E.R. Campbell said:Indeed, and plenty of other stuff, too, including much needed resources and lebensraum.
The return of the "Greater East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere."
E.R. Campbell said:Indeed, and plenty of other stuff, too, including much needed resources and lebensraum.
The return of the "Greater East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere."
Kirkhill said:Right now China and Russia can both agree on the need to co-operate to "catch-up" to "The West". When/if that day occurs is there anything in their mutual track-records to suggest that they can come an amicable distribution of assets?
I don't see a Russia-China based Asian Union as a viable option. Should I?
Russians are streaming out of Siberia while the Chinese are streaming in.
E.R. Campbell said:I don't think the SCO is meant to tie Russia in.
It is, I believe, a way to extend Chinese influence into Central Asia. Russia is "in" only because, to paraphrase Lyndon Johnson, China wants then "in the tent pissin' out" rather "outside pissin' in." I suspect, also, that China is doing a little not so subtle "nose rubbing" - letting the Russians see that after only a very few years Central Asia is now in China's sphere of influence.
The Chinese are deeply suspicious of Islam and of the "stability" of their Islamic neighbours. The separatists in Xinjiang are perceived to be a real, significant threat to China and, therefore, China needs to "control"the neighbourhood.
Thucydides said:In terms of resource development, China is facing a similar problem that Imperial Japan faced in the 1930's.
The Imperial Army faction wanted to expand from Manchuria into Siberia in order to secure the resources known and suspected to be there. The two down sides to the project were the vast expense of actually developing the resources from scratch out of the hostile Russian wilderness, and the Red Army. The Japanese defeats in a series of battles between the Imperial Army and the Red Army in 1938 in Northern Manchuria and outer Mongolia ended that particular line of thought.
The Imperial Navy supported aggression against European colonies in SE Asia, with the rational that most resources were already developed and therefore accessible, European Empires would be unable to resist Japanese incursions and the local peoples could be co-opted to act as a ready labour force. As it turned out, the Navy faction was right up to that point, but had totally miscalculated the response of the United States.
The Chinese might establish a defacto colony in Siberia through "squatter's rights", but I suspect they may have difficulty in mobilizing the manpower and resources to develop the resources in a timely manner (note; they can accomplish this with either a patient approach, or alternatively rape Siberia of whatever there is to grab and leave). On the other hand, looking south provides a source of well developed resources and markets, and the Chinese may well be content to act as notional overlords of a trading hub without establishing an actual presence. In the 1400's, the Chinese sent tribute fleets throughout the Indian ocean basin to proclaim their power and accept notional acceptance of their supreme place in the order of things by other regional powers, but never established colonies, cities, markets or any of the other signs of presence that we as Westerners would take for granted.
E.R. Campbell said:No worries, Bruce Monkhouse or CougarDaddy. Had I been offended by anything CougarDaddy said I would have told him so.
It is not an issue, for me. In many languages it is customary to address people by "titles" - when no "titles" (like "uncle" or "elder brother" or "comrade" or "master") are evident one falls back on to a single word name. I know two people who speak and write absolutely unaccented English; one would have no idea of their Chinese ethnicity until you hear them address one another or refer to one another - not as "Eric" and "Vanessa" but rather as "Bother" and "Sister," as in "Sister, have you seen my such 'n' such?" That is the form they inherited as part of their milk tongue - the language they learned at their mother's breast.
Serious students of a second language often pick up some of the linguistic habits of that language.
I don't know CougarDaddy's first language or his status re: other languages, but being addressed as "Campbell" does not jar and I do not take it as anything other than yet another linguistic peculiarity - I've gotten used to several over the decades.
He does not offend; I only wish I had his facility with languages; I only wish I was young again; it's a good thing I'm so devilishly handsome, eh?
Maybe a Mod could delete both these messages so as not to clutter up the thread with extraneous details ...
Your observation to Edward that because Zheng He was muslim and Chinese, and that there are other Chinese muslims, and therefore muslims will find a welcoming in China as a trusted member of the community seems to me to be a bit weak. In fact, IIRC, didn't the Emperor of the Day (Ming?) reject Zheng He's advice?
