America’s Beggar-Thy-Neighbor Policy
by Fred Sheehan
by
Fred Sheehan
DIGG THIS
Weaker minds
in the U.S. Senate are determined that China revalue its currency.
Up, up it must go, in relation to the dollar. Leaving aside the
abysmal logic employed by Senators Schumer and Graham, the historical
precedent of America’s revaluation of the Chinese currency is a
sorry episode of U.S. foreign policy. The earlier generation of
weak minds caused nothing short of starvation across the Chinese
Republic.
By 1930, China
and Mexico were the two notable countries that still employed a
silver standard. (There is a long history of silver standards. The
pound sterling is one legacy. By the late 19th century
though, most countries had attached themselves to the gold standard.)
Silver traded more like a commodity than it might have if it still
circulated as money. In step with most raw materials the price of
silver fell 52% between 1928 and 1932.
That was an
unpleasant period in The United States, not so much in China. This
is a relative comparison. China had not escaped the worldwide depression.
Between the high of 1929 and September 1931, wholesale prices had
fallen 29.5% in the U.S., roughly the same across Europe, but only
20% in China. In the words of Roy Jastram, author of Silver:
The Restless Metal: "The Senate Foreign Relations Committee
wanted to raise the price of silver so that China could buy foreign
goods." The motivation is no different today. Substitute "Senate
Finance Committee" and the match is exact.
A higher silver
price – in theory – would increase the Chinese capacity to buy more
American goods and pull the U.S. out of the depression. Economists
buttressed the politicians’ yearnings. John Maynard Keynes wrote
a letter to a House of Representatives’ committee. Keynes believed
there "was good reason to suppose that higher silver prices
would boost Chinese imports and diminish exports by raising costs
of production in world terms. This would cause China to stop buying
silver and to export it instead, to make up for her unfavorable
balance of trade."
Jastram’s blood
boils at this hallucination: "What China really needed was
a stabilized price of silver, because rapidly fluctuating
exchange rates could do real harm. Predictability of exchange rates
was what the businessman needed. The prospect of silver prices rising
arbitrarily at the hands of the United States meant further instability
– the last thing the commercial world needed to add to its internal
turmoil from war, flood and famine." (Italics in the original.)
"War,
famine and flood" ravaged China for a quarter century or more,
culminating in the Communist Party’s acquisition of national control
in 1949. It is true the post-1928 slide allowed the Chinese to buy
silver cheaply, thus, in greater quantities. In Professor Jastram’s
words: "[China] could then apply [the greater quantity of silver]
to her purchase of other goods and commodities. As a nation with
an unfavorable balance of trade, mainly due to internal catastrophes,
a low price of silver was important to her." A low price of
silver – and what the economists and Senators described as an undervalued
Chinese currency – was exactly what the United States would banish.
(Under a silver standard, China’s business expanded with a greater
quantity of silver reserves. Today, we have elevated the Fed to
a godlike status since the means of expanding business is to print
more dollars which become bank reserves. Godlike figures always
crash and burn, but that is another story.)
This analysis
only describes the public debate, and regrettably, the more high-minded
motivations. The man most responsible for currency manipulation
was Senator Key Pittman of Nevada. He was not in the least bit interested
in the China trade but had long been an advocate of higher silver
prices. Lyric Hale, CEO and Publisher of the indispensable China
Online, describes the motivations of the peoples’ representative
thusly: "Senator Key Pittman of Nevada supported a bill to
require the U.S. Treasury to purchase silver, in order to raise
prices and ‘do something’ for the silver industry. Need I mention
that Senator Pittman was a major investor in silver mines? By 1934
he got his way, since FDR needed votes for his New Deal."
Pittman rode
the fiat train as it gathered steam. (He had played an instrumental
role in the decision to sell silver reserves on the open market
and to replace them with Federal Reserve Notes during World War
I.) In the confusion following the passage of the Gold Reserve Act
in 1934 (which transferred title of gold from the Federal Reserve
to the United States government) and the frantic pace of New Deal
legislation, Pittman was able to re-monetize silver, in a manner
of speaking. His attachment to Roosevelt’s Agricultural Adjustment
Act (under the Thomas Amendment) required the U.S. government to
buy silver on the world market until the price reached one-sixteenth
that of gold: $1.29 an ounce. This was more than double the world’s
market price. In Charles Kindleberger’s estimation: "Silver
purchases abroad provide a brilliant example of world economic irresponsibility
on the part of the United States."
Kindleberger
continues: [The silver program] represented a beggar-thy-neighbor
policy, where the hurt to the neighbor was wanton and provided no
domestic economic and little political benefit." It also ignored
reality. American trade with China was the best thing going. Between
1930 and 1931, when the silver price declined 25%, the United States
increased its exports to China by 1.2%, a period when American trade
with all other countries fell by 38%. But Washington operated under
a veil of ignorance. After driving up the price of silver, American
exports to China collapsed.
The Chinese
Minister of Finance T.V. Soong warned the rising prices of silver
drained China of money. (There is no funny-money paper printing
with a metal standard. The silver is either there or not. If the
money has been sold and left the country, it simply does not exist.
Businesses cannot borrow and jobs disappear.) Soong’s sober warning
went unheeded. Jastram laments: "It is sad to be reminded of
popular American comments at the time. These seldom went beyond
reiterating the conviction that doubling the world price of silver
would double the exchange value of China’s stocks of silver and
thereby allow her to buy the United States out of the depression.
