Comments on Inflation, Appreciation, or Reform

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Nomura Institute of Capital Markets Research Comments on Inflation, Appreciation, or Reform A Structural and Institutional Perspective on RMB and China s External Imbalance By Geng XIAO C. H. Kwan Nomura Institute of Capital Markets Research November 13, 2007

More to Agree than to Disagree The author correctly points out that: 1. The reduction in transaction cost (together with rising productivity) is an important factor contributing to the improvement in the competitiveness of Chinese products. 2. In the long run, the government can at best control the nominal exchange rate, but not the real exchange rate. There is a tradeoff relation between price adjustment and exchange rate adjustment. 3. The Balassa-Samuelson hypothesis suggests that a fast growing country should see its exchange rate appreciating in real terms, but this had not been observed in China until recently because of the existence of an immense amount of surplus labor in the rural areas. However, the Balassa-Samuelson effect is becoming more apparent as China approaches full employment (Lewis turning point). 4. China needs to reform its financial sector as US Treasury Secretary Paulson suggested (Paulson Plan). I have some reservations, however, regarding the author s denial of the possible role that exchange rate policy can play in redressing BOP imbalances.

A Policy-mix Approach Tinbergen's rule: Achieving a multiple number of independent policy targets requires an equal number of policy instruments. Mundell's rule: Each policy instrument should be assigned to a policy target on which it has the greatest relative effect. Exchange-rate policy cannot solve China s structural problems (state-owned enterprises, banks, agriculture). It should be assigned to reduce China s external imbalance.

China's Rising External Imbalance and Foreign Exchange Reserves 2006 ($ billion) 1200 1000 800 Net errors and omissions Capital account Current account Foreign exchange reserves Rise in foreign exchange reserves 600 400 200 0-200 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 (year) Note: Increase in foreign exchange reserves = current account balance + capital account balance + errors and omissions. Source: State Administration of Foreign Exchange http://www.safe.gov.cn/

The Mechanism behind the Rise in Foreign Exchange Reserves Yuan/dollar Stronger dollar, weaker yuan Current rate Amount of increase in foreign exchange reserves as a result of dollar buying intervention Dollar supply Equilibrium rate Weaker dollar, stronger yuan Dollar demand $

Liquidity Expansion - Mechanism, Effects and Policy Responses Policies aiming Balance-of-payments surplus at reducing BOP surplus Open market operations Interventions (Sterilization narrowly defined) Foreign exchange reserves Monetary base RMB revaluation Import promotion/ export restraint Liberalization of capital outflow Credit multiplier Deposit-reserve ratio Money supply Monetary tightening (Sterilization broadly defined) Liquidity effect Interest rates Consumer prices, assets prices

Is Exchange Rate Stability More Desirable than Price Stability? Japan s experience in the late 1980s McKinnon s hypothesis of ever higher-yen syndrome is irrelevant for China, because China s major concern now is expansion of an asset bubble rather than deflation. It was not a strong yen per se, but attempts by the monetary authorities to suppress the yen s appreciation through intervention in the foreign exchange market and monetary easing (by keeping interest rates low) that led to the bubble economy in the late 1980s. Hong Kong s experience following the Asian Crisis (1997-98) Hong Kong suffered negative GDP growth and negative inflation as a result of the Asian Crisis Overvalued HK dollar (relative to other Asian currencies which had depreciated sharply), together with the need to maintain high interest rates in line with the United States, delayed Hong Kong s recovery.

The "Impossible Trinity" in International Finance

Japan's Financial Situation at the Time of Transition to a Floating Exchange-rate System ($, bil.) 20 15 10 Foreign exchange reserves 5 0 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 (yoy, %) 30 25 M2+CD 20 15 10 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 (yoy, %) 80 60 Nikkei Average 40 20 0-20 1969 1970 1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 Source: Bank of Japan and Tokyo Stock Exchange.