When we talk about "Chinese" moving into Siberia, are we talking about Beijing civil servants and Shaanxi farmers moving out to establish new communities on, essentially, virgin ground? Or are we talking about Uighurs and Mongols moving north to continue their traditional lives amongst distant relatives that are living the same lives? It seems to me that one is a threat to Beijing's hegemony and the other extends it.
Would the son of a farmer on the Han in Shaanxi move downriver to seek opportunity in Shanghai or would they consider moving upcountry to set up as a pioneer outside or Irkutsk?
So there's the other question: Is Beijing in control of its northern populations?
And finally, does that play into Beijing's fear of the chaos that might/will ensue when North Korea falls?
China's trillion dollars
Posted by Richard Spencer on 07 Jan 2008 at 21:48
Tags: China, Taiwan, South Korea, Japan, US, dollars
Last week I wrote a piece for the paper's comment pages putting forward the view that a trillion dollars wasn't a lot of money. It was another of my attempts, possibly self-serving, to play down the hype over the economic rise of China that has started to take hold of some areas of public life in the UK and beyond.
US Dollars
What does the Chinese government use to buy those dollars?
Self-serving? Because it's my job to hype China stories, and no-one else's, of course.
So you can say I'm biased, but in any case, re-reading the piece after publication I decided I ought to go on a bit more. I omitted for a general audience some of the economic niceties, so here for the suffering loyal reader they are, as I see them.
It's basically true that a trillion and a half dollars divided between a billion and a half people (that's the Chinese people, as in the People's Republic, which owns a trillion and a half dollars in foreign exchange reserves). However, that sounds a bit amateurish, and since I did check out some aspects of my theory with the professionals I thought I should flesh it out.
The attitude I was attacking is that attitude that states that by itself, China's admittedly huge forex reserves, as of last year the largest in the world, were an enormous sign of wealth which, as the government set it into action overseas, would see the idea that China was taking over the world become reality.
If you have a trillion and a half dollars, you can buy up swathes of western companies, hold indebted countries who have borrowed the cash (like the United States) in your thrall, and generally play at economic neo-colonialism.
There's one, to me, very dramatic counter-argument: if huge forex reserves make you a giant, what about other big forex holders. Let's not talk about such mighty titans as Qatar, or Taiwan, or South Korea. Let us instead talk of Japan, the only other country with (nearly) a trillion in reserves - and let's face it, no-one's been talking about Japan as a giant throwing its weight around in the last few years.
If a trillion in spare cash makes you a strong nation, what happened there?
There's a good answer, for which I am indebted in part to Michael Pettis, the hedge fund director/professor of finance at Beijing University whose blog follows this issue closely. (As with everyone I quote, wisdom is his, mistakes are mine.)
He points out that forex reserves seem like cash and sometimes are cash, but are also sometimes just an accounting issue.
While Qatar has made money by selling a dollar-denominated asset (oil), China has got those reserves like this: it sells lots and lots of stuff, nearly all in its own currency. It sells far more than it buys.
While that seems like a good thing, and is, you would expect its currency to rise, making its stuff more expensive and less buyable.
But China wants to stay competitive (and to keep its currency stable, which has other advantages) so it keeps the renminbi artificially low by buying up the dollars of the companies that have sold the "stuff" at an artificially high price. It also has to buy dollars off foreign companies investing in China. End result: it has lots of dollars, but overpriced ones.
Well, better to have overpriced dollars than none at all, it's true: the dollar is still the main reserve currency, and having them is a good hedge against the sort of currency crisis that afflicted much of Asia a decade ago. But still, you have bought an asset at too high a price - and, as we now see, that asset's value is decreasing all the time.
Still, better to have the asset - but just how valuable is it? Now here's the thing: what does the Chinese government use to buy those dollars? Of course, being the government, it can just print money.
But that's inflationary - no governments should just print money. It could pay it out of its budget - but what government has the hundreds of billions of spare dollar-equivalents necessary to build up those reserves?
