s exchange with Prime Minister Wen Jiabao at the United Nations on September 23, one would not realize that Chinese savers have not sent a single yuan of their own money to the United States.

                Krugman is one of the few realists left in the United States. The world isn't short of money.

                Last I heard the situation in China is that private individuals or companies will find it very tough to get any sizable loan from the banks. The China real estate bubble is now effectively fanned by hard cash.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: China Bashing: Junk Economics (Hudson)

                  Excellent description of the undercurrents of the FIRE economic debate with the likes of China.

                  I was left pondering what would happen if China simply placed the Renminbi onto a Gold standard and insisted on payment in Gold? They could thus implement the "Hudson Plan" immediately; rather than wait for five years.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: China Bashing: Junk Economics (Hudson)

                    Originally posted by c1ue View Post
                    Krugman continues the destruction of his own reputation.

                    The Nobel Prize in economics, much as the Nobel Peace Prize, appears to be a reward rather than an award.
                    Of course, Krugman's been 100% correct in his diagnoses and predictions regarding the ongoing crises. I wish I could say the same for iTulip (inflation? who was predicting that?).

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: China Bashing: Junk Economics (Hudson)

                      Originally posted by oddlots View Post
                      Jesus that is hard to follow. Clear as mud.
                      I love Hudson, but clarity and brevity are not his strong points.

                      A three point summary:

                      1. China's surplus of dollars has little to do with the U.S.-Chinese trade deficit, but rather results from low U.S. interest rates;
                      2. Even if the Yuan were strengthened 25%, it would have little effect on the U.S-Chinese trade deficit because the production of the traded goods is inelastic;
                      3. The whole issue is a ruse by the Wall Street banks to attempt to financialize China anyway.

                      I do not have the data to analyze his Claims 1 and 2; he just pulls it out of thin air as a given. I have my doubts tho.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: China Bashing: Junk Economics (Hudson)

                        Originally posted by Munger
                        Of course, Krugman's been 100% correct in his diagnosis and predictions regarding the ongoing crises. I wish I could say the same for iTulip (inflation? who was predicting that?).
                        Has he now?

                        All he said was there wasn't enough deficit spending.

                        And yet he wrote in 1999:

                        http://web.mit.edu/krugman/www/trioshrt.html


                        If you listen to the rhetoric of fiscal policy, however - all the talk about pump-priming, jump-starting, etc. - it becomes clear that many people implicitly believe that only a temporary fiscal stimulus is necessary because it will jolt the economy into a higher equilibrium. Thus in Figure 5 a policy that shifts the spending curve up sufficiently will eliminate the low-level equilibrium; if the policy is sustained long enough, when it is removed the economy will settle into the high-level equilibrium instead.

                        If this is the underlying model of how fiscal policy is supposed to succeed, however, one must realize that the criterion for success is quite strong. It is not enough for fiscal expansion to produce growth - that will happen even if the liquidity trap is deeply structural in nature. Rather, it must lead to large increases in private demand, so large that the economy begins a self-sustaining process of recovery that can continue without further stimulus.

                        It is in this light that one should read economic reports about Japan today, and perhaps about other troubled economies in the future. For what it is worth, at the time of writing there is nothing in the data that would suggest that anything like the supposed shift to a higher equilibrium is in progress. Indeed, private demand is actually falling, with more than all the growth coming from government demand.
                        None of this should be read as a reason to abandon fiscal stimulus - in fact, one shudders to think what would happen if Japan were not to provide further packages as the current one expires. But fiscal stimulus is a solution, rather than a way of buying time, only under some particular assumptions that are at the very least rather speculative.
                        The point is quite simple: if indeed Krugman believes the present stimulus is insufficient, and furthermore has yet to disprove/disagree with Carmen and Reinhart's work on debt levels affecting long term growth, then exactly how much stimulus is sufficient?

                        And at what point does the accumulated debt level need to be frozen in order to forestall long term permanent growth reduction?

                        As a supposed economist, he should have long since spit up these numbers.

                        Instead, he acts like a political commentator: Not enough. Too much. Not my fault.

                        I stand by my previous statement.

