To be or to be,
That is the option for the Chinese.
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Bloomberg <<<
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China Needs Another $2 Trillion of TreasuriesCommentary by William Pesek
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China, it’s often said, can spend its way out of this crisis. Throwing lots of money at the problem will soften the blow, yet it won’t be enough with the world slump intensifying. The key to China getting back to the all-important 8 percent growth level is a global recovery. Basically, that means the U.S.
$14 Trillion GorillaThat’s why buying more U.S. debt makes sense. I’m not saying this because I’m American. This isn’t about economic nationalism. It’s just that the sheer size of the U.S. economy makes it a $14 trillion gorilla when officials in Beijing, Tokyo or Singapore grapple with safeguarding growth.
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Admittedly, this whole argument is politically incorrect. Asia lending the U.S. even more money would be highly unpopular. The U.S., Asians often point out, was slow to help this region during its 1997 crisis. And why bail out a country that is so successfully exporting its own crisis?
The answer is that Asia is heading into a highly turbulent environment. Governments can spend all they want on stimulus efforts, and they may help at the margin. For better or worse, though, restoring global growth is more of a U.S.-centric exercise than many in Asia and Europe might like to admit.
That inconvenient fact makes it pointless for China to suddenly dump its Treasuries. It’s just not an option for the world’s third-largest economy.
U.S. officials used to fret about the Japanese doing that. Concerns increased after Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto said in June 1997 that “several times in the past, we have been tempted to sell large lots of U.S. Treasuries.” It never happened. The reason: It can’t, and especially now.
China would cannibalize its outlook by curtailing its U.S. debt purchases. It may have more to gain from doing the opposite.