Page added on February 14, 2015
The euro has dropped almost 20 percent over the last six months after endless hints from the ECB.
We are in a currency war, and have been since 2008. Our current global monetary system is deeply flawed in spite of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which was supposedly created to foster monetary cooperation and financial stability. Yet, the IMF has been eerily silent lately, which has not gone unnoticed by those who butter the IMF’s bread.
The current unwritten rule on exchange rate policy is that direct intervention is frowned upon, but indirect intervention is acceptable if the exchange rate was not the initial objective of policy. The thinking here is similar to that used when dropping a thousand pound bomb on a terrorist, wiping out a preschool, and then saying “it’s no problem since our primary target was the terrorist.”
It is simply irresponsible to look only at the direct and not indirect effects of economic policies. The US’s quantitative easing over the last six years has forced emerging market countries to impose capital controls and other currency restrictions, and ramp up their own printing presses. Current Japanese monetary policy, which is driving down the yen, is causing serious consternation to its Chinese and Korean neighbors. The People’s Bank of China recently lowered reserve requirements and is planning to widen the trading band on its currency. Let’s call this what it really is — retaliation and escalation of worldwide currency wars.
Does Devaluing Currency Really Help Exporters?
Of course, these actions are based on another popular misconception promulgated by economists: that a depreciating currency will allow exporters to reduce their prices overseas, helping them capture market share, thus boosting profits with positive ramifications for the domestic economy. The mistake in this logic is that it looks at the direct effects while totally ignoring other direct and indirect effects.
A simple example will make this clear. Suppose the exchange rate is one dollar for one euro. The European exporter is selling his product for $100 in the US which he converts into 100 euros to cover his production cost of 80 euros. Now suppose the euro depreciates so that it takes 1.5 euros to get 1 dollar. The exporter can now lower his price to $66.66 since this will bring in the same number of euros as before the depreciation. He has gained a competitive advantage over his foreign rivals, with benefits to the domestic economy.
The first problem with this story is that with new financial instruments such as swaps and financial futures, many exporters can hedge their foreign exchange risk long term, and may have already committed themselves to the rate they swap dollars for euros.
The second problem with this story is that many exporters today import many of their inputs. A BMW has parts coming from all over the world. Its engines may come from the UK. The leather seats may come from China and the steel may come from Brazil. If the depreciation causes input prices to rise from 80 euros to 120 euros, the exporter will be unable to lower his dollar prices, and, therefore will not gain in competitiveness. Of course, not all costs are imported inputs. This, however, highlights how depreciations really help exporters.
Workers Don’t Benefit from Devaluation
If domestic cost, mostly labor, does not adjust to the higher import prices resulting from the depreciation, exporters will gain, but this gain comes from reducing the real incomes of domestic workers. If these workers ultimately negotiate an increase in nominal wages to bring their real wages back up to before the depreciation, the gain to exporters will disappear. The depreciation has created only a temporary gain.
Few journalists seem to understand that a policy to reduce the foreign exchange value of a currency is, in reality, a policy to transfer wealth from workers — the middle class and the poor — to the wealthier owners of export industries. It is another example of the central bank acting as a reverse Robin Hood, taking from the have-nots to give to the haves.
Furthermore, there are many other indirect effects that make depreciating your currency a very bad policy objective. Mises explained that standard balance-of-payment accounting cannot be used when the unit of account is being distorted. Even if exporters are more profitable, this is not something to cheer if a higher nominal profit means lower real profit.
Of course, other economic actors are also hurt by a beggar-thy-neighbor policy. Consumers will bear the brunt of higher prices on foreign products. Domestic firms who import their inputs and sell on the domestic market will also likely be hurt.
Distorting Prices Hurts an Economy
A depreciating currency reflects a country’s central bank printing money faster than its neighbors. Yet, this printing hurts all firms, including exporters. Printing money alters absolute and relative prices. It interferes with the critical signals that prices send across time about what and how society wants goods and services to be produced.
What Europe needs is not a weaker euro, but significant structural reform. Europe should learn from Latvia’s experience with reform. In 2009–2010, Latvia cut government spending from 44 percent of GDP to 36 percent. It fired 30 percent of the civil servants, closed half the state agencies, and reduced the average public salary by 26 percent in one year. Government ministers took personal wage cuts of 35 percent. The Latvian economy initially dropped 24 percent, but rebounded sharply with yearly real growth of nearly 5 percent over the last three years. Yet, Latvia did this without using currency as a weapon since it kept its former currency, the lats, fixed against the euro.
18 Comments on "Devaluing Currency to Help Exporters"
paulo1 on Sat, 14th Feb 2015 8:36 am
If I was a fired Latvian I think I would have preferred currency devaluation. It’s always fat trimming when it’s the other guy. When you lose your job it’s different. Right?
Take one on the chin for the Gipper, you Latvian civil servent. You get nothing, but over 5 years the country sees a real growth of 5%…(Whatever that stat is supposed to mean when you lost your job or got a 26% wage cut).
