Category Archives: China

Renminbi to Fall Next Year?

One of the trades that looked like a no-brainer was betting on continued appreciation of the Chinese renminbi. In fact, so strong was the confidence in this outlook that China suffered from large-scale hot currency inflows (as recounted ably by Brad Setser) despite the official obstacles. A top investment bank in China is now forecasting […]

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China: Less, Not More, Capitalistic?

Reader Michael passed along the Economist review of a new book, Capitalism with Chinese Characteristics: Entrepreneurship and the State by Yasheng Huang, which turns conventional wisdom about China on its head. It contends that, post-Tiananmen Square, new Chinese leadership shifted its approach to economic development to one that had more state direction than before, and […]

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China Looking Vulnerable

Ambrose Bierce, in The Devil’s Dictionary, defined an alliance as: In international politics, when two thieves have their hands plunged so deeply into each other’s pocket that they cannot separately plunder a third party. The corollary is that when your ally stumbles, you fall down too. China is learning that lesson the hard way. By […]

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"China’s Central Bank is Short of Capital"

Either the Chinese do not understand banking and investing or the line being fed the Western press about the struggle over the Bank of China’s reserves is a cover story of some sort. Given the fact set, Dean Baker’s reaction ‘Is China’s Central Bank Run By Morons?” is not unreasonable. I have a different theory, […]

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Stephen Roach: China Needs to Get Tough About Inflation

Morgan Stanley economist and Asia chief Stephen Roach’s current offering at the Financial Times, “Beijing’s Olympian task is to curb inflation,” says that the Chinese officialdom is focusing overmuch on growth in its policy mix. And Roach most assuredly believes that a serious slowdown is just starting. The article oddly underplays its bottom line. China […]

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Bank of China Cuts GSE Holdings by 25%

We wrote yesterday about Japanese retail and institutional investors exiting Freddie and Fannie holdings, and didn’t consider it as worrisome as it might seem on the surface, since at this juncture, the funding of our current account deficit is coming almost from central banks and to a lesser degree, sovereign wealth funds. Tonight, the Financial […]

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China Considering Stimulus Package, Oh My!

If you had any doubt that China would remain unaffected by the global slowdown, that should be put to rest by various stories discussing that the Chinese government is mulling a stimulus package. Yes, you could argue that the economy might need a tap on the gas pedal to compensate for all the factory closings […]

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"China: Humiliation & the Olympics"

This is a great piece by Orville Schell in the New York Review of Books. These essays tend not to lend themselves to editing, but this one does in reviewing several works both for their immediate content and how they relate to the larger issue of China’s deeply held sense of insecurity. I’ve taken the […]

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China Desk

Brad Setser thinks that China is again holding the RMB down to maintain export volume in the face of softening global demand. From the comments (my emphasis): China prefers subsidizing US consumption of Chinese goods to subsidizing Chinese consumption of Chinese goods… if China’s foreign asset accumulation continues at $800b a year, it will add $3.2 […]

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