To inform, confuse, and enlighten; in economic matters as well as philosophical ones. Jørund Holterud Aarsnes and Stephan Andreas Jensen write on economics and the human condition.
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Category — China

The Future of Capitalism (and economics)

The opening session today in the ongoing OECD Forum 2010 was on the future of capitalism, where economic historian Anatole Kaletsky argued that “we’re entering a new period of pragmatism, when ideology will give way to a more “common sense” approach.” Arguably, this is not such a radical notion; the financial crisis has shown in a dramatic way that there have been some serious cracks in what has commonly been accepted as “good” economic policy. It is easy to blame greed and carelessness in the financial sector, but that hardly goes to the heart of the problem. At the end of the day, even if the greed and carelessness of a few “evil bankers” really is to blame, policy has to change if the economic structures have been conducive to making it cause despair for millions of people.

Aside from highlighting dysfunctional economic structures and the need for reform, a very immediate consequence of the crisis is that Governments have been [Read more →]

May 28, 2010   No Comments

China, the Next Big Blow up? Excessive Exports a Risk Factor?

The Fall of Icarus by Rubens 1633

Intuitively, large foreign account reserves should be a cushion against runs on the local currency especially for countries with high foreign debt levels or lots of foreign investments that at some point need to be repatriated. If you don’t have enough foreign currency to repay, crisis will surely follow as we have seen during the many Latin-American or Asian balance of payment crises. As such, China’s enormous reserves of about 5-6 percent of global GDP should be reassuring, but as Michael Pettis explains the risks that threaten large developing countries are quite different from those smaller countries can experience.

“The risks that China faces today (and the US in the late 1920s and Japan in the late 1980s) is of excessive domestic liquidity having fueled asset and capacity bubbles, the latter requiring the uninterrupted ability of foreign countries to absorb via large and growing trade deficits. These risks include an explosion in domestic government debt directly and contingently through the banking system.”

Quite similar to what countries rich in natural resources often experience, where large inflows of foreign currency and current account surpluses cause bubbles to arise. And importantly, as foreign reserves cannot be used to solve the problems the solution lies domestically through higher interest rates, less lending, stronger currency and consequentially a less competitive export industry.

We all know what happened to the US and Japan, hopefully China will manage better.

Read the whole post over at China Financial Markets here

-Jørund

February 6, 2010   No Comments