Eichengreen

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I have been on the road for the past few (and next ten) days, in part because of Spring Festival, so I haven’t been able to post as much as I normally do, but I was asked to write an article for a Chinese magazine, which I recently finished, on comparisons between today and the beginning of the 1930s.\’a0\’a0 As the recognition grows around the world of the similarities between China in 2008 and the US in 1929, it is worth considering why the Great Depression in the US was so severe and what lessons China should draw from it.\’a0 I and a few others have discussed one of the similarities so many times and in so many different places that I think by now the whole issue of the trade impact of US overcapacity in the 1920s and 1930s and how it relates to China today is pretty widely recognized.

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But there is more.\’a0 I just finished rereading Barry Eichengreen’s Golden Fetters, a book on monetary conditions in the 1920s and 1930s (and in my opinion one of the great books of financial history).\’a0 One of the points he makes \’96 in fact it is probably the main point of the book \’96 is the way currency policies (i.e. adherence to the gold standard) sharply constrained the ability of policymakers to deal effectively with the monetary consequences of the 1929-31 crisis.\’a0 It wasn’t until various affected countries escaped from their monetary handcuffs and rejected gold that monetary policy became flexible enough to permit them to loosen sufficiently to counteract the banking collapse that accompanied the crisis.\’a0 Eichengreen makes the point often and forcefully that there was a strong positive correlation between the speed with which countries went off the gold standard and the mildness of the subsequent economic crisis.

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As an aside I would add my impressionistic sense that countries that ran large balance of payments surpluses (most obviously the US, but there were others too) were in the strongest position to hang on to gold, and so were the last to go off gold.\’a0 They were also the ones most harmed by the 1930s crisis.\’a0 I am not sure if this is primarily because of the monetary straitjacket or because most countries with strong balance of payments positions were also countries with large trade surpluses, and so they suffered most from a contraction in global demand and a collapse in international trade, but I suspect that the two are very closely linked.

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Let me summarize my view of the key conditions in the 1920s and 1930s that shed light on current conditions.\’a0 Besides the standard impact of the 1929 crash on consumer confidence, domestic consumption, and the cost of capital, economists generally speak of two factors that compounded the difficulties facing the US economy:

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  1. The first I have discussed many times.\’a0 Throughout the 1920s, the US created significant industrial overcapacity, which it was able to export even as massive foreign borrowing in the US markets financed those exports.\’a0 However just when the 1929 crash caused US consumption to decline, it also eliminated foreign financing for the trade deficit countries.\’a0 As international trade collapsed \’96 especially after the US tried to force the adjustment abroad by the passage of import tariffs \’96 domestic demand was not nearly high enough to absorb everything US factories produced, and the US was forced to resolve its overcapacity problem domestically.\’a0 It could have done so by increasing domestic government demand, as Keynes advised, but although the US was in a very strong position fiscally, it failed to take advantage of this strength and barely expanded government spending.\’a0 This ensured that overcapacity would not be resolved by rising government demand but rather by factory closings and rising unemployment.\’a0 Of course the passage of Smoot-Hawley and other mercantilist acts, by inviting retaliation, made the process much more difficult.
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  3. To make matters worse, excess money expansion caused by the massive accumulation of reserves in the 1920s had led to over-investment and risky lending.\’a0 The stock market crash set off the process of deleveraging that always signals the end of a liquidity boom, and banks, financing companies and securities firms saw their balance sheets contract.\’a0 When the Federal Reserve failed to accommodate the sudden collapse in money supply as banks cut lending in response to the crisis, the resulting money contraction in the US converted a sharp economic slowdown into a disaster.\’a0 According to Milton Friedman (and I think most other economists) this was the biggest policy blunder that ensured that the crisis would be so devastating.
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Compared to the US in 1929 China fares better on some measures, but not all.\’a0 The first and most obvious is the scale of China\’92s overcapacity problem.\’a0 China\’92s trade surplus, the cleanest measure of overcapacity, is of the same magnitude as that of the US in 1929 \’96 roughly 0.5% of global GDP \’96 but its economy is less than one-fifth the relative size of the US in 1929.\’a0 Resolving the overcapacity problem will be much more difficult for China, especially if the world descends into trade friction and if international trade contracts.\’a0 For that reason China must be at the forefront of trade liberalization and avoid the mistake the US made in 1930 of trying to increase its export competitiveness and reduce domestic demand for foreign goods.\’a0 In that direction lays trade friction, which would have a devastating impact on Chinese businesses.

