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Showing posts with label overvalued dollar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label overvalued dollar. Show all posts

July 7, 2017

World's Most Misaligned Currencies -
Dollar, Yen, and Euro for Germany


Any country that devalues their currency in order to take unfair advantage of the United States, which is many countries, will be met with sharply. And that includes tariffs and taxes. 

Candidate Trump, Pennsylvania, 6/28/16

Messages like this resonated with voters across the nation during the Presidential Campaign. "Foreigners are manipulating their currencies" and "currency manipulation is destroying American factories and jobs" have been the rallying cries. 

Currency manipulation has indeed created serious problems for the competitiveness of factories and farms across America, especially during the period 2003-2013, the "Decade of Manipulation" as Fred Bergsten and Joe Gagnon have called it in Chapter 4 of their new book, Currency Conflict and Trade Policy.  But we must keep in mind two very important facts. 

First, even during this period, private capital flows greatly exceeded public capital flows into the United States (Figure 1). There is no evidence that an open-market purchase of $100 billion of U.S. securities by the Chinese Government would have any more impact on the dollar's exchange rate than an equal purchase by Deutsche Bank AG of Germany. Thus, even during the "Decade of Manipulation," excessive private capital flows into the United States clearly had a larger impact on the dollar's exchange rate than did currency manipulation.

Figure 1

Second, the Decade of Manipulation ended about four years ago, but the US trade deficit still amounts to hundreds of billions of dollars per year because the U.S. dollar is still so sharply overvalued.

This note uses the latest data from the IMF and the Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE) to show (a) the severity of the dollar's overvaluation, and (b) the uniqueness of this overvaluation -- which is truly a one-of-a-kind situation for the entire world.

Among the currencies of the countries accounting for the large majority of US trade -- and almost all of its trade deficits, the dollar is the only currency that is significantly overvalued -- and it is overvalued by a massive 25.5 percent (Table 1, column 7). No wonder the US suffers serious trade deficits. [1]

Table 1

September 21, 2015

Why a MAC charge on FDI will Stimulate FDI


A common question from ABDC Now! readers: 
"Why not exempt foreign direct investment from the MAC?  Imposing a MAC charge on all incoming capital would discourage investments in physical assets that could improve American manufacturing's productivity and international competitiveness,"
The answer is quite simple and revolves around two issues -- (a) the need to create a level playing field that minimizes the risk of distortions, evasion, and high administrative costs, and (b) the fact that, because of its very design, the MAC creates a natural bias in favor of FDI.

August 28, 2015

Is a Market Access Charge Better than Higher Taxes on Imports?

Readers have asked why the Market Access Charge (MAC), the centerpiece of this blog site, would work better than the options being considered by Congress, most of which involve currency manipulation taxes (CMTs) -- taxes that would be added to the import duties already paid by the American consumers of various imported goods. 

The MAC approach would be simpler and far more effective for many reasons, reasons that will be discussed in future postings, but let's start by looking at the simple issue of complexity. Maintaining a currency manipulation tax system would be complicated and costly, to say nothing of subjective, debatable, difficult to defend in WTO hearings, and damaging to free trade.

August 14, 2015

Trade Deficits -- Growth Stimulant or Depressant?

Summary

Understanding the impact of trade deficits and foreign debt on economic growth is vital to understanding the origins of America’s current economic problems and to designing trade and monetary policies that will put America back on the path to prosperity for all in the 21st century. 

Unfortunately, economists are sharply divided regarding the impact of trade imbalances on growth.
Progressive economists such as Scott and Baker generally say that trade deficits are the leading cause of slow growth, excessive unemployment and growing social inequality in the United States, that trade deficits threaten the nation’s long-term economic viability. 

In sharp contrast, conservative economists such as Riley, Griswold and Ikenson would generally say that trade deficits mean faster economic growth and falling unemployment, that the foreign loans used to finance these deficits are an important vote of confidence in America.

The 2015 Economic Report of the President by the Council of Economic Advisors presents both of these conflicting positions but fails to reconcile them or to provide meaningful policy options for action. 

This note reconciles the conservative and progressive views and presents a possible consensus position on U.S. trade policy for the 21st Century, one that could simultaneously increase business profitability, stimulate innovation, maximize employment, and reduce income inequality.

June 23, 2015

Currency-Based CVD Penalties: Wrong Tool for Solving America's Trade Deficits

The currently proposed legislation that would use currency-based countervailing duty surcharges to help reduce America's trade and unemployment problems will have almost no impact because CVDs are designed to fix firm-level, product-specific problems, not macro-economic imbalances. The note concludes that a macro-level policy designed to correct the dollar's global overvaluation is needed instead.

March 13, 2015

Restore the American Dream –
Abolish the Overvalued Dollar Tax


The dollar is currently overvalued by about 35 percent. [1] Consequently, US producers must sell their goods for 35 percent less than if the dollar were fairly valued.  This applies equally to the prices of exports and to the prices of goods that must compete with "the China price" of imports – the price at which countries like China can sell goods in America.

In short, the overvalued dollar places a severe tax on U.S. producers. America cannot eliminate its trade deficit, restore millions of jobs, or create a thriving economy unless it removes this severely burdensome overvalued dollar tax.