                        EDIT: It is also interesting to note Krugman's comments in 1998 on liquidity traps:

                        http://web.mit.edu/krugman/www/japtrap.html

                        To preview the conclusions briefly: in a country with poor long-run growth prospects - for example, because of unfavorable demographic trends - the short-term real interest rate that would be needed to match saving and investment may well be negative; since nominal interest rates cannot be negative, the country therefore "needs" expected inflation. If prices were perfectly flexible, the economy would get the inflation it needs, regardless of monetary policy - if necessary by deflating now so that prices can rise in the future. But if current prices are not downwardly flexible, and the public expects price stability in the long run, the economy cannot get the expected inflation it needs; and in that situation the economy finds itself in a slump against which short-run monetary expansion, no matter how large, is ineffective.
                        So to thread the needle between these two statements - barring a major and nonpublicized change of heart on Krugman's part - is to assume that Krugman intended such a gigantic fiscal stimulus as to "shock and awe" the public into fearing inflation and thus spending.

                        Of course this crap theory didn't work in Weimar or in Argentina, and the previous comments on how much is enough are equally applicable - but by all means continue to idolize this hack.
                        Last edited by c1ue; September 30, 2010, 02:26 PM. Reason: typo fixed

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: China Bashing: Junk Economics (Hudson)

                          Originally posted by oddlots
                          Jesus that is hard to follow. Clear as mud.
                          Hudson is making his point by illustrating the incongruities between various Junk Economics theories being used to justify political actions, vs. what actually transpires/has transpired in the real world.

                          Junk Economics Theory #1:

                          For over a century, central banks have managed exchange rates by raising or lowering the interest rate. Countries running trade and payments deficits raise rate to attract foreign funds. The IMF also directs them to impose domestic austerity programs that reduce asset prices for their real estate, stocks and bonds, making them prone to foreign buyouts. Vulture investors and speculators usually have a field day, as they did in the Asian crisis of 1997.

                          Conversely, low interest rates lead bankers and speculators to seek higher returns abroad, borrowing domestic currency to buy foreign securities or make foreign loans. This capital outflow lowers the exchange rate.
                          This is Junk Economics because the US is the gigantic exception to the rule. Despite a massive deficit and massive debt, the US has the lowest interest rates. Clearly the rule above is bull***t.

                          The point is quite simple: if the above rule is bull***t, then central banks holding US dollars isn't savings for the nation for which the central bank operates. It is savings for the US.

                          The analogy I would use is if you are a parts supplier for GM. If GM forces you to stock 100,000 extra parts for GM's cars, are you saving? You have no use for these parts except as part of a transaction with GM (sales).

                          If GM chooses to change models, change production levels, etc etc - who ends up eating the losses associated with said parts?

                          Junk Economics Theory #2:

                          To pretend that China is “manipulating its currency” by doing what central banks have done for over a century
                          Here Hudson points out that if China is manipulating its currency, the mechanisms for doing so are identical with those being used by Japan, by Taiwan, by Korea, and OPEC in the '70s due to US demand, and by central banks everywhere for 100 years.

                          The only reason the US is singling out China is political.

                          More importantly, his point is that the reason this is necessary is that US fiscal policy is itself causing other currencies to change in relative value: which other nations in the world are fighting multiple foreign conflicts and deficit spending to the tune of $5000 per year per unit of population? The other nations are doing this 'manipulation' solely to cancel out the effects of the US' policies.

                          Junk Economics Theory #3:

                          To pretend that exchange rates are determined mainly by international trade
                          This is quite straightforward: Hudson points out that the speculative flows for currency trading and what not outweigh the actual currency volume of trade. Look at the actual oil consumed/produced vs. derivatives on oil as an example.

                          Junk Economics Theory #4:

                          Chinese currency appreciation would make its exports cost more. But would this spur America rebuild its factories and re-employ the workforce that has been downsized and outsourced? To imagine that long-term investment responds to immediately
                          Again, quite straightforward. The outsourcing of American manufacturing took decades. Why would a change in China's exchange rate reverse this in any less amount of time - even ignoring structural factors like labor costs? And more importantly, what difference would it make in terms of the present massive unemployment? Little to none.

                          Junk Economics Theory #5:

                          To assume that higher exchange rates automatically reduce rather than increase a nation’s trade surplus
                          Again, Hudson points out that this is never correct.

                          Eastern Europe before the collapse? High exchange rates vs. the dollar and euro.

                          Argentina before its collapse? Parity exchange rate (dollar peg), but consequently stronger Argentina currency vs. its trading partners outside of the US.

