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Dr. Peter Morici: Tuesday, analysts expect the US
Commerce Department to report the deficit on international trade in goods and
services was $39.0bn in May, down slightly from $40.3bn in April
because of lower oil prices.
Non-oil and petroleum imports are rising faster than exports, and the overall
trade deficit will increase sharply when oil prices rebound, threatening the
economic recovery.
President Obama has cautioned Americans about the dangers of another boom
financed by excessive borrowing; but unless the Administration implements
policies to reverse the huge trade deficits on oil and with China, the nation
risks economic stagnation or depression. The trade deficit rose dramatically
during the Bush expansion and was $66.4bn in July 2008. This depressed
demand for U.S.-made goods and services, causing layoffs in manufacturing and
supporting service industries, even as finance, housing, retailing, and other
industries grew more important.
Financing a trade deficit exceeding
5 per cent of GDP required massive capital inflows from China and other nations,
and those investments suppressed long-term interest rates and instigated
excessive risk taking in the bond market.
Reckless banking practices and shoddy bond ratings permitted the indiscriminate
securitization of mortgages and other consumer and business loans, bubbles in
residential and commercial real estate values, and overleveraging by consumers
and businesses.
When the bubble burst and consumers and businesses cut back spending, layoffs
spread from manufacturing through the entire economy and cascaded into the Great
Recession.
The trade deficit bottomed at $24.9bn in May 2009, just before the current
economic recovery began. Now, a rising trade deficit and continued weakness
among regional banks threatens to derail the recovery.
If the economy goes down a second time, it will not likely recover easily or
quickly. The unemployment rate will rise into the teens and conditions
reminiscent of the Great Depression will prevail through much of the nation.
Oil and consumer goods from China account for nearly the entire trade deficit,
and without a seismic change in energy and trade policies, the U.S. economy
faces grave peril.
President Obama’s efforts to halt offshore drilling and otherwise curtail
conventional energy supplies—premised on false notions about the immediate
potential of alternative energy sources—threatens to make the United States even
more dependent on imported oil, drive up the trade deficit and subvert the
economic recovery.
Detroit can build many more attractive and fuel-efficient vehicles now, but for
cumbersome union contracts and government regulations. A national policy to
replace the existing fleet would reduce imports and spur growth
President Obama’s soft policy toward China fails to address an even bigger
menace.
To keep Chinese products artificially inexpensive on U.S. store shelves and
discourage U.S. exports into China, Beijing undervalues the yuan by 40 per cent.
It accomplishes this by printing yuan and selling those for dollars to augment
the private supply of yuan and private demand for dollars. In 2009, those
purchases were about $450bn or 10 per cent of China’s GDP, and about 35
per cent of its exports of goods and services.
In 2010, the trade deficit with China reduces U.S. GDP by more than $400bn
or nearly three per cent. Unemployment would be falling and the U.S. economy
recovering more rapidly, but for the trade imbalance with China and Beijing’s
protectionist policies.
In June, China indicated it will adopt a more flexible exchange rate policy, but
it has made clear Americans should not expect a dramatic change in the value of
the yuan.
Simply, Beijing views its exchange rate policy as a tool for domestic economic
development; but this policy imposes high, chronic unemployment on the United
States and other western countries.
China recognizes President Obama is not likely to counter Chinese mercantilism
with strong, effective actions; hence, it offers token gestures and cultivates
political support among U.S. businesses with major investments in China.
President Obama should impose a tax on dollar-yuan conversions in an amount
equal to China’s currency market intervention divided by its exports—in 2009
that was about 35 per cent. For imports, at least, that would offset Chinese
subsidies that harm U.S. businesses and workers.
After diplomacy has failed for both Presidents Bush and Obama, inaction amounts
to appeasement and the wholesale neglect of President Obama’s obligations to
create jobs for U.S. workers and avert economic calamity.
Discussing
whether China is a currency manipulator or not, with John Rutledge, former
Reagan economic advisor; Peter Morici, University of Maryland and CNBC's John
Harwood:
Professor,
Robert H. Smith School of Business, University of Maryland,