Overvalued Dollar Tax is worse than the Corporate Income Tax


 The Overvalued Dollar Tax is an especially heavy burden because it is imposed on the final selling price of made-in-America goods, not on profits like the despised Corporate Profits Tax (CPT). This is critically important.

If a business has a profit margin equal to 15 percent of the selling price, the CPT takes 35 percent of the profits -- or 5.25 percent of the selling price. In contrast, a 35 percent ODT takes over 200 percent of the profit when the profit margin is 15 percent, leaving the company with a substantial net loss.

A very important corollary is the following: Reducing the corporate income tax rate does nothing to help firms that are making zero profits or losses. The benefit of reducing the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 20 percent when a producer’s net income is zero is exactly that – zero. It does nothing to stimulate jobs, output, or investment. On the other hand, implementing the Market Access Charge (MAC), which affects the final selling price, can massively increase after tax profits – even if the corporate income tax rate remains the same.

Until the dollar is restored to its equilibrium value, firms will continue to fire workers, reduce output, close plants, and move offshore. Nobody can stay in business with a tax that can exceed 100 percent of profits! Compared to the overvalued dollar tax, the business profits tax is relatively unimportant. It is the overvalued dollar tax that must be fixed before we can restore the American dream.

Overvalued Dollar Tax:  Foreigners win - U.S. loses


Nobody likes taxes, but at least normal tax revenues generally stay in America. However, the Overvalued Dollar Tax is entirely different – it goes directly to foreign producers. The ODT effectively gives foreigners a 35 percent subsidy on their exports and places a 35 percent tax on our exports. Truly the worst of all taxes.

Because the ODT kills American businesses and jobs, it puts pressure on the US Government to raise taxes to make up for revenues lost because of falling business profits and family incomes, and to help cover the high costs of corporate bailout, economic stimulus, and family income support programs.

Despite shortfalls in revenues and sharp increases in expenditures, Congress has understandably resisted pressures to raise taxes. Consequently, the ODT has caused Government deficits and borrowing to explode.

Even worse, nearly 100 percent of the net government borrowing in recent years has been from abroad, mainly from China and Japan. Such borrowing is far worse for the American economy than domestic borrowing because it adds to total domestic spending power and thus to inflation, making it even harder for U.S. producers to compete. And thanks to fractional reserve banking, the impact on total domestic spending power may be up to ten times as large as the initial borrowing.

Overvalued Dollar Tax and the External Deficit Doom Loop

The overvalued dollar is driving an "External Deficit Doom Loop" that condemns our children and future generations to a bleak future unless the dollar returns to a trade-balancing equilibrium rate. The doom loop works as follows:
  1. The dollar's value rises as foreign capital assets seek yield and safe haven in America's attractive financial markets. 
  2. Because of the rising dollar, trade deficits increase, further increasing foreign capital inflows.
  3. Trade deficits create a bias against direct foreign investment by making production in America less profitable.
  4. Consequently, the share of speculative in total foreign investment rises. This adds to financial instability and, by increasing asset values in U.S. financial markets, pushes the dollar’s value even higher.
  5. Borrowing capital from abroad rather than from domestic savers is like printing money, so inflation increases.
  6. With higher domestic prices, US firms can't compete with foreign producers, and business profits fall.
  7. With reduced profits, firms cut back on investments needed to increase productivity – or move offshore. U.S. firms also sell domestic production capacity to foreign investors, further reducing the strength of the economy for future generations.
  8. As firms shrink or move offshore, personal incomes fall and jobs disappear, worsening US unemployment.
  9. Even if real assets sold to foreigners remain in the United States, foreigners, not U.S. citizens, will own the future income streams from these assets, further reducing the ability of future generations to repay our debts to foreigners. And attempting to reclaim these assets by force, a.k.a. nationalization, would lead to unthinkable legal, economic and perhaps even military complications.
  10. With falling business profits and household incomes, Government revenues fall and expenditures on bailouts for families and businesses rise.
  11. The Government borrows more from abroad, facilitating currency manipulation by China and Japan.
  12. Currency manipulation overvalues the dollar further, and the External Deficit Doom Loop starts again. 

Restoring the American Dream – Prosperity for All


Excessive demand for dollar-denominated assets in the United States, home to the world's finest financial markets and issuer of the world's premier reserve currency, is the key cause of the dollar's over-valuation. The best way to moderate the dollar's overvaluation is to moderate foreign demand for these assets. The following summarizes the key measures under discussion today for attaining this goal.
Restoring Competitiveness for Specific Products and Sectors
The legislation recently discussed in Congress focused on increasing the effectiveness of countervailing duties (CVDs) by adding a surcharge treating currency undervaluation due to currency manipulation as an additional countervailable subsidy.

Product-specific ADDs and CVDs are legal and can play an important role in protecting U.S. firms from unfair trade practices. However, CVDs only cover about one percent of all US imports and do nothing to stimulate exports. Furthermore, the proposed duties would apply only to imports from countries declared as "currency manipulators" – and such countries only account for fraction of the dollar's total overvaluation.
Competitiveness for the Entire Economy 
Although product-specific duties can help at the firm and sectoral levels, additional policies are needed to handle the far larger problem of overall currency misalignment -- a problem that may be caused by official currency manipulation or by private sector capital flows seeking profits in the global economy.

