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这还是我第一次给作者写信,感觉这个人还是很客气的,虽然我比较不客气。这是作者的原文。

本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛Undervalued yuan puts China in driver's seat

By BRIAN MILNER
Monday, July 7, 2003 - Page B2

Just take a stroll through the nearest mall if you want an up-close and personal view of one of the most contentious issues on the global economic stage today.

Check out the low price tags on everything from T-shirts, towels and toys to big-ticket TVs and laptop computers. Chances are they were made or at least partly assembled in China. And if not, they came from another source forced to match Chinese prices to stay in business.

Bargain-hunting shoppers have been keenly aware of this deflationary trend for some time. It's great for consumers, keeps retailers afloat and aggravates people trying to boycott Chinese goods.

No one anywhere seems able to beat China, whose export economy continues to roar ahead at a near-record clip while other countries are still struggling to get back on a growth track. Plentiful supplies of cheap labour and capital are important advantages. But the remarkable performance is in no small part the result of a deliberately undervalued and tightly controlled currency.

The Chinese yuan has been pegged since 1995 in a narrow trading range of about 8.3 to the U.S. dollar, whose recent weakness has probably been a bigger boon to the Chinese than to the ever-shrinking world of U.S. manufacturing. Currency watchers say this is far too low, given China's vast foreign exchange reserves and its huge trade surpluses.

Fred Hu, a China watcher with Goldman Sachs in Hong Kong, told Bloomberg News on Friday that the yuan is "modestly undervalued" by as much as 15 per cent. Others say the currency should be at least 20 or 30 per cent higher than its present level.

No one expects the Chinese to suddenly float their currency, ease exchange controls and leave the yuan's fate in the hands of market forces. But China is under growing pressure to do something about a serious imbalance that is inflicting considerable damage on struggling economies around the world. The United States, Japan and other developed countries are worried about the rapid decline of their manufacturing sectors, the prospect of global deflation and China's growing trade clout, while Third World competitors are fighting a losing battle in international markets.

It is not a level playing field. And as the Chinese win an ever-increasing share of global exports, they are starting to exert pricing power in a widening range of industries, from simple textiles to the most sophisticated electronics and machinery parts. Foreign producers are being forced to match them, taking a haircut on profits, which is not a good strategy for long-term survival.

Not even the SARS epidemic has slowed the Chinese export locomotive. In the first five months of this year, shipments of high-tech goods ballooned 55 per cent to $35.8-billion (U.S.). The Japan Electronics and Information Technology Industries Association, a business lobby that understandably keeps worried tabs on Chinese developments, forecasts that China will take over this year as the world leader in eight big-selling consumer items. Among them are TVs, DVD players, personal computers, car stereos, wireless phones and laptops.

Unlike Japan, which isn't used to getting clobbered in consumer electronics, the United States has been racking up losses on the merchandise trade front for years. But its latest dismal job numbers and gloomy manufacturing prospects may finally persuade the Bush administration that China has to be checked before it's too late.

The U.S. unemployment rate of 6.4 per cent in June was worse than had been expected and the highest in nearly a decade. But the really troubling news was the continuing plunge in manufacturing, where 56,000 more jobs disappeared. That brings the total manufacturing jobs that have evaporated in the United States during the Bush II era to more than 2.6 million.

There are numerous reasons for the decline, led by the steep cutbacks in capacity that followed the collapse of tech and telecom spending. But the fact is that even as the American pie has shrunk, the Chinese have been grabbing an ever-larger slice. China's trade surplus with the United States totalled $103-billion last year, a figure that trade specialists say could triple within five years. And all the tax cuts and pump-priming in the world won't fix the problem.

Chinese officials say they have no intention of changing what they regard as a successful policy that has provided stability, steered the country unscathed through the Asian currency meltdown of 1997 and cushioned the troubled domestic economy from even more severe shocks. But it is a costly and complicated policy that ties the hands of the central bank and alienates China's trading partners, foreign investors and its own companies in need of easier access to foreign currencies.