                          The US trade deficit with Japan before vs. after the Plaza Accords? Didn't do a damn thing except create a gigantic bubble in Japan.

                          Junk Economics Theory #6:

                          Krugman urges the United States to do what it “normally does” when other countries subsidize their exports: impose a tariff to offset the supposed subsidy. Congress is increasing the drumbeat of accusations that China is violating international trade rules by protecting itself from financialization. “Democrats in Congress are threatening to … slap huge tariffs on Chinese goods to undermine the advantages Beijing has enjoyed from a currency, the renminbi, that experts say is artificially weakened by 20 to 25 percent.” The aim is to make China “lift the strict controls on its currency, which keep Chinese exports competitive and more factory workers employed.” But such legislation is illegal under world trade rules. This has not stopped the United States in the past, but the believe that it might succeed internationally
                          Again, straightforward. Krugman is advocating that the US do exactly what it (The US) has complained other nations have done in the past: set a punitive tariff to protect internal industries. Or in other words, no free trade.

                          If you assume that currency values are the primary factor for trade and industry, then this might make sense. But see the above.

                          Lastly:

                          Hudson is pointing out that this big talk about trade sanctions vs. China if no upward valuation of the yuan is merely a smokescreen for gigantic speculative plays by currency traders (hedge funds). More bankster bulls***

                          It is those who will win and win big if this comes about.
                          Last edited by c1ue; September 30, 2010, 02:28 PM.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: China Bashing: Junk Economics (Hudson)

                            Originally posted by c1ue View Post
                            Has he now?
                            Yes, he has. He predicted the stimulus was too small to make a significant dent in unemployment, put out specific numbers, and further predicted that the expansion of the monetary base would have no effect on inflation given that the U.S. is in a liquidity trap. Krugman clearly asserted that the people predicting inflation were incorrect. And he was completely right. He also predicted there would be no dramatic rise in bond yields even in the face of large deficit spending because there was a savings glut. And again, completely right. I haven't seen an instance where he was incorrect regarding the crises and effects. I would be interested in seeing one.

                            All he said was there wasn't enough deficit spending.
                            He said the stimulus was not large enough according to his calculations. Again, completely correct.

                            The point is quite simple: if indeed Krugman believes the present stimulus is insufficient, and furthermore has yet to disprove/disagree with Carmen and Reinhart's work on debt levels affecting long term growth, then exactly how much stimulus is sufficient?

                            And at what point does the accumulated debt level need to be frozen in order to forestall long term permanent growth reduction?

                            As a supposed economist, he should have long since spit up these numbers.
                            Indeed, for a supposed economist to not address the Reinhart-Rogoff debt conundrum is a serious error. They should take his Nobel away. Oh wait ... that's right, he repeatedly directly addresses Reinhart / Rogoff's evidence and why it is weak ...

                            http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/201...-in-the-light/
                            http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/201...bt-in-the-30s/
                            http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/201...-confusing-me/
                            http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/201...wth-yet-again/
                            http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/201...-debt-history/
                            http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/201...inhart-rogoff/
                            http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/201...ogoff-wonkish/
                            http://krugman.blogs.nytimes.com/201...talking-about/

                            Instead, he acts like a political commentator: Not enough. Too much. Not my fault.
                            I have not seen where Krugman asserted that the stimulus was too big. Neither have I seen where he predicted inflation. Nor have I seen him assert the debt load was currently untenable. He's been entirely consistent -- and correct.

                            So to thread the needle between these two statements - barring a major and nonpublicized change of heart on Krugman's part - is to assume that Krugman intended such a gigantic fiscal stimulus as to "shock and awe" the public into fearing inflation and thus spending.
                            Krugman advocates government spending to offset lack of private demand. He thinks monetary policy can have only limited effects in the face of a liquidity trap, and that for it to succeed they must make a credible pledge to increase inflation. It's really not that difficult.
                            Last edited by Munger; October 04, 2010, 01:03 PM.