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Perhaps not nearly as strong as the US in 1930, China is nonetheless in a reasonably strong position fiscally \’96 although municipal reliance on land sales for revenues, contingent liabilities in the banking system and in provincial and municipal borrowing, and overall lack of transparency, make it difficult to judge.\’a0 More importantly, however, there is widespread recognition among policymakers, unlike in the 1930s, that rapid and forceful fiscal expansion is key to creating new demand.\’a0 Unfortunately it is not yet clear exactly how aggressively the Chinese government will expand fiscally and whether it will do so fast enough to replace declining US and European imports.

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The second point may be the more important.\’a0 Like the US in the 1920s China experienced a huge run-up in central bank reserves and, as the inevitable counterpart, low interest rates and excessive money supply growth.\’a0 When this happens the financial system often responds by taking on excessive credit risk and over-investing.\’a0 Given the complexity of the China\’92s formal and informal banking systems and the lack of transparency, it is difficult to know how vulnerable the banking sector is, but it is clearly something about which to worry.\’a0 Warren Buffett once quipped that you can never know who is swimming naked until the tide goes down.\’a0 The tide is receding and we are about to see how many naked bankers there are.

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How the PBoC will respond to any signs of sharp money contraction is probably the most important question to answer and also the most difficult.\’a0 On the optimists’ side the mistakes made by the US central bank in the 1930s have been so widely discussed that there is no question that Chinese policymakers understand the risk.\’a0 The PBoC will undoubtedly do all in their power to counteract any monetary or credit contraction.

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But things are not so easy.\’a0 In the 1930s as long as the US was on the gold standard, it had limited flexibility in dealing with domestic monetary management.\’a0 This is one of Eichengreen’s key points.\’a0 Once the US got off the gold standard in 1933 it was able to pursue a wholly independent monetary policy, but its failure to counteract the initial credit contraction was a blunder with huge implications, and one from which it was only able to recover after tremendous pain.\’a0 Certainly the PBoC would not make the same choice this time around, would it?

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But can it choose differently?\’a0 Unfortunately the PBoC is not as free to manage domestic monetary policy as the Fed was after 1933 because its primary obligation is to manage the foreign exchange value of the currency.\’a0 This means that a crucial aspect of monetary policy in China is determined largely by net inflows or outflows on the trade and capital account.

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The PBoC has other tools: most importantly its influence on credit creation (I am skeptical about the usefulness of open market operations) which it can expand partly by reducing the minimum reserve requirement for banks and partly by moral suasion within the banking system, but I am not sure how effective this is likely to be.\’a0 Remember that much of the credit expansion from previous years seems to have migrated off the balance sheets of commercial banks (including into the informal sector) when the PBoC tried to constrain credit growth.\’a0 In my opinion when underlying monetary conditions are consistent with rapid credit expansion there, is little the regulators can do to prevent this from happening.\’a0 At best they can decide whether it happens in the regulated parts of the system or whether it simply migrates to other areas.

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The reverse is also likely to be true.\’a0\’a0 Attempts by the PBoC and other policy-makers to force banks to expand credit may result in higher loan growth reported on bank balance sheets, but overall credit growth within the economy is likely to be much less.\’a0 If the underlying money supply is consistent with contracting credit, the system will most likely see contracting credit (and I am saying nothing about the possibility that much of the formal credit expansion reported by the banks will consist of empty lending into future NPLs).

