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Outside View: The Great Recession

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only
by Peter Morici
College Park, Md., April 27, 2009
Economists expect a late-year economic recovery, but their conviction appears failing.

Forecasters predict more than 630,000 jobs will be lost in April -- an annual pace exceeding 7.5 million. Meltdowns at General Motors and Chrysler portend more hemorrhaging and depression-like conditions in the Midwest.

Team Obama is quick to claim employment is a lagging indicator, but the economy started bleeding jobs in December 2007, three quarters before gross domestic product began contracting.

This is no Eisenhower recession, caused by too much inventory. Rather, this meltdown was caused by structural imbalances in the global economy that no stimulus spending can fix.

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner inspires like Mickey Rooney in "Boys Town." He mouths platitudes of his elders but offers no insights into the unique character of the slump.

He talks endlessly about stronger international cooperation and the need for a "balanced" economic recovery. He reminds us that the Bush prosperity relied too much on debt, but he never explains why the U.S. economy needs either gargantuan budget deficits or massive consumer borrowing to create enough demand to keep Americans working.

Dysfunctions on Wall Street notwithstanding, China and several other developing countries produce far more than they consume and enjoy huge trade surpluses, thanks to artificially undervalued currencies, export subsidies and import restrictions. Those require Americans to consume far more than they produce and for the United States to amass huge trade deficits and foreign debt, or global demand falls short of supply and unemployment skyrockets.

Once Americans were no longer able to live beyond their means, the global economy collapsed, and Obama has volunteered the federal government as the borrower of last resort.

Now China complains Washington borrows too much. That's like a drug pusher complaining about client addiction. Yet Obama appeases Beijing by offering to share stewardship of the global economy with this renegade mercantilist.

China's purchases of U.S. treasuries and threat to quit buying are the elephant in the room. But those purchases are made necessary only by China's huge hoard of dollars that is contrived by Beijing's massive sale of yuan for dollars on foreign exchange markets to keep its yuan cheap, exports flowing and jobs moving from Indiana to Shanghai.

The People's Bank of China buys U.S. treasuries because it does not have any better use for the dollars it obtains manipulating the yuan to boost exports. If it quit using those dollars to buy treasuries, it would simply have to put those in the vault and remove them from circulation. The U.S. Federal Reserve would have to replace those dollars in circulation by purchasing the very same treasury securities Beijing now buys.

The Fed would collect the interest instead of the People's Bank. That's not so bad.

To dig out of the Great Recession, Washington needs to challenge China on trade and currency manipulation, but Obama and Geithner must recognize that Beijing only has the leverage Washington gives it.

Fixing trade with China would do more to boost demand for U.S. growth and employment than any stimulus spending ever could.

(Peter Morici is a professor at the University of Maryland School of Business and former chief economist at the U.S. International Trade Commission.)

(United Press International's "Outside View" commentaries are written by outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important issues. The views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United Press International. In the interests of creating an open forum, original submissions are invited.)

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China says manufacturing expanding
Beijing (AFP) May 1, 2009
China's manufacturing activity expanded in April to its highest level for a year, according to data released Friday, in an indication that the nation's economy might be showing signs of recovery.







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