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Home / Business / Economy

Guess Hu's coming to dinner- Not the fickle point scorers

Bloomberg
24 Jan, 2011 04:30 PM4 mins to read

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Barbra Streisand and Herbie Hancock were guests at the White House last week. Photo / AP

Barbra Streisand and Herbie Hancock were guests at the White House last week. Photo / AP

You know we've got problems when Barbra Streisand and Herbie Hancock understand the global economy better than John Boehner and Harry Reid.

Singer Streisand and jazz great Hancock were on hand for the Chinese President's White House dinner last week, while House Speaker Boehner, Majority Leader Reid and Senate Republican
leader Mitch McConnell wimped out and stayed away.

Lawmakers are right to object to China's human-rights record, undervalued currency, disregard for intellectual property laws and coddling of North Korea and Sudan. But blowing off a state dinner to placate the Tea Party crowd? That's a little too high school for comfort and very short-sighted.

President Barack Obama's time with Hu Jintao had its successes, and Congress had other chances to chat with China's leader. While small gestures can mean a lot, here's the bottom line: economic imbalances are sure to grow even more dangerous.

Both leaders softened the rhetoric and pledged co-operation toward peace and prosperity. Obama gave Hu plenty of face with which to return home; Hu delighted Obama with an admission that China's human rights need improvement. Capitol Hill is another story, and any glow from the Obama-Hu summit will end there.

Like it or not, China is booming. It grew 10.3 per cent in 2010, while US unemployment spent the year uncomfortably close to 10 per cent. China's currency reserves rocketed to US$2.8 trillion ($3.7 trillion), which is greater than France's annual gross domestic product.

Yet China isn't becoming less dependent on exports. Its reserves build-up shows the yuan remains undervalued, fanning inflation risks. Americans are still flooding the world with dollars and consuming more than they produce. Markets wonder how debt-laden European nations can cope with a currency beyond their control.

Rather than fix these festering imbalances, leaders are playing a game of global musical chairs. They are tiptoeing around a shrinking number of seats, hoping to find one when the music stops. There won't be enough to go around. Will the US bond market be left standing and in turmoil? Or bonds in Japan, which has the largest debt among industrialised nations? What about Europe, where hedge funds are placing bets on which economy will crash next? Whither Chinese inflation?

Almost all solutions to what ails the world run through Washington and Beijing. The US and China are critical to progress on everything from climate change to Iran's nuclear ambitions.

Chances for progress are minimal when Congress is more interested in scoring points in the short run at the expense of long-term prosperity. Blaming China is good domestic politics, but bad economics. It won't create US jobs. Only bold efforts to make the US more vibrant will do that.

It's hard to miss how US lawmakers are choosing wilful ignorance of a rapid shift in the world economic order.

Obama's economic stimulus, along with predecessor George Bush's bank bailout, saved capitalism. Now, China is taking things a big step further by becoming the global economy's sugar daddy. The implications of that are only now coming into focus.

The future is one in which cash-rich authoritarian governments - be they in China or Gulf states - have huge leverage over free-market democracies. Increasingly, the size of their bond holdings will work their way into geopolitics.

One gets all nostalgic for a time when bond gurus like Bill Gross of Pacific Investment Management mattered.

That was before China amassed its foreign currency arsenal. China's reserves will hit US$3 trillion before long and are on the way to US$4 trillion. China's economy may well crash in the years ahead, as many emerging ones do. Yet if money is power, that's a whole lot of influence.

China wants to buy some time for Europe, a vital export market. Yet further Chinese debt purchases have consequences. What if China saw its massive sway over bond yields as a way to blunt America's support for Taiwan? What if China saw debt as a means of prodding the European Union to end arms-sales embargoes?

The longer we avoid addressing these imbalances, the bigger they will get. The more the US ups spending or cuts taxes the more money it owes China, giving China yet more leverage.

Lawmakers can skip dinner with China's leader, yet they can't shirk their responsibility to put the world on a more sustainable path. That means dealing with Asia's fast-emerging superpower. If entertainers can see that, why can't Congress?

- BLOOMBERG

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