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                            • #15
                              Re: China Bashing: Junk Economics (Hudson)

                              Originally posted by Munger
                              Yes, he has. He predicted the stimulus was too small to make a significant dent in unemployment, put out specific numbers, and further predicted that the expansion of the monetary base would have no effect on inflation given that the U.S. is in a liquidity trap. Krugman clearly asserted that the people predicting inflation were incorrect. And he was completely right. He also predicted there would be no dramatic rise in bond yields even in the face of large deficit spending because there was a savings glut. And again, completely right. I haven't seen an instance where he was incorrect regarding the crises and effects. I would be interested in seeing one.
                              Yes, let's look at Krugman's specific policy critiques starting with Bush TARP bailout:

                              http://newsbusters.org/blogs/tom-blu...pposed-bailout


                              • At Krugman's NYT blog on September 20, he expressed "Doubts about the Rescue," because nobody was saying "how Treasury might recapitalize firms that will be bankrupt even with the purchase facility, yet need to be kept in being."
                              • Later that day, Krugman, said "No Deal" -- "Not unless Treasury explains, very clearly, why this is supposed to work, other than through having taxpayers pay premium prices for lousy assets."
                              • The very next day, September 21, Krugman wrote that "the plan does nothing to address the lack of capital unless the Treasury overpays for assets. And if that’s the real plan, Congress has every right to balk." But at the same time, he wrote that "public intervention is needed." He was already on board for a bailout; it was just a question of the form it would take.
                              • On September 23, Krugman, to his credit, objected to Paulson's attempt to avoid any kind of oversight.
                              • On September 28, Krugman agreed with another writer, Brad DeLong, "that Swedish-style temporary nationalization is the right answer to a financial crisis; he’s right." So he didn't like the bailout as envisioned because it didn't involve de facto government takeovers.
                              • Here's paydirt -- On September 28, Krugman made his support, though a bit grudging, quite clear -- "I don’t, in the end, have much more to say about the plan. It passes my test of no equity, no deal; that, plus the danger of financial panic if it doesn’t go through, makes it worth passing, though celebration is not in order."
                              So the fact is, at crunch time, Krugman said "yes."

                              As what I refer to as The Giant SUCKUP (Seemingly Unlimited Cash Kitty Under Paulson) has morphed from an asset-purchase program to a heavily coerced preferred equity investment program, subsequent posts by Krugman have, as you would expect, become more supportive. His objections lie in the fact that the government isn't throwing more money at the problem -- i.e., the de facto nationalization of the banking system isn't happening fast enough:
                              • On October 9, as it became clear that Paulson was moving to government equity investments, Krugman gave "A tentative cheer: Paulson may have been dragged kicking and screaming into doing the right thing to rescue the financial system."
                              • On October 25, Krugman supported a complaint that "despite the big-sounding numbers, financial institutions are losing capital faster than governments are putting it in."
                              • Yesterday (November 24), he said that among his objections to the Citigroup bailout, it is "quite possibly inadequate, so that Citi will be back for more."
                              Why the AP writer of the Nobel article chose to characterize Krugman as opposing the bailout bill, when under open-ended provisions Treasury has been doing what Krugman prefers for about 45 days -- supposedly just not enough of it -- is a complete mystery. Was it sheer ignorance, or the need to show Krugman specifically disagreeing with Bush about something-anything to make sure it didn't end positively, or something else?
                              I guess we'll never know, but there's no doubt that it's wrong.
                              So Krugman in fact agreed that Bush TARP bailout was acceptable. So in fact his talk about Sweden didn't get in the way of his getting on the TARP train in 2008.

                              Now let's look at Krugman and Obama bailout (1)

                              http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/0..._n_167721.html

                              Paul Krugman, the professor of economics at Princeton University and a Nobel Prize winner, spoke Tuesday to CNBC, where he discussed his views on the stimulus package.


                              The $787 billion stimulus is not nearly enough to fill the "well over $2 trillion hole" in the economy, Krugman said. "A fair bit of the bill is not really stimulus," he adding, noting that just about $650 billion would actually spur consumer spending and other types of stimulus.
                              It is "pretty likely" that the Obama administration will try and pass a second stimulus package in the next few months, Krugman said.

                              The economy is likely to remain depressed for at least two years, but probably much longer than that, Krugman said.

                              As for real estate, Krugman said that the housing bubble is still not fully deflated.
                              "You don't have to fill a flat tire through the hole," Krugman noted. He said home prices would likely drop another 10% to 15% before they bottom out.

                              As for unemployment, Krugman is predicting it will peak around 9% sometime later this year. There is a chance unemployment could reach the double digits, however, if the crisis continues to spread rapidly across the globe.
                              So where's the precise Krugman plan? All he says is there is a $2T hole, and that the $787 $819B ARRA isn't enough to fill it.