Fighting Currency Manipulation: In the past, currency manipulation as defined by the IMF was a significant cause of the currency misalignment with countries such as China. This gave manipulating countries an unfair competitive advantage over U.S. producers.

To fight misalignment due to manipulation, the United States should consider Countervailing Currency Intervention (CCI) as suggested by Fred Bergsten and Joe Gagnon.  Under this proposal, whenever the Government of China, for example, intervened in international currency markets by purchasing, say, $100 million worth of dollars with $100 million worth of its domestic currency to drive down the domestic currency and drive up the foreign currency, thus attaining a competitive advantage in international trade, America would respond in kind by purchasing a like volume of yuan with dollars, thereby countervailing China’s original purchase of dollars. The same would apply to any country attempting to manipulate the dollar’s value.

This approach appears to be legal and would be an excellent way to target country-specific exchange rate distortions caused by manipulation, thus responding to wide-spread support in Congress and the Administration for ways to counteract country-specific threats caused by currency manipulation. On the other hand, it would probably be necessary to raise the U.S. debt ceiling before the U.S. could undertake sufficiently large purchases of foreign currencies, and even though this would not technically increase the budget deficit because assets of like value were being swapped, the optics could make this a heavy lift.

Furthermore, since no country that is a significant source of U.S. trade deficits is manipulating its currency today, the main value of the CCI approach at present would be to warn countries that any future attempts to manipulate currency values would be countervailed and rendered ineffective.

Fighting Currency Misalignment with the MAC: Even when China was actively manipulating currency values in the first decade of this century, currency manipulation per se was only a small subset of overall currency misalignment. The broader problem of currency misalignment was and still is caused primarily by private capital flows – flows that respond to opportunities to make profits in global financial markets.

The dominance of private capital flows is seen clearly in the two graphics below:



Two key messages emerge from these graphics. First, official flows were only about one fifth the size of official flows on average between 1995 and 2010. Second, between 2010 and 2015, official flows became negative on average, while private flows were sufficient to make total net inflows positive.

In other words, even if 100 percent of all official flows had been for currency manipulation during the past twenty years, the impact of those flows would have been significant only for selected cross rates such as the dollar vs. the yuan, and they would have been largely insignificant for the dollar’s overall value. Second, official flows are now negative. This eliminates any possibility that active currency manipulation is a significant cause of the overvalued dollar tax today.

Given this stark reality, balancing U.S. trade will clearly require far more than countervailing currency manipulation. Instead, it will require a major effort to moderate the inflow of private capital that pours into the United States because our first-rate financial markets offer such good profits and security.

The Market Access Charge (MAC) is specifically designed for this task. By reducing the net yield on foreign-source capital seeking access to US financial markets, the Market Access Charge (MAC) would moderate such inflows, allowing the dollar to return to its trade-balancing equilibrium exchange rate. (For more details on the MAC, see How the MAC Would Help Restore American Manufacturing.)

Summary


While countervailing duties will help solve unfair trade practices for specific products and sectors, and while countervailing currency intervention will help reduce bilateral trade deficits if and when individual countries begin manipulating their currencies again, the only way to eliminate the dollar’s overall overvaluation and thus America’s overall trade deficit is to implement a Market Access Charge (MAC).

March 13, 2015
(rev. March 16, 2017)
Notes:
[1] The latest Peterson Institute for International Economics calculations, based on data from mid-2016, indicated that, for the US to attain fully balanced external trade, the dollar would need to become about 25 percent more competitive. Since mid-2016, the dollar has appreciated by more than 10 percent. Hence the 35 percent estimate presented here.

[2]  By the end of the Tech Bubble in 2000, the flood of foreign capital that fed this market frenzy had driven the dollar 's overvaluation to nearly 50 percent. No wonder US firms began failing or moving overseas, destroying American jobs.


                         America needs a more competitive dollar - now!

February 27, 2015

ABCD - Americans Backing a Competitive Dollar

 This new blog will focus on what may be the most important problem facing America today --
     the loss of millions of jobs and thousands of factories to foreign countries.

These losses are driven by capital inflows from foreign investors, both public and private, who are seeking to exploit the best capital markets in the world -- those in America. These flows -- the vast majority of which are speculative and do not increase the productivity of America's industries, have pushed the value of the US dollar so high that American workers, factories and goods now find it hard to compete with imports in domestic markets or with other country's products in export markets -- despite the fact that America's factories and workers are among the most productive in the world..

This blog is not designed to generate a daily string of sound bites.  Instead, its purpose is to make available serious analysis of the challenges and policy alternatives facing America as it seeks to restore jobs and factories by balancing its international trade. Meeting this challenge will make America a better place to live, both now and in the future.

The plan is to issue a new post of 500-1,000 words by the start of each week. You can easily get new weekly postings by signing up for email delivery - see box near top right of home page, 

Best regards,
John


                          America Needs a More Competitive Dollar - Now!