Chat with us, powered by LiveChat Pick a recent article from the WSJ and develop a power point presentation (at least 3 slides). In your presentation focus on th | Wridemy

Pick a recent article from the WSJ and develop a power point presentation (at least 3 slides). In your presentation focus on th

 

Pick a recent article from the WSJ and develop a power point presentation (at least 3 slides). In your presentation focus on the following:

1. Why did you pick this article?

2. What are the main points of the article?

3. What is the relationship between the article and the course content? That is, relate the terms, concepts, theories, and principles used in this article with the material you learned

NOTE: the course is economics finance , so choose an article related to economics 

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers visit http://www.djreprints.com.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/blame-the-u-s-for-the-weaker-chinese-currency-1539624847

The U.S. is due to decide this week whether to designate China a currency manipulator. While it’s not expected to apply the label on this go around, the yuan has fallen more than 9% against the dollar since it last considered the move in April.

Tensions between the two nations have been building since then. It is tempting to think that China must be actively pushing its currency down in an attempt to offset the effect of the 10% tariffs being imposed on its exports to the U.S. by President Donald Trump. It is also tempting to want to punish China for what Vice President Mike Pence earlier this month called “currency manipulation” in a long list of Chinese policies in breach of “free and fair” trade. Both are mistaken.

STREETWISE

Blame the U.S. for the Weaker Chinese Currency If the yuan is being manipulated, it’s arguably because China is keeping it strong

Vice President Mike Pence recently raised Chinese currency manipulation as a way China breaches fair trade. PHOTO: JOSHUA ROBERTS/BLOOMBERG NEWS

Oct. 15, 2018 1:34 p.m. ET

By James Mackintosh

DJIA 1.84% ▲ U.S. 10 Yr 3.161% ▼ Euro -0.05% ▼

Arguably the yuan should have weakened more. It is being pushed down by a slowing economy and easier monetary policy, at the same time that the dollar is being pushed up by the supercharged U.S. economy and higher interest rates. U.S. tariffs should lead to a weaker yuan and stronger dollar, too, even in a free market.

To simplify: “When bad things happen to a country, the currency goes down,” says Alan Ruskin, global co-head of FX research at Deutsche Bank .

The effects of the strong dollar are obvious everywhere, with major emerging market currencies –Mexico’s peso aside – all falling even more than the yuan against the greenback this year. The yuan is down a barely noticeable 2.3% against the currency of the next-largest economy, the euro. And adjusted for China’s higher consumer price inflation, it is down only 2.6% against its global trading partners, according to JPMorgan . The true issue this year is the strong dollar, not the weak yuan.

If anything, China has been preventing its currency from falling further. China’s central bank has recently pushed up the cost of borrowing for offshore speculators wanting to bet against the yuan, too, even as it loosened restrictions on bank lending domestically. And as Nicholas Lardy, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics says, it has mostly been setting its daily fix – where trade starts each day – slightly stronger than the previous night’s close.

“The Chinese have been doing quite a bit to slow down the rate of depreciation,” Mr. Lardy said.

Why would China want to keep its currency stronger? In the long run because it has been trying to encourage more consumption, which is helped by having a stronger currency. Lots of exports are nice to have, but workers want cheap imports and foreign travel, too.

In the short run the incentive is to avoid panic. In 2015 China made a mistake by suddenly devaluing the currency, prompting speculators to pile in to bet against the yuan – and domestic companies to unwind the huge bets they had made on the yuan rising. The fall began to become self-fulfilling, and China burned through half a trillion dollars of reserves trying to halt the drop before tighter capital controls finally led to a rebound.

The lesson for China was to avoid drama in the exchange rate, keeping the decline in check and restricting outflows of money. So far it has worked, with currency reserves down only $74 billion, or 2%, from January’s peak.

This is manipulation, but not the sort that the U.S. worries about. Worse, if China did as the U.S. wants and decided to intervene to push the yuan up, it would have perverse and unwelcome

Copyright ©2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. To order presentation-ready copies for distribution to your colleagues, clients or customers visit http://www.djreprints.com.

effects on the U.S. bond market.

To understand this, consider how China used to hold its currency down by building up foreign exchange reserves – something that was obviously manipulation. When dollars flowed into the country, either from investment or from its trade surplus, the central bank recycled them back into U.S. Treasurys rather than let the yuan rise. This

made China’s exports more competitive until its wages rose, and, according to former Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke’s “global savings glut” thesis, held down U.S. interest rates.

If China were to intervene to strengthen its currency now, it would mean selling U.S. Treasurys, or at least not rolling over maturing holdings, and selling the dollars for yuan. With markets already on high alert over rising bond yields, adding to the selling pressure on Treasurys wouldn’t be welcome.

Finally, the entire U.S. approach is odd. The Treasury’s tests label countries as currency manipulators only if they are deliberately weakening their currencies, not if they are deliberately strengthening them. If we cared about free markets, as Mr. Pence claimed, both should be seen as equally bad.

Mr. Pence is right that there is no proper free market in the yuan. But if there was, it would most likely be falling even faster than it has been.

Write to James Mackintosh at [email protected]

Appeared in the October 16, 2018, print edition as 'Yuan Falls, but Beijing Isn’t Pushing It Down.'

RELATED STORIES

Analysis: The Brewing Fight Over the Yuan

Trump and Xi Plan to Meet Amid Trade Tension

U.S. Edges Toward New Cold-War Era With China

As U.S. Tariffs Bite, China Moves to Spur Its Economy

How China Pries Technology from U.S. Companies

Our website has a team of professional writers who can help you write any of your homework. They will write your papers from scratch. We also have a team of editors just to make sure all papers are of HIGH QUALITY & PLAGIARISM FREE. To make an Order you only need to click Ask A Question and we will direct you to our Order Page at WriteDemy. Then fill Our Order Form with all your assignment instructions. Select your deadline and pay for your paper. You will get it few hours before your set deadline.

Fill in all the assignment paper details that are required in the order form with the standard information being the page count, deadline, academic level and type of paper. It is advisable to have this information at hand so that you can quickly fill in the necessary information needed in the form for the essay writer to be immediately assigned to your writing project. Make payment for the custom essay order to enable us to assign a suitable writer to your order. Payments are made through Paypal on a secured billing page. Finally, sit back and relax.

Do you need an answer to this or any other questions?

About Wridemy

We are a professional paper writing website. If you have searched a question and bumped into our website just know you are in the right place to get help in your coursework. We offer HIGH QUALITY & PLAGIARISM FREE Papers.

How It Works

To make an Order you only need to click on “Order Now” and we will direct you to our Order Page. Fill Our Order Form with all your assignment instructions. Select your deadline and pay for your paper. You will get it few hours before your set deadline.

Are there Discounts?

All new clients are eligible for 20% off in their first Order. Our payment method is safe and secure.

Hire a tutor today CLICK HERE to make your first order

Related Tags

Academic APA Writing College Course Discussion Management English Finance General Graduate History Information Justify Literature MLA