                              So does that mean the bailout should be $2T? $3$? $1.5T?

                              Well, fortunately he finally coughed up an actual "plan":

                              http://www.bizjournals.com/portland/...6/daily68.html

                              New York Times columnist Paul Krugman said during a press conference Friday at Willamette University that investment in universal health care and infrastructure, along with temporary nationalization of the country's banks, are the most viable paths to economic recovery.
                              But the Obama administration isn't proposing to spend enough, added Krugman, the winner of a Nobel Prize in economics for his work in world trade patterns.

                              Krugman is speaking Friday night at Willamette. Thursday night he spoke at the Arlene Schnitzer auditorium in Portland.

                              The $819 billion spending package passed by the House of Representatives this week is about $1 trillion short of what's needed, Krugman said. Achieving sustained recovery will probably require spending $600 billion per year for three years on projects that put people to work while building a lasting infrastructure to support ongoing economic growth.

                              Oregon's plans to create economic growth around sustainable energy and other green industries may be laudable for environmental reasons, but it's not clear that the strategy will succeed in economic terms.

                              "Ten years from now, we will be doing a lot more in the green energy field," Krugman said. "We'd better be, or we're cooked. But whether it makes sense as a business proposition, I have no idea."

                              On the other hand, since it's likely that the United States will institute a nationwide market system for carbon emissions, Oregon's ambition to be the first state with a cap-and-trade system may be a wise economic move.

                              "Cap and trade is a quintessentially global strategy, but a local economy that gets a head start might be positioning itself for the industries that come along," Krugman said.
                              Investing in health care makes sense both as a short-term boost to the economy and as a long term public good, Krugman said.

                              "We're going to want to provide people with aid to get insurance," he said. "In the immediate, next two years, that would mean a lot of people would increase spending on needed medical care and be freed from fears of medical disaster."
                              That in turn would make people and businesses more comfortable about spending on and investing in other things.

                              Asked how long the current downturn could last, Krugman said that the recession could end, according to traditional economic measures, as soon as late this year or early 2010.
                              But as experienced by most Americans, the slump is likely to last well beyond the point when economists declare that the recession is over, a marker that could arrive by November, or early next year.

                              "The source of the recovery is hard to see," he said. "There's not going to be a whole lot of business investment until a dramatic new technology comes along to get businesses investing."

                              Krugman believes that the administration should temporarily nationalize the banks, "though you should call it by a different name."

                              "Take them into receivership, at least the ones teetering on the edge," he said. That would have the effect of restoring confidence and getting money to flow.

                              While Krugman believes that U.S. manufacturing can never recover to 1970s levels — improved productivity means industry will never need as many people to make what we actually buy — he said increasing spending on public infrastructure is one of the chief ways to get people back to work.

                              "You could hire people to dig holes and fill them up again, and that would create demand," he said. "But if you have people build a bridge, then you put them to work and you get a bridge."

                              As for worries about increasing the national debt, Krugman said there's still plenty of room for the United States to borrow without losing the confidence of the financial markets.

                              "Belgium has debt equal to 87 percent of its gross domestic product," he said. "That's 40 percent higher than ours, with no financial crisis. So we can probably run up another $6 trillion in debt."
                              So - he recommended $1.8T in spending in 2009. 2009 saw a $1.4T deficit (http://www.nationalreview.com/corner.../john-j-miller) - another $1T in spending would have yielded a $2.4T deficit. Almost halfway to being Belgium.

                              He also then says $600B in infrastructure spending over 3 years; we should build bridges. Yet this is in direct contradiction to his previous work on Japan - they've been building bridges and highways everywhere for a decade - and it doesn't seem to have worked yet.

                              And indeed they have national health care already.

                              And you've still not reconciled how he notes that fiscal stimulus works only under very questionable assumptions in 1998, yet now is pushing hard for more and better fiscal stimulus?

                              And of course his magic plan now is to pay for this with a national VAT. Because taxes of course don't hurt the economy. After all, the government giveth (stimulus) and then the government taketh away (VAT).

                              Originally posted by Munger
                              He said the stimulus was not large enough according to his calculations. Again, completely correct.
                              Simply because the stimulus didn't work, doesn't mean a larger stimulus would have worked.