For a minute I had to check if this article was from Forbes? It’s always about screwing regular folks for the benefit of a few.
The article forgot to mention that while currency devaluation causes a rise in cost for imported goods, regular consumers often have the ability to choose what they purchase and stay away from imports, thus boosting domestic production. Maybe the BMW factory can make their leather seats at home?
Makati1 on Sat, 14th Feb 2015 8:47 am
The problem comes when the devaluation spreads and becomes an economic war. Such is the current situation. Then it is a race to the bottom.
The Us is experiencing the problems of being on the wrong end of the trade. If your currency is increasing in value, your exports will shrink because they will cost too much.
I notice the change in stuff imported from the Us here in the Ps. Many are disappearing from the shelves as they cost too much and are being replaced by stuff from other countries that are cheaper. For instance, a can of corn from the US is P58 and from Thailand is P26. Guess which sells faster.
I enjoy watching current events unfolding in this slow collapse to the new dark ages.
Plantagenet on Sat, 14th Feb 2015 9:24 am
I like the weaker Euro. I travelled through southern spain over the holidays and it was amazingly cheap. If the point of devaluing the euro was to attract US buyers and travelers then it worked in my case.
Davy on Sat, 14th Feb 2015 9:35 am
Some people here just can’t make up their minds. Is the devaluation of the dollar good or bad? Is the appreciation of the dollar good or bad. I hear both are bad out of this individual. Can both be bad?
Sounds like the agendist on Wall Street who say good news is good news and bad news is good news. Sirs, which is it please I am confused says a normal person. We are fully aware of the dangers for all when the dollar moves out of a stable trading range. That is the important point. If the fed raises rate we are going to see consequences for all involved as an example.
ghung on Sat, 14th Feb 2015 9:42 am
Perhaps not a great thing when you import most of your energy, much of your food, and a lot of your raw materials.
ghung on Sat, 14th Feb 2015 9:57 am
Yeah, Davy, I was waiting for them to get to the necessity of a one-world currency or somesuch.
Dredd on Sat, 14th Feb 2015 10:05 am
When the nomenclature is doublespeak stability and competence of communication is a fantasy.
Economic stability requires competent communication.
Speculawyer on Sat, 14th Feb 2015 11:17 am
Austrian economics . . . Economists who expressly reject empiricism and instead rely on philosophical voodoo.
bobinget on Sat, 14th Feb 2015 11:41 am
Why is the USD the strongest world currency?
I really don’r know…
http://finviz.com/forex_charts.ashx
Could it be we learned how to extract oil & gas from
rocks as dense as city sidewalks? (before ANYONE ELSE, just in the nick of time)
Apneaman on Sat, 14th Feb 2015 11:59 am
Austrian economics. One of a number of bad ideas that came out of Vienna in the late 19th, early 20th century.
Rodster on Sat, 14th Feb 2015 12:23 pm
The world’s economies are being run by “Bankism” and have been for awhile.
Rodster on Sat, 14th Feb 2015 12:28 pm
Bob- “Why is the USD the strongest world currency?
I really don’r know…”
———————————
It’s just a reflection of the other currencies which are even more worthless than the $USD.
GregT on Sat, 14th Feb 2015 1:38 pm
“Why is the USD the strongest world currency?”
Because the USD is the world’s reserve currency. If it loses WRC status, the central bankers lose control of their system of debt slavery, and another group of bankers take over control of the world. They will fight this at any cost, up to and including, a world war.
Dredd on Sat, 14th Feb 2015 3:04 pm
The currencies of the world follow the military.
Where you see a strong currency you see a strong military.
Long live combat boots (Your Mother Wears Combat Boots)!
Plantagenet on Sat, 14th Feb 2015 3:32 pm
The USD isn’t the worlds strongest currency. Check out the Swiss franc
Makati1 on Sun, 15th Feb 2015 5:28 am
Maybe…
“Central Banks Buy The Second Most Gold In 50 Years: A Look At Who’s Buying”
“Rattled European consumers buy more gold in January”
“Why it’s time to get off the U.S. dollar bandwagon”
“Will China’s Currency Peg Be the Next to Fall?”
“Sweden’s Central Bank Cuts Key Rate To Negative, Launches QE”
“Guess What Happened The Last Time The U.S. Dollar Skyrocketed In Value Like This?…”
“China Moving to Replace USA as Financial Capitol of World”
“Greek Investors Buying More Gold Coins From U.K. Royal Mint”
“US farmers expected to see 32 percent drop in income in 2015”
And on and on…
http://ricefarmer.blogspot.fr/
clif14 on Sun, 15th Feb 2015 4:44 pm
Makati,” Thanks for the “ricefarmer” blog.
Makati1 on Sun, 15th Feb 2015 6:58 pm
clif14, you are welcome. I found it by accident and saw that it covers a wide range of topics in one location. And it originates in France, I think.