cash
SEOUL, South Korea
TENSIONS over currencies and trade gaps are simmering ahead of a summit of global leaders this week as America’s move to flood its sluggish economy with US$600 billion of cash triggers alarm in capitals from Berlin to Beijing.
The Group of 20 (G20) major rich and developing nations has taken on the role of reforming the world economy in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis. Its leaders first met two years ago and have set out an ambitious agenda to ensure stable economic growth, strengthen financial supervision to prevent another meltdown and give developing countries more of a voice.
But discussions on achieving those goals at the summit Thursday and Friday in Seoul are being complicated by the Federal Reserve’s decision to buy US$600 billion of Treasury bonds over the next eight months with the aim of lowering interest rates to spur growth and cut the high unemployment rate.
Export-reliant nations, many of them poor, fear the Fed move will drive more cash into their markets in search of higher returns, driving their currencies even higher and hurting manufacturers that provide jobs and security for fast-growing populations. At the same time, China has maintained tight control over its currency, the yuan, adding to criticism it is kept artificially low and gives Chinese exporters an unfair export advantage.
At the heart of the discussions is the recognition that a decades-long global economic order centred on the US buying exports from the rest of the world and running huge trade deficits while countries such as China, Germany and Japan accumulate vast surpluses is no longer tenable in the aftermath of the crisis.
“The present world economy is unbalanced,” Paul Volcker, a top economic adviser to President Barack Obama and a former Fed chief, said in Seoul last week. “It’s unbalanced in a way that can’t persist if we are going to have a thriving global economy.”
The attempt to give the world economy an extreme makeover has gotten some of its momentum from the rise of countries such as India, China and Brazil to become economic and political giants in their own right. The G20 meetings themselves are a sign of how much things have changed since the crisis. They symbolise the end of a system in place since the 1940s in which the world economy was managed largely by a handful of rich nations led by the United States, Europe and later Japan.
The forum, established in 1999, is a disparate combination of rich nations, developing economies, rising powers and consumers and producers of natural resources. The European Union is also a member. It took the financial crisis, however, to thrust the G20 into a position of global leadership, supplanting the Group of Seven club of advanced nations.
Besides discussing currencies and reducing trade gaps, G20 leaders are also likely to endorse proposals for beefing up supervision of large banks and other financial institutions. They are also widely expected to express support for a proposal to give developing countries more voting power at the International Monetary Fund and more seats on the board of the key global lender.
There is broad agreement within the G20 on the need for countries such as China to consume more, save less and let their currencies strengthen to become less reliant on exports for growth. But the questions of how fast, how to go about it and the role of US policies have caused divisions.
Recent debate centered on a US proposal unveiled at a G20 meeting of finance officials last month to set guidelines for when surpluses and deficits in the current account — a broad measure of trade and investment — become potentially destabilising.
Those officials agreed that G20 members will not use their currencies as trade weapons and will also work to come up with guidelines for current account gaps, calming fears of a trade war.
But tensions re-emerged when the Fed announced its bond buying plan last Wednesday. Aside from concerns about exports, the massive increase in the supply of dollars is a potential threat to the wealth of many nations because the bulk of
their foreign currency reserves are stored in dollar-denominated assets.
In Beijing, Vice Finance Minister Zhu Guangyao said Monday that China would have a “candid” exchange of views with the US and called the bond-buying plan “a shock to the stability of global financial markets”.
His criticism followed that of other G20 capitals. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble said he didn’t think the plan would work and that the Americans are “creating extra problems for the world”. Guido Mantega, Brazil’s finance minister, said the move would devalue the dollar and hurt Brazil and other exporters.
During an official trip to India, Obama backed the Fed’s decision and emphasised America’s interest in using the G20 to better balance the global financial system, taking a veiled hit at China’s resistance to letting its currency rise.
“We can’t continue to sustain a situation in
which some countries
are maintaining massive surpluses, others massive deficits, and there never is the kind of adjustments with respect to currency that would lead to a more balanced growth pattern,” he told reporters Monday.