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With international trade falling, it is probably only a question of time before China\’92s trade surplus begins to shrink sharply (although a number of commentators who I respect a lot, including Brad Setser, might disagree with me on this), and as I wrote last week there is mounting evidence that some of the hot money that poured into China one year ago is now starting to leave.\’a0 This suggests that China may begin to see rapid contraction of foreign currency holdings and, with it, a contracting domestic money supply.

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This may be the biggest unexpected risk China faces.\’a0 We must remember that as long as the main task of monetary policy is to set the value of the RMB in foreign currency\’a0 terms, the PBoC has limited ability to manage the domestic money supply.\’a0 If net outflows are large in 2009, the PBoC may be forced to preside over a monetary contraction, and this would be exacerbated if there were problems in the banking system that caused formal and informal banks to cut lending.\’a0 This would undoubtedly worsen China\’92s difficult economic adjustment to the problem of overcapacity.\’a0 It is vitally important that Chinese policymakers recognize the monetary constraints under which they work and prepare contingency plans.\’a0 China can learn a lot from the mistakes of US policy in the 1930s.

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By the way whenever I say that money outflows could become a problem for China, inevitably someone rushes in to pour scorn on the idea that China is vulnerable to a 1997-style Asian crisis.\’a0\’a0 I agree it isn’t, and I will repeat (again) that this is not and never has been the point of my concern about hot money outflows.\’a0\’a0 China does not have a currency mismatch risk worth bothering about.\’a0 The reason to worry about hot money outflow is that it has a domestic monetary impact.

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Between the holiday slowdown and the number of writing commitments I have it has been a little too easy to neglect my blog. What free time I have has been spent reading, and I am reading for the third time what I think is one of the best books ever written on financial history \’96 Barry Eichengreen\’92s Golden Fetters: The Gold standard and the Great Depression.
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Eichengreen\’92s book has an awful lot to tell us about our own current crisis, as does any good book on financial history. In spite of all the unending nonsense written about what went caused the financial crisis this time around \’96 derivatives, securitization, deregulation, greedy bankers, overpaid traders, fraudulent behavior \’96 the fact is that financial crises going back over at least 2000 years are disconcertingly familiar, and have nearly identical consequences and processes, even when they include none of the conditions blamed for the current mess. To focus on those particular triggers as being the main causes of the crisis is what I would call the \’93trigger fallacy.\’94 They are merely the symptoms of the underlying problem \’96 excess liquidity, which the financial system is forced into accommodating by taking on increasingly levels of risk, either inside or outside the regulated areas.
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Not surprisingly then it is impossible to read Eichengreen\’92s book in the current economic climate without several \’93aha!\’94 moments, but this passage (pp. 11 of the 1992 edition) I found particularly interesting:
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The arrival of the Fed on the international scene was a significant departure from the pre-war era. Disputes between New York and Washington rendered the new institution unpredictable. Until the Banking Act of 1935 consolidated power, considerable influence was wielded by reserve city bankers from the interior of the country with little exposure or sympathy for international considerations.

