Nobel laureates warn against yuan revaluation (Xinhua) Updated: 2005-03-26 09:32
Two Nobel laureates in Economics have endorsed China's decision not to
appreciate its currency, saying it would not be helpful to either China and the
United States.
Joseph Stiglitz, former chief economist of the World Bank who was awarded a
Nobel Prize in Economics in 2001, mirrored Robert A.Mundell's argument that the
political pressure on China to appreciate the yuan conflicts with economic
reality.
Some US congressmen have reportedly threatened to impose extra tariffs on
Chinese goods if China does not appreciate its currency.
Stiglitz said at a seminar held this week that in the 1980s, the United
States had huge trade deficits and that It is natural for politicians to blame
somebody else.
"At that time, they blamed Japan," as Japan enjoyed substantial trade surplus
with the United States.
"Japan would be very thankful today to China because today China is being
blamed." But he said one has to be very clear that the trade deficit with China
is not the root of the America's economic problem, which actually results from
the imbalance between savings and investment.
"A change of the (Chinese currency) exchange rate will not have a significant
effect on that," he said.
China imports goods (raw and semi-processed materials), processes them, and
exports them," and the value added is about 30percent. "When you revalue
(appreciation of the Yuan), the cost ofimports is reduced."
"The net effect of a 10 percent appreciation of the currency isprobably
around 3 percent change on the value-added."
"A three percent change on the foreign exchange rate does not have a
significant effect" on US trade deficit with China, he said.
Factories are not going to move the production here in China tothe United
States because of the change, said Stiglitz.
"A revaluation of the Yuan would get political pressure off theback of China
for a couple of months," he said.
But the problems of outsourcing, manufacturing, and China's global
comparative advantage would not be affected by a moderate change in the foreign
exchange rate.
The two Nobel laureates said an appreciation of the Yuan would have adverse
effect on Chinese farmers as well as China's bid to narrow the rural-urban
income gap.
Stiglitz said an appreciation of the currency could undo some of the progress
China has made in reducing poverty in rural areas since it would risk
"significantly increasing poverty in the ruralsector."
China does not have a social safety net in place in the event of such an
outcome.