by MrBill » Thu 12 Apr 2007, 09:56:17
Inflation, inflation, everywhere I look. What's a man to think? From the Rhyme of the Ancient Merchant Banker.
Let's start with US import & export prices.
US March import prices +1.7% vs. 0.8% f/c
+2.8% yoy
US March export prices +0.7% vs. 0.4% f/c
+5.3% yoy
US petroleum imports +9.0%
non-petroleam imports 0.03%
Forget rate cuts. The Fed is going to end up raising rates by 50 basis points, yet, if this does not mitigate soon. Even if the IMF forecasts meager 2.2% US growth in 2007.
While the IEA tells us that the Q1'07 drop in OECD petroleum inventories is the biggest in over 10-years practically guaranteeing that even the hurricane season aside that prices will remain high in 2007. Especially, if you add in strong growth in Asia and a weaker US dollar.
Don't expect much relief on the labor front either. Year on year wage gains as well as a tight work force are still pushing up secondary wage inflation as well.
And abroad?
China's foreign exchange reserves jumped to $1.202 trillion in February/March. While their trade surplus shrank slightly to $46.44 bio in Q1'07 vs. $67.75 bio in Q4'06. Still, M2 growth in China is a hefty 17.3%, while loan growth is 15.7%.
That means that as China sterilized its foreign exchange earning from exports that all that extra liquidity is finding its way into domestic assets prices in stuff like real-estate and apartments because let's face it there are no bonds to buy, and at 40-50X price to earnings the stock exchange does not look like much of a bargain there any more either.
I could not decide which parts of this article to re-print as I have no link, so here is all of it.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'D')on't read too much into the big slump in China's trade surplus last month.
The first quarter of the year is a volatile period for China's trade balance as factories change their work schedules and increase production before or after the Lunar New Year shutdown. By May, the data will stabilize.
Unless the world economy slows sharply, the Chinese trade surplus, which fell 71 percent from its February level to less than $7 billion in March, may return to where it was in the previous nine months: between $14 billion and $24 billion.
For several years now, the world has been anticipating a big reshuffle in the Chinese economy, one that would see domestic consumption gradually increase and the trade surplus abate. It hasn't happened yet; it may not for years.
If a balanced economy is one that doesn't consume too much less -- or too much more -- than what it produces, China is a long way from becoming one.
The deficiency of China's consumption isn't immediately apparent. Seven of the world's 20 biggest shopping malls are in China. Retail sales, as reported by the National Bureau of Statistics, rose 21 percent last year to 7.6 trillion yuan ($989 billion). That's a respectable $761 per capita, even higher than in some developed consumer economies, such as Malaysia.
This statistic, however, is misleading. A large part of ``retail'' sales in China should be seen as intermediate business expenditure masquerading as final consumer demand. Wholesale, catering and ``other'' trades are included in the number.
So how big is the retail market in China, really? Arthur Kroeber, the editor of China Economic Quarterly, estimates it to be about half the reported figure.
Retail in China
A $500 billion Chinese retail market would account for a fifth of the economy; India's $325 billion retail industry has twice as big a share in that country's gross domestic product.
UBS AG's chief Asia economist, Jonathan Anderson, makes the
same point differently.
A Chinese family that has a 100-square-meter (1,076-square- foot) house on mortgage, as well as a car loan, must earn about $18,000 a year. That gives a per-capita income of $6,000 for a family of three, the official household size in ``one-child'' China, he says.
China's average per-capita income is $2,700.
``Based on international experience with income distribution, the likely percentage earning twice as much as the average would be 10 percent,'' Anderson says.
According to his calculations, the real urban Chinese population is about 244 million, even though official figures put the number close to 600 million. So the core consuming urban middle class in China comprises just about 25 million people.
Missing Middle Class
If the UBS economist is right, the scope of China's challenge to boost consumption is immense.
On the one hand, 100 million Chinese factory workers are
flooding the world markets with every conceivable consumer product. On the other, there may be just 25 million urban Chinese who can buy goods made elsewhere in the world.
It's not that the remaining 1.275 billion Chinese don't count for global demand, though it's really just the urban middle class that has to drive import growth.
New York-based consulting firm McKinsey & Co. expects a transition from ``Made in China'' to ``Sold in China.'' Increasing affluence will create a 19 trillion-yuan, or $2.5 trillion, urban consumer market in China by 2025, it says. That will compare quite favorably with the current level of U.S. personal consumption of $9.3 trillion.
More than three-fifths of this demand would come from the middle class, or ``upper aspirants,'' as McKinsey researchers call them.
Growing Imbalances
A large consumer market in 2025 is of no consolation to China's policy makers today. In the short run, the only way for them to balance the economy will be to sacrifice some export growth. For one, the serious environmental damage from China's overgrown manufacturing industry needs a response.
How long would the nation want to carry the dubious distinction of having 20 of the world's 30 most-polluted cities?
Besides, China's strained trade relations with the U.S. can only get worse. Senators Charles Schumer and Lindsey Graham have
withdrawn their 2005 legislation proposing punitive tariffs on
Chinese goods. The senators aren't keeping quiet, though.
They have now joined hands with Max Baucus and Charles Grassley, the top Democrat and Republican respectively on the Senate Finance Committee, to come up with an alternative measure to force China to revalue its currency. This time, the threat of the U.S. Congress enacting a law may be much more real.
The rest of Asia's independent access to industrialized markets is shrinking. Research cited by the World Bank in its latest East Asia update shows clearly that China has gained market share in the U.S. in computers, peripherals and semiconductors at the expense of other East Asian economies.
Other Asian nations are keeping their export engines running by supplying to China, though that's not where the final consumers are.
It may be unrealistic to expect another yuan revaluation, though quicker appreciation in the Chinese currency would be welcome -- both in China's own neighborhood and in Washington.
Source: April 12 (Bloomberg)
The upshot is that The Economist amoung others estimated that the fall of communism in Eastern Europe as well as Chindia joining the world economy in a meaningful way may have increased the global labor supply by up to 40% in total terms. Now, in the beginning that was very deflationary and kept inflation rates in importing countries low.
However, now that those one off gains are dissipating those same workers are contributing to higher rates of inflation through higher output of finished goods and the inputs needed to produce them as well as in terms of consumption by those workers as they climb the ladder of relative affluence. Chindia and Eastern Europe are now exporting that inflation around the world. That trend is not likely to change anytime soon.
Ironically, there is one other commodity that China can still export to bring down domestic inflation and take the heat out of a protectionist Congress in the US, eh. And that is Chinese labor.
Chinese workers are already toiling away for Chinese companies in Africa where there are real or perceived labor shortages. Why bother with finicky locals when you can bring your own hardworking and easier to control miners?
Chinese workers are also starting to staff factories in unlikely places like Romania. They do the jobs the locals have left Romania to do for more money elsewhere in the EU. While the Chinese are happy to work harder for less in clean, well-equipped factories in Romania because, hey, at least its not in one of ten of the top twenty most polluted cities in the world like back in China. Hey Brussels, those aren't Chinese exports. They are EU produced!
Not to mention au pairs and nannies the world over as well as care givers in places like Japan where Japanese schooled Chinese are replacing workers in a rapidly aging population there.
Join China Inc. and see the world!
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.