The rest of the world is still treading carefully when it comes to pressing China to revalue its currency. But self-restraint is in its own best interest, as government officials appear to acknowledge privately. There will be change, although it will be in small steps.

bmilner@globeandmail.ca更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
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Replies, comments and Discussions:

  • 枫下茶话 / 政治经济 / 今天给GLOBE AND MAIL的作者写信,关于他的关于人民币的文章。这家伙回信还很快。我的原信在此。
    本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛Dear Mr. Milner,

    I read your article titled "Undervalued yuan puts China in driver's seat".
    As a Chinese student, I feel the obligation to speak in this matter.

    First of all, as a matter of fact, I have to agree that Renminbi (The
    official name of Chinese currency) is indeed undervalued. But the influence it appears now is just because US dollars are weakened in this year. The rate was fixed at 8.3 for a few years. So I think we all agree it supposed to be overvalued 10 years ago when Chinese economy is not so strong. It is GREATLY overvalued especially in 1997 when all the currencies in Eastern Asia are weakened. But I haven’t seen anyone complain about that. And even ten years ago, when you checked the price tag on everything in Walmart, most of them are from China. (Nowadays I find more and more of them are from Vietnam) Currency is indeed a fact in export but not the only one.

    Secondly, I don’t think you can blame the unemployment rate growth of
    United States on China especially on Renminbi. If you study globalization
    carefully, manufacturing is not an industry that will survive in a developed country. When cheap labours are easy to find everywhere, why they bother to setup factories in US or Canada. And that is the same reason why so many call centers of US are located in Canada. Can we blame Canada for cheap labours?

    Thirdly, even China’s trade surplus with the United States totalled 103-billon last year, most of the money is made by business in States or Canada. If you see an IBM computer made in China, what is percentage really indeed made by Chinese? I would say 50% at most. If you count that factor, I don’t think the surplus is that huge.

    After all, this article is the first article I read from you. Only from this
    one, I don’t feel that you have in-deep knowledge to write on this matter specially something about Asia. Your idea is kind of stereotyped and this world is growing very fast.

    Thanks for your time reading my letter.

    Best regards,更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
    • 他的回信。
      Thank you for your thoughtful comments. You're quite right about the
      movement of cheaper goods such as clothing to Vietnam and other Third World
      countries. But the China-US trade facts speak for themselves. The
      $103-billion (US) Chinese trade surplus is the largest in history between
      two trading nations. It's true that multinationals reap part of the benefits
      from this, but currency controls make it extremely difficult to extract
      profits. Wal-Mart alone imports $12-billion worth of Chinese-made goods a
      year. That's more than all of the United Kingdom. An academic study I did
      not cite forecasts that within five to 10 years China will be the world's
      leading manufacturer and exporter of autos and auto parts. Soon, the big US
      and Japanese assemblers will be buying 70 per cent of their parts from
      Chinese factories, many of them owned, to be sure, by the Japanese and
      Americans. The cost of building a new plant in China, including land
      assembly, is exactly 5 per cent of the cost in Japan.
      • 我觉得他的回复可能没有切中你提到的要害处,如果考虑到货币利率没有一定利润存在,WALMART又为何要KEEP进口$12-billion 中国产品呢?
        • 我觉得也是,还是没有说利率并不是造成逆差的主要原因。
          • 我觉得你的信已经写得很客气和客观了,没觉着他的回信有多客气。BTW,你是干财务还是金融的?觉得你的思路清晰,佩服佩服啊。:D
            • 不是吧,其实我写之前还只有一个想法,写着写着就搞成了3个(TOEFL作文的作用)。有人夸奖可是不错,不过我可不是学这方面的。
    • 这还是我第一次给作者写信,感觉这个人还是很客气的,虽然我比较不客气。这是作者的原文。
      本文发表在 rolia.net 枫下论坛Undervalued yuan puts China in driver's seat

      By BRIAN MILNER
      Monday, July 7, 2003 - Page B2

      Just take a stroll through the nearest mall if you want an up-close and personal view of one of the most contentious issues on the global economic stage today.

      Check out the low price tags on everything from T-shirts, towels and toys to big-ticket TVs and laptop computers. Chances are they were made or at least partly assembled in China. And if not, they came from another source forced to match Chinese prices to stay in business.

