by MrBill » Mon 05 Nov 2007, 04:36:02
The problem is that there is no mechanism for the USA to default on foreign debt versus domestic debt because both are issued in USD and are fungible.
This is unlike the default in Argentina where Argentina forced foreign investors to accept a haircut of 65% on their USD bonds, while they froze USD loans, but still acknowleged peso deposits.
Or like Russia that issued both USD denominated bonds, but also ruble denominated treasury bills as well, so they could selectively default on one class of bonds, but honor the others.
Were the US to default on their USD denominated bonds they would have no way to, say, punish foreign investors like China without taking down domestic banks, mutual funds and individual investors at home as well.
As soon as they tried to ring fence domestically owned bonds they would create a black market for foreign owned bonds. The mechanics are quite easy (I have done this before). You wait until almost maturity when the foreigner is facing, say, a 65% haircut on their redemptions, but you are allowed to redeem at face value. You then offer them 'something' more than 35% for their bonds. If they do not like it they can only get redemption at whatever the government is offering.
How ugly can it get? During the Russian crisis I was able to buy Ukraine treasury bills at up to 3000% p.a. with three months to maturity from investors desparate to get out at any cost. I was paid out at par as a domestic investor (bank) in Ukraine. That was a real nail bighter, but I figured out that the worst that might happen was that my short-term tbills would be converted into long term debt and I would get 60% of face value over time. A high risk, but worth it as my own assets were trapped in hryvnia, so there were only limited means to stay ahead of the default and devaluation of the currency as well. Gold was another.
On the other hand if the US defaults on all USD denominated debt then it will collapse all those 401K with bonds in them; the stock market; mutual funds; US banks holding bonds; etc. Not only would it cause a dollar collapse and severe recession/depression, but the US government would then be forced to issue debt only in foreign currency as its own USD bonds would of course be worthless. Never say never, but as it controls the printing presses, it is far more likely to inflate its way out of its existing obligations.
Ultimately capital controls do not work as the Chinese are not likely to accept devalued US dollars for their exports if they know they will trapped in a burning house. And for US citizens the result is again the black market. Like in S. Africa those who are desparate to get their funds out of country can circumvent the capital controls by buying assets in dollars and then moving those assets abroad to be sold in euros or another currency.
In the run-up to the euro there was a boom in art and antiques as well as Spanish real-estate for example as a lot of gray market money tried to avoid having to exchange lira, franc and deutschmarks for euros officially. Capital controls usually enrich one subset of investors at the expense of others. They do not help the country to deal with the underlying structural problems, which in the case of the USA is borrowing far beyond its means to repay without real economic hardship. It is a self-inflicted wound.
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.