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Henry:
Hear, hear!
Gunnar
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, May 22, 2003 12:28
PM
Subject: [gang8] Central Banks and
Deflation
The Federal Reserve is very nervous about deflation.
The reason for this is more than its awarenes of the grave danger of
deflation on the economy. The real reason is is that central banks
in general, and the Fed in particular, do not have the power or operative
measures within their discourse to deal with deflation. The exclusive
dependence of central banks on interest rate policy to fight inflation
does not work for fighting deflation, as a decade of data in Japan has
shown. The Fed is now following Japan's lead in trying to manage an
exchange rate policy (talking is not pushing the dollar down) to export
deflation to its trading partners.
The Chinese economy has been
accused by some Japanese economists as exporting deflation by stripping
non-Chinese companies of their pricing power. That is an obvious fact, but
the cause of this does not origninal from inside China. As I pointed
out in an earlier post (Dollar's slide and PPP), the Chinese currency, the
RMB, is actually depreciating against the dollar on a PPP adjusted basis,
despite a nominal peg. Thus with the US pushing the dollar down, it
will only exacerbate China's deflation export.
The problem is not
the relative value of the dollar, but the dollar's role as the dominant
reserve currency for trade. The use of exchange rates to manage
trade is a destructive move, regardless who does it. Exchange rates need
to be stable and to change only gradually and infrequently. Trade
needs to be structured to increase domestic wages rather than to push
domestic wages down. Pushing wages down decreases purchaing power
domestically which directly contracts international trade.
Central
banks must change their theology of protector of the value of money and
start promoting full employment and rising wages worldwide and alter an
economic system that rewards corporate policies of layoffs and cost
cutting, to one that rewards job creation and expansion.
Henry C.K.
Liu
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