      Bargain-hunting shoppers have been keenly aware of this deflationary trend for some time. It's great for consumers, keeps retailers afloat and aggravates people trying to boycott Chinese goods.

      No one anywhere seems able to beat China, whose export economy continues to roar ahead at a near-record clip while other countries are still struggling to get back on a growth track. Plentiful supplies of cheap labour and capital are important advantages. But the remarkable performance is in no small part the result of a deliberately undervalued and tightly controlled currency.

      The Chinese yuan has been pegged since 1995 in a narrow trading range of about 8.3 to the U.S. dollar, whose recent weakness has probably been a bigger boon to the Chinese than to the ever-shrinking world of U.S. manufacturing. Currency watchers say this is far too low, given China's vast foreign exchange reserves and its huge trade surpluses.

      Fred Hu, a China watcher with Goldman Sachs in Hong Kong, told Bloomberg News on Friday that the yuan is "modestly undervalued" by as much as 15 per cent. Others say the currency should be at least 20 or 30 per cent higher than its present level.

      No one expects the Chinese to suddenly float their currency, ease exchange controls and leave the yuan's fate in the hands of market forces. But China is under growing pressure to do something about a serious imbalance that is inflicting considerable damage on struggling economies around the world. The United States, Japan and other developed countries are worried about the rapid decline of their manufacturing sectors, the prospect of global deflation and China's growing trade clout, while Third World competitors are fighting a losing battle in international markets.

      It is not a level playing field. And as the Chinese win an ever-increasing share of global exports, they are starting to exert pricing power in a widening range of industries, from simple textiles to the most sophisticated electronics and machinery parts. Foreign producers are being forced to match them, taking a haircut on profits, which is not a good strategy for long-term survival.

      Not even the SARS epidemic has slowed the Chinese export locomotive. In the first five months of this year, shipments of high-tech goods ballooned 55 per cent to $35.8-billion (U.S.). The Japan Electronics and Information Technology Industries Association, a business lobby that understandably keeps worried tabs on Chinese developments, forecasts that China will take over this year as the world leader in eight big-selling consumer items. Among them are TVs, DVD players, personal computers, car stereos, wireless phones and laptops.

      Unlike Japan, which isn't used to getting clobbered in consumer electronics, the United States has been racking up losses on the merchandise trade front for years. But its latest dismal job numbers and gloomy manufacturing prospects may finally persuade the Bush administration that China has to be checked before it's too late.

      The U.S. unemployment rate of 6.4 per cent in June was worse than had been expected and the highest in nearly a decade. But the really troubling news was the continuing plunge in manufacturing, where 56,000 more jobs disappeared. That brings the total manufacturing jobs that have evaporated in the United States during the Bush II era to more than 2.6 million.

      There are numerous reasons for the decline, led by the steep cutbacks in capacity that followed the collapse of tech and telecom spending. But the fact is that even as the American pie has shrunk, the Chinese have been grabbing an ever-larger slice. China's trade surplus with the United States totalled $103-billion last year, a figure that trade specialists say could triple within five years. And all the tax cuts and pump-priming in the world won't fix the problem.

      Chinese officials say they have no intention of changing what they regard as a successful policy that has provided stability, steered the country unscathed through the Asian currency meltdown of 1997 and cushioned the troubled domestic economy from even more severe shocks. But it is a costly and complicated policy that ties the hands of the central bank and alienates China's trading partners, foreign investors and its own companies in need of easier access to foreign currencies.

      The rest of the world is still treading carefully when it comes to pressing China to revalue its currency. But self-restraint is in its own best interest, as government officials appear to acknowledge privately. There will be change, although it will be in small steps.

      bmilner@globeandmail.ca更多精彩文章及讨论,请光临枫下论坛 rolia.net
    • 不错,标准的TOEFL小作文结构,可以得5.5分 :-P
    • Good job, you made the points to challenge Milner's article. :D
    • Good Job, PigBrain!
    • One small suggestion: do not use Chinese characters for punctuation marks in English writing. They won't show up in an English Windows OS.