                              He himself said that fiscal stimulus is NOT the right way to go - it is inflation, or at least the strong expectation of inflation.

                              Nothing to do with Rogoff and Reinhart's work. Merely them saying a stimulus may be necessary - doesn't in any way detract from their original research showing how high debt levels reduce future growth

                              Again, Krugman nit picking. He attempts to show that Rogoff and Reinhart's analysis is not relevant because debt actually fell in the '30s - the GDP/debt ratio only spiked due to GDP falling. Yet this is clearly NOT the case today.

                              Krugman using other people's work to disprove Rogoff and Reinhart - boiling down to: I can show one example where the correlation is false. Therefore the entire list of examples and the empirical conclusion itself must be false.

                              Useless. Even if the assertion is correct - a single outlier does not itself invalidate the premise, especially as we know full well how the US post WWII had a uniquely powerful economic advantage over the rest of the developed world: most of the gold and most of the factories.

                              Note that Rogoff and Reinhart never stated debt to growth was a law - merely presented a long list of historical examples which appear to have exhibited the criteria.

                              Unlike a theory of physics, a theory of economics always has exceptions.

                              Only for a hack like Krugman does this solipsistic line of attack work.

                              The paper mentioned in the previous link. Again, it purports to show that demobilization was the primary cause of low growth in the United States. Yet this criticism is weak because you'll note that both pre- and post- WW II years are in the right half of the graph. Asserting the 1945 - 1949 years as being disproof ignores that the 1930s and the WWII years of the '40s, as well as the '50s - are all on the high debt side.

                              Yet clearly all 3 eras have potential extenuating factors beyond just debt: the Great Depression for one, WW II for the other, and the Cold War/Marshall Plan for the last.

                              Here Krugman attempts to show that the entire paper is invalid because he can find excuses for all of the 'modern' examples.

                              His critique of Canada comes down to that austerity fans call it a counter example. Hardly telling. His own blogs show that Rogoff and Reinhart are not advocating austerity - thus again his own policy goals are intruding into his academic work.

                              His Japan example continues to assume that the correlation is reverse - this would be more credible if he wasn't advocating the US to take the same path as Japan now.

                              And his view on Italy and Belgium is that they have other problems so don't count and furthermore are small.

                              Yet Belgium is held up as a poster child for the US being able to take on more debt as shown above?

                              Krugman continuing to use the post WW II era as a 'disproof' - ignoring the other economic factors I've noted above

                              Krugman damning with faint praise: saying that Rogoff and Reinhart's empirical study is fine but that there should be no policy conclusions to be drawn from it.

                              Again, his own work shows that Rogoff and Reinhart are not advocating austerity - nor was their paper intended to further a policy goal.

                              Fortunately Krugman himself doesn't have this problem: he has no problem disavowing his previous work in order to again stray from economic academia into policy advocacy.

                              There is a difference - and he's long since strayed over the line.

                              Again, a bizarre attack on Rogoff.

                              Krugman again Janus faces the Bush tax cuts: somehow Bush's stimulus is bad, but Obama's stimulus was good just too small.

                              To disagree that there was no public policy purported Keynesian stimulus effect from fiscal deficit spending - whether Bush or Obama or Krugman Bizarro world - is contortionism of the highest degree.

                              Originally posted by Munger
                              I have not seen where Krugman asserted that the stimulus was too big. Neither have I seen where he predicted inflation. Nor have I seen him assert the debt load was currently untenable. He's been entirely consistent -- and correct.
                              His position is exactly that of any other pundit: it is either too big, or too small, or its not my fault. In this case he chose too big even though his own words contradict his policy prescription - as well as his own conclusions on Japan's liquidity trap.

                              Originally posted by Munger
                              Krugman advocates government spending to offset lack of private demand. He thinks monetary policy can have only limited effects in the face of a liquidity trap, and that for it to succeed they must make a credible pledge to increase inflation. It's really not that difficult.
                              Its not that difficult to say, but it both contradicts his own past work and has few if any real world examples of success.

                              Furthermore it is noteworthy that the ARRA itself has had difficulty in meeting its spending goals - how then would an ARRA of more than twice its size be able to successful be used?

                              Much less the higher waste and what not attendant to these types of endeavors?

                              It is the pundit, the talking head, the politician which conveniently tosses out easy sounding prescriptions.
                              Last edited by c1ue; October 04, 2010, 03:30 PM.

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