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Eichengreen is discussing how the advent of the US as a major financial center changed the \’93rules of the game\’94 involving cooperation between the major European central banks \’96 mainly the UK, France and Germany \’96 when the closest thing to a US counterpart was the very well-managed and internationalist House of Morgan. During the end of the 1920s and beginning of the 1930s the Fed\’92s role became increasingly prominent and increasingly erratic especially after the death of Benjamin Strong, who ran the New York Federal Reserve Bank and who had a very strong relationship with Montagu Norman, the Governor of the Bank of England.
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The point is that before power was consolidated under the Chairman of the Federal Reserve System in Washington DC, the US central bank consisted of 12 regional banks with quite a lot of independent power, and the regional banks tended to be, not surprisingly, more parochial, more beholden to the dominant economic interests of their region, less understanding of the US role within the global system, and less sympathetic to the need for the US to behave in a manner befitting what was later dubbed a \’93global stakeholder.\’94
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This had consequences. It was very hard for the US central bank to act in a consistent way to manage its proper role within the global context, and this failure not only created a very debilitating uncertainty, but also ensured that parochial interests trumped international interests even when the US was better off parochially from understanding its role within the international context. For example US trade policies aimed at helping regional economic interests at the expense of the outside world ultimately ensured both a collapse in international trade and, as result of the US position of overcapacity, a brutal collapse in US capacity.
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What does this have to do with China? Perhaps nothing, but I am of course not the first to observe that the PBoC has very little independence and is largely beholden to the State Council and senior officials within the Standing Committee for its policy decisions. This is, in itself, not a problem and might even result in better coordination between the country\’92s treasury and central bank functions. However there are persistent rumors of serious disagreements among senior policymakers and especially a split between one camp, dominated by provincial leaders more concerned about social issues arising from unemployment and income inequality, and another camp, based in the major international center and more concerned about macroeconomic imbalances at both the national and global levels.
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Is there a possibility that the PBoC will find itself, like the Federal Reserve in 1929-31, riven by very different understandings of the country\’92s role within the global crisis and with different priorities in resolving the crisis \’96 ones that misconstrue how the global adjustment will affect China\’92s adjustment? I have no idea, and perhaps the game of finding parallels between 1929 and 2008 gets a little carried away at times, but it is worth considering that monetary policy-making in China has not always been consistent and, like most major policy-making, can be easily subject to competing views of Chinese political priorities and China\’92s role within the crisis.
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This is not to say that the illusionary triumph of parochial over global interests is inevitable, as occurred in the US in the 1930s, but it certainly is a possibility. This is yet anther reason why I am convinced that US, European, Japanese, and especially Chinese leaders need to get a clear macro picture of what the global balance of payments adjustment will mean for each country, and give up the silly blame game to work out a reasonable long-term period (at least three or four years), during which time China can adjust to the global adjustment. Any quick adjustment will be bad for the world and devastating for China.
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But the prospects for understanding don\’92t look good. Local newspapers are filled with worried articles about rising unemployment, and on Saturday Premier Wen made an unscheduled and very surprising visit to one of our academic neighbors. According to an article in today\’92s People\’92s Daily:
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Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao has pledged to university student that the government would seek to provide more jobs for graduates and “put the issue of graduate employment first.” “Your difficulties are my difficulties, and if you are worried, I am more worried than you,” Wen told the students at the Beijing University of Aeronautics and Astronautics. Wen made the remarks in a surprise visit on Saturday afternoon.

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\’85He said the country is in a difficult period as the global financial crisis has continued affecting the country’s real economy. The government has begun measures to sustain the economy, such as the four-trillion-yuan stimulus package and interests cuts. “We are considering taking more measures at proper time. But currently we are most concerned about two issues, migrant workers returning home and employment for graduates,” Wen said.

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The financial crisis and China’s slowing economic growth has forced 4 million migrant workers to return to their rural homes, according to a report from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. The report also said as of the end of this year, 1.5 million graduates are likely to have failed to find jobs, and the country could see an ever tougher employment situation in 2009 as there will be about 6.1 million seeking jobs (from 5 million last year).

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Other headlines fret about the mass migration \’96 well before the traditional Spring Festival period \’96 of unemployed workers returning to their rural homes. According to an article in Friday\’92s South China Morning Post:
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Up to 9 million migrant workers have left coastal areas this year amid diminishing job prospects and falling wages, prompting fears that unemployment in inland provinces may increase sharply next year. Home-bound migrant workers have packed major railway stations in major cities, catching the central government by surprise because the traditional passenger peak arrives just before the Lunar New Year, which is late next month.

