The US current account deficit: dark matter or black hole?

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The US current account deficit: dark matter or black hole? Globalization Outlook: Its Impacts and our Region s Response March 30, 2006, Shawnee State University, Portsmouth, Ohio Ian Sheldon OSU AED Economics

Key indicators for the US economy GDP growing at annual rate of 3.3% US inflation rate rising 3.6% Interest rate 4.75%, 2 year bonds 4.79%, 10 year bonds 4.78% Fiscal deficit $427 billion 3.7% of GDP Current account deficit $805 billion 6.8% of GDP (2006 $1 trillion) 2

What is the US current account? Current account balance = Trade Balance Exports - Imports + Investment Income Return on Assets - Liabilities International Investment Position = Assets Liabilities (adjusted for capital gains) 3

The cumulative deficit. US Current Account and International Investment Position ($ billion) ($ billion) Net foreign assets Current account Cumulative current account Source: BEA 4

$ A black hole? External debt generating significant concern: the US is now on the comfortable path to ruin (Martin Wolf, Financial Times, 2004) any sober policymaker ought to regard the US current account deficit as a sword of Damocles over the global economy (Maurice Obstfeld and Kenneth Rogoff, 2005) Others claim: this is just confusion caused by an unnatural set of accounting rules (Ricardo Hausmann and Federico Sturzenegger, 2005) 5

Is there dark matter? Net foreign assets - $2.5 trillion in 2004 Yet US earned +$36.2 billion on assets in 2004 implying net foreign assets of +$724 billion given a 5% rate of return Income flow steady since 1980 net foreign asset stability, i.e., dark matter Dark matter results in current account stability 6

Effect of dark matter Current account with and without dark matter Current account with dark matter Current account without dark matter Source: BEA/IMF 7

What is dark matter? Difference due to dark matter : returns to US know-how provision of liquidity US earns a risk premium Story has serious problems: analysis sensitive to fixed rate of return $724 billion of assets in 2004 smaller in relation to overall economy compared to 1980 dark matter actually very unstable 8

Is the deficit made in China? Politicians see China as the culprit Yuan pegged to US$ for past decade, but abandoned in July 2005 Yuan would have to appreciate by 5-10% to even dent deficit China accounts for only a fraction of US trade deficit 9

Freeing up the Yuan 10

A lack of US savings? Net national saving at 2% of GDP lowest since the Great Depression Personal savings rate is negative Consumers borrowing against increasing house prices 13%/year Debt service at a record high 11

US savings rates 12

Is it Bernankeconomics? Dismisses twin-deficits argument Lack of US savings more likely due to external factors A global savings glut helps finance US trade deficit Link between growth and interest rates may not hold at present 13

Where is the glut though? 14

Investment vs. savings Low investment rates may explain low interest rates, but not imbalance between US and world Explanation lies in differing economic structures and policies: fiscal/monetary stimulus in US since 2001 China s savings rate and rising price of oil Asia has built up foreign-exchange reserves 15

Foreign-exchange reserves and US bonds Increased foreign exchange reserves 50% of US bonds purchased by foreign central banks in 2003/4 In 2004 foreign central banks financed 60-70% of US trade deficit US treasury bond yields determined in Beijing a balance of financial terror (Larry Summers, 2004) 16

Foreign exchange reserves 17

Why the build-up of reserves? 1997-98 Asian financial crisis Policies of export-led growth and pegged currencies in Asia Absorption of large Chinese labor force with high savings rate Weak domestic banking systems in Asia Need for international financial intermediation currency reserves provide protection against capital flight 18

A big bang? Asian central banks face huge risk by holding reserves in dollardenominated assets Decline in purchase of US bonds would cause US$ to depreciate Short-term rates and bond yields would have to rise End result global recession 19

Too pessimistic? Purchases of US bonds fell in 2005, yet US$ appreciated Recent currency depreciations followed by falling bond yields Investors believe inflation has been tamed by monetary authorities Greenspan may be right US imbalances will adjust gradually 20

Ian Sheldon Dept. of Agricultural, Environmental & Development Economics The Ohio State University 234 Ag Administration 2120 Fyffe Rd Columbus, OH 43210-1067 sheldon.1@osu.edu (614) 292-2194 http://aede.osu.edu/people 21