In fact, it is largely issuing bills - ie, it is borrowing money off banks to buy the dollars. Michael Pettis tells me that no-one knows the exact details - it's that opaque thing, the party state, at work again - but a guess might be two-thirds of the forex reserves are matched by government bills. In other words, its net wealth is much, much smaller than a trillion and a half dollars.
There's an interesting way of looking at this (this is purely my own doing, and I welcome people telling me it's nonsense). Why are the banks lending money to the government on this scale to buy dollars? Remember that these are ultimately state-owned banks, which operate according to a mixture of commercial and political imperatives. Is this a good investment of their savers'/depositors/investors' money, or are they doing what they are told?
Well, there's the rub. Banks are difficult places for depositors: as we know, ordinary savings accounts attract very little interest, which is one reason people are flocking to the stock market and the property market.
Individuals are banned from investing abroad (say, in dollars) and it is also difficult for domestic financial institutions. Yet modern investment advice suggests that one should diversify one's holdings - I bet if you look at your pension/investment fund, if you have one, you will find that while most is in your home currency, some has been diversified to other currencies and their equities and other markets as a hedge. So this represents a sensible diversification by the banks.
Except the actual decisions on where to invest are not being taken by the banks, but by the state. The already nationalised assets of the banks have been renationalised once turned into dollars. And liberal economists would suspect that as with all state-run business decisions, the investments are not necessarily wise: as in, perhaps, putting your trillions in a fast-declining currency backed by an economy which appears to be in trouble.
Creating a sovereign wealth fund with some of the money (200 billion) looks like a sensible move, as that puts the investment fund at arms-length from the government. But how long is an arm?
We are waiting for that 200 billion to start buying up western companies, and some of it no doubt will - 3 billion has gone to the private equity firm Blackstone, and 5 billion to the troubled US investment bank Morgan Stanley.
But the biggest sums - 65 billion, more or less - has so far been ear-marked to bail out troubled Chinese banks. It's not being used to take over world-beating western companies yet!
In fact, it doesn't strike me at all as far-fetched to describe the forex reserves a nationalised pension fund. After all, their existence is part and parcel of a non-liberalised financial system which discourages long-term private pension fund building.
As we know from the Shanghai pension fund scandal, such pension funds as there are in China aren't necessarily the safest bets for your future, and they are, in total, rather small.
Last time I looked, the government's own pension funds were in the low tens of billions of dollars: compare that to the Japanese government pension fund which is the largest single pension fund in the world (guess what - it's around a trillion dollars).
So in a best-case scenario - where the government doesn't have to use the reserves to rescue itself from a currency crisis, or to bring them back home to pay off the debts it's taken out to buy them - the reserves represent a long-term, rather poorly invested savings fund.
In fact, they the government's major savings fund for all its many future dependent pensioners.
Which is why, with a number of elderly that will grow fast in the next couple of decades, a trillion dollars is not a large sum of money.
As I say, I'm not saying it's better not to have reserves than have them: but excessive reserves are a sign of something that's not quite right.
As with everything else (including the American sub-prime crisis) if growth continues, and reform happens, you could grow out of the underlying problem - the weakness of the financial system and lack of confidence in the industrial sector that causes the government to undervalue its currency.
Then you will be left with a healthy-looking, but not particularly enormous, starting point for future investment.
All well and good, though as I pointed out once before, a sum not unlike other country's (Japan's) pension funds, and not unlike the international holdings of big western wealth management firms. But nothing, in the overall view, so very spectacular.
At the moment, China's growth is heading in the right way, and the financial system is getting better. That's the best-case scenario, then. Let's just hope it continues.
Posted by Richard Spencer on 07 Jan 2008 at 21:48
Thucydides said:WRT the treasure fleets, I was perhaps glossing it over a bit too quickly, but considering the size and numbers of ships in the "Treasure Fleet", the actual Chinese presence in the Indian ocean basin was insignifigent, especially when compared to the results of much smaller and less organized incursions of the same area by the various European Empires shortly thereafter.
I was also under the impression that the large scale presence of Chinese people throughout SW Asia was the result of musch later disporias, including the recruitment of Chinese workers (voluntary or otherwise) to serve in the various European colonies. Regardless, they are there now....