Today, it seems to be an article of faith among US policymakers and many economists that the world’s appetite for dollar debt is virtually insatiable. But a modernization of China’s exchange-rate arrangements could deal the dollar’s status a painful blow.
The mighty US dollar continues to reign supreme in global markets. But
the greenback’s dominance may well be more fragile than it appears,
because expected future changes in China’s exchange-rate regime are
likely to trigger a significant shift in the international monetary
order.
For many reasons, the Chinese authorities
will probably someday stop pegging the renminbi to a basket of
currencies, and shift to a modern inflation-targeting regime under which
they allow the exchange rate to fluctuate much more freely, especially
against the dollar. When that happens, expect most of Asia to follow
China. In due time, the dollar, currently the anchor currency for
roughly
two-thirds of world GDP, could lose nearly half its weight.
Considering
how much the United States relies on the dollar’s special status – or
what then-French Finance Minister Valéry Giscard d’Estaing famously
called America’s “exorbitant privilege” – to fund massive public and
private borrowing, the impact of such a shift could be significant.
Given that the US has been aggressively using deficit financing to
combat the economic ravages of COVID-19, the sustainability of its debt
might be called into question.The long-standing argument for a more
flexible Chinese currency is that China is simply too big to let its
economy dance to the US Federal Reserve’s tune, even if Chinese capital
controls provide some measure of insulation.
China’s GDP (measured at
international prices) surpassed that of the US back in 2014 and is still
growing far faster than the US and Europe, making the case for greater
exchange-rate flexibility increasingly compelling. A more recent argument
is that the dollar’s centrality gives the US government too much access
to global transactions information.
This is also a major concern in
Europe. In principle, dollar transactions could be cleared anywhere in
the world, but US banks and clearing houses have a significant natural
advantage, because they can be implicitly (or explicitly) backed by the
Fed, which has unlimited capacity to issue currency in a crisis. In
comparison, any dollar clearing house outside the US will always be more
subject to crises of confidence – a problem with which even the
eurozone has struggled.Moreover,
former US President Donald Trump’s policies to check China’s trade
dominance are not going away anytime soon. This is one of the few issues
on which Democrats and Republicans broadly agree, and there is little
question that trade deglobalization undermines the dollar.
Chinese policymakers
face many obstacles in trying to break away from the current renminbi
peg. But, in characteristic style, they have slowly been laying the
groundwork on many fronts. China has been gradually allowing foreign institutional investors to buy renminbi bonds, and in 2016, the International Monetary Fund added
the renminbi to the basket of major currencies that determines the
value of Special Drawing Rights (the IMF’s global reserve asset).
In addition, the People’s Bank of China is
far ahead
of other major central banks in developing a central-bank digital
currency. Although currently purely for domestic use, the PBOC’s digital
currency ultimately will facilitate the renminbi’s international use,
especially in countries that gravitate toward China’s eventual currency
bloc. This will give the Chinese government a window into digital
renminbi users’ transactions, just as the current system gives the US a
great deal of similar information.Will other Asian countries indeed
follow China? The US will certainly push hard to keep as many economies
as possible orbiting around the dollar, but it will be an uphill battle.
Just as the US eclipsed Britain at the end of the nineteenth century as
the world’s largest trading country, China long ago
surpassed America by the same measure.True,
Japan and India may go their own way. But if China makes the renminbi
more flexible, they will likely at the very least give the currency a
weight comparable to that of the dollar in their foreign-exchange
reserves.
There are striking parallels between Asia’s close alignment
with the dollar today and the situation in Europe in the 1960s and early
1970s. But that era ended with high inflation and the collapse of the
post-war Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates. Most of Europe
then recognized that intra-European trade was more important than trade
with the US. This led to the emergence of a Deutsche Mark bloc that
decades later morphed into the single currency, the euro.This does not mean that the Chinese renminbi will become the
global currency overnight. Transitions from one dominant currency to
another can take a long time. During the two decades between World Wars I
and II, for example, the new entrant, the dollar, had roughly the same weight
in central-bank reserves as the British pound, which had been the
dominant global currency for more than a century following the
Napoleonic Wars in the early 1800s.
So, what is wrong with three world currencies – the euro, the renminbi, and the dollar – sharing the spotlight? Nothing,
except that neither markets nor policymakers seem remotely prepared for
such a transition. US government borrowing rates would almost certainly
be affected, though the really big impact might fall on corporate
borrowers, especially small and medium-size firms.
Today, it seems to
be an article of faith among US policymakers and many economists that
the world’s appetite for dollar debt is virtually insatiable. But a
modernization of China’s exchange-rate arrangements could deal the
dollar’s status a painful blow.
Project Syndicate
© Project Syndicate
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