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There is still more about the rise of criminal gangs, more protests, and all the other indications of social tension. In these circumstances it is not hard to see why policymakers may decide that short-term unemployment pressures trump the global balance of payments adjustment, and push to subsidize and encourage more production, rather than worry about rapidly expanding domestic consumption. This would, of course, only exacerbate the Chinese overcapacity problem and increase the likelihood of trade tensions which, if they lead to global protectionism, could scuttle any chances of China\’92s recovering from the crisis. I guess this is exactly what they mean by \’93between a rock and a hard place.\’94
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One other thing to discuss before I finish this long posting \’96 Bloomberg posted the following article today:
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China\’92s foreign exchange reserves dropped for the first time in five years as a result of the global financial crisis, Market News International reported, citing Cai Qiusheng, head of the investment management bureau under the State Administration of Foreign Exchange. The current figure must be lower than the peak of about $1.9 trillion, Cai told a trade forum in Beijing over the weekend, the English-language wire service said. He didn\’92t specify which period he was referring to or give a figure.

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I am not really sure what is going on. We used to get regular and reliable monthly leaks about reserve figures but these have pretty much dried up since June, just as we needed the numbers more than ever. The last official numbers were released for September \’96 they are released on a quarterly basis \’96 and put reserves at $1.9056 trillion. The latest \’93leak\’94 claims reserves are at $1.89 trillion, which with rounding suggests that reserves declined in two months by somewhere between $10 and $20 billion.
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Of course we are all very eager to get a better breakdown of the recent figures so that we can estimate hot money flow directions. But given the we have had two world-record-smashing trade surplus months in a row since September, amounting to $75 billion (and three monthly world records before that), not to monition positive FDI inflows of $14 billion and about $10 billion of interest income in the past two months, it is very unlikely that the dollar value of the various non-dollar reserves can have declined by even a significant fraction of $99 billion increase in reserves from trade, FDI and interest income in the past two months (or the $110-120 billion implied by the new reserve numbers). Does this mean there has been significant hot money outflow? Perhaps, but without real numbers it is tough to want to conclude anything. January\’92s central bank data release promises to be very, very interesting.
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But there\’92s more. My friend Victor Shih published a very good Op Ed article in the Wall Street Journal Asian last week. You can find it on his blog. He discusses how the new fiscal expansion plans \’96 which are seriously constrained by structural impediments in the economy \’96 are likely to cause significant pressure for bank \’93participation,\’94 and this pressure is unlikely to lead to improved banking practices. He concludes:
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In any event, everyone is too preoccupied with their own losses to comment on Chinese policies. Which is a problem, not least for China itself. With enormous political pressure from the central government to pump money into the economy and silence from the rest of the world, much of the work in the past decade is being undone.

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What will happen to all this money? Stephen Green \’96 one of the best bank research analysts on China, in my humble opinion \’96 just published a research report called China \’96 The best-laid plans of mandarins and ministers in which he tries to tabulate the various spending plans being proposed at the national and provincial levels. Not surprisingly, he has a hard time figuring out the numbers \’96 one section of his report is titled \’93CNY 4trn, CNY 18trn, or CNY 320bn?\’94
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The government is so worried about a slowdown that there is almost a feeding frenzy over who can proclaim the most spending \’96 with very poor Hunan proposing $1.2 trillion in expenditures that surpass the entire US fiscal plan, as Green notes. Even if most of these proposals are rejected, clearly an awful lot of money is going to be spent awfully quickly with an awfully small amount of oversight. Elsewhere in the report Green notes:
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One suspects that corners are now being cut to get the money flowing again. The bureaucracy must also be exceedingly happy; it is commonly believed that 15-30% of the cost of a project is absorbed by \’91administrative\’92 fees, \’91consultancy\’92 fees, and the like (which raises the question of whether we should be discounting the CNY 4trn by 20% or so, and assuming these other funds will form part of 2009\’92s FX capital outflows). The Party\’92s corruption inspectorate is already preparing teams to monitor the use of public and bank funds. But it is, as they say, a big country.

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It certainly is. And yes, we should be increasing our estimates of hot money outflows next year.
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Happy holidays to all my readers. Unless there is a lot of important news in the next few days I will probably not post anything for a week. For those living in Beijing, we do have an outstanding Christmas Eve show at my music club, D22, and another outrageous night on New Year \’92s Eve. If you want a good feel for some of the best new music in China (and the world), don\’92t miss these two nights. Sorry for the advertisement, but the Beijing music scene is truly exciting.

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