What it did was to drag China in…" The American-led program
of purchasing silver (other countries bought upon American insistence)
"added the final destructive touch in 1933…. It could not have
made the Chinese feel any happier to hear the American proposals
advanced as a means of saving [China]." Following the 1934
Thomas Amendment, when the Mexicans and Chinese pleaded for relief,
Secretary of the Treasury Morganthau reacted much as the bombastic
political class today: he blamed the Mexicans and Chinese for creating
difficulties. For good measure, Morganthau cast doubt on their "standards
of personal and public morality."
By the latter
half of 1934, "depression in China deepened as [silver appreciated]
with American buying. Dislocation became severe with the great drain
of silver from the country. This forced a contraction of credit
leading to business failures everywhere, including some major banks."
Unlike the U.S., China did not have a Federal Reserve System. It
was a hard-money country. When bank reserves fell, and without the
stimulus of fiat money printing, banks failed. (These explanations
of the different money systems may look repetitive, but we are so
far removed from a hard money standard today, the redundancy may
be useful.)
Silver continued
to flee China since Pittman’s handiwork bid prices above what the
production from his Nevada silver mines would have earned if not
for mindless government buying. (Corn and ethanol might be a current
parallel.) In Jastram’s eulogy: "In [October] 1934, a record
volume of silver left China in legal form. In an attempt to stem
this vital outflow, a heavy export tax was put on the metal."
Order was disintegrating.
Mao’s Long March started the same month. Japan was encircling China.
The Chinese people were starving to death. "At the close of
October in 1935, the Chinese had reached their limit of patience
– even endurance. They proposed the sale of a huge amount of silver
in preparation for putting their money on a paper basis. On November
3 they nationalized all domestic silver and ordered it exchanged
for paper notes. China was the last major nation to abandon the
silver standard." In Lyric Hale’s words, "China was truly
an accidental Communist county."
In a sad reenactment,
the U.S. Senate drafted legislation in July 2007 to "boost
pressure on China to let its currency rise in value." If passed,
this will include heavy tariffs on imported goods. Wal-Mart shoppers
may be surprised to see prices rise 30%. In a sad recreation of
Morganthau, current U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson flew to
China the following week "to warn top Chinese leaders that
Congress will move ahead with legislation unless the yuan appreciates
in value." Paulson’s mind seems to be a muddle. When he departed
on an April trip to Beijing: "U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry
Paulson said… he is ‘a big believer in a strong dollar’ but reiterated
that China's currency needs to appreciate more against the greenback."
Paulson persisted: "As I think you know, I believe very strongly
that a strong dollar is in our nation's interest, and I'm a big
believer in currencies being set in a competitive, open marketplace."
The Chinese negotiators may be left asking themselves: "If
the head money-changer from Goldman Sachs thinks you can appreciate
and depreciate a currency at the same time, what do Americans want?"
It only grows
less comprehensible. The politicians want to devalue the dollar,
yet it is on the verge of a collapse. In such circumstances it is
a noble sentiment of presidential candidate Hillary Clinton to campaign
for a bullet-proof dollar. According to the Daily Telegraph:
"[She] has called for restrictive legislation to prevent America
being ‘held hostage to economic decisions being made in Beijing,
Shanghai, or Tokyo.’ She said foreign control of over 44% of the
US national debt had left America acutely vulnerable." The
second sentence is true; the first sentence is preposterous. A practical
application of Clinton’s proposal might ban the Chinese from buying
American securities, or, demand all Americans to pay off their mortgages
immediately (thus retiring the billions of dollars worth of American
mortgages the Chinese government was kind enough to mop up.)
The Communist
Party of China has enough domestic woes of its own without this
nonsensical blustering: The fragility of the Chinese banking system
is comparable to that of 1934; the millions of unemployed Chinese
might whip up their own Long March. Perhaps this is why the authorities
issued their "nuclear option" on August 8, 2007. He Fan,
a government official, reminded the world’s greatest spendthrift
to bother someone else: "China has accumulated a large sum
of U.S. dollars. Such a big sum, of which a considerable portion
is in U.S. Treasury bonds, contributes a great deal to maintaining
the position of the dollar as a reserve currency…. China is unlikely
to [sell dollars] as long as the yuan's exchange rate is stable
against the dollar." If not, "the Chinese central bank
will be forced to sell dollars once the yuan appreciates dramatically,
which might lead to a mass depreciation of the dollar."
In response,
Senator Graham warned the Chinese "to work with us to achieve
meaningful currency reform rather than issuing draconian threats.
Congress has been incredibly patient on this issue, and the consequences
of inaction without real reform are too great to many sectors of
our economy." This is populist rambling with no substance.
Just how would the U.S. close the trade gap if the dollar was devalued
by 30% – by 50%: ship 200 tons of socks to Shanghai Harbor?
In the wake
of Graham’s warning, President Bush told the Chinese they would
be "foolhardy" to sell U.S. dollars. Bush expanded by
describing his ambition to "encourage the Chinese to go from
a savings economy to a consumer economy." This would seem to
be for the Chinese to decide. Hank Paulson told CNBC selling dollars
would be "absurd." Possibly so, but the debtor is not
in a position for its head-of-state and chief-currency-negotiator
to mock its primary dealer. Even the most arrogant, highly-leveraged,
insolvent hedge fund manager knows that. Well, maybe not.
Samuel Johnson
best described the past seventy-five years of nonsense: "Knowledge
without integrity is dangerous and dreadful."
August
22, 2007
Fred Sheehan
[send him mail] is
finishing a biography of Alan Greenspan. He writes frequently for
the Gloom, Boom & Doom Report, Whiskey & Gunpowder and the Prudent
Bear website. He has worked in the financial industry for more than
two decades. This was reprinted from Whiskey
& Gunpowder.
Copyright
© 2007 Fred Sheehan
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