What Yellen Really Told China
Are China's factories coming to America...?
TREASURY Secretary Yellen recently took an airplane to China, writes
Brian Maher in The Daily Reckoning.
To our everlasting astonishment the aerial machine arrived intact.
It was – after all –
"constructed" by Boeing.
In China the American potentate read her hosts a
severe lesson...and wagged a
lecturing finger in their stern faces.
She bellyached and moaned about Chinese
economic
"overcapacity."
China – in Ms.Yellen's telling – is overproducing and
underconsuming.
This condition represents a dreadful menace to the United States. Thus the lady mumbled
that:
"I
am particularly worried about...China's enduring macroeconomic imbalances – namely its weak household
consumption and business
overinvestment..."
China has long had excess savings, but investment in the
real estate sector and
government-funded infrastructure had absorbed much of it. Now we are seeing an increase in business
investment in a number of "new"
industries targeted by the PRC's industrial policy. That includes electric vehicles, lithium-ion
batteries and solar.
"China is now simply too large for the rest of the world to absorb this enormous
capacity...When the global market is
flooded by artificially cheap Chinese products, the viability of American and other foreign firms is put
into question."
Last week we placed within our stable Mr.Andrew Zatlin – "The Moneyball
Economist".
Here he
strips the preceding mummery to its nuts, to its bolts, to its washers and screws:
"China has built a massive
manufacturing base and they continue to build out the factories.
"It's
reminiscent of what Japan did in the
'70s and '80s, which was to rapidly industrialize and get rich quick.
"The
Chinese government is taking a
page out of that playbook. Basically, you make a lot of stuff, you sell that stuff to other
people.
"Janet
Yellen said she's particularly worried about how China is enduring macroeconomic imbalances. What does
that mean?
"It means China's making a lot of money and saving it, resulting in weak household
consumption. We want China to have a
consumer economy...and to stop building factories that are making cheap products that are overwhelming
us.
"Quite frankly, it's all about jobs. If the US is flooded with cheap Chinese products, US companies go
out of business and we lose
jobs.
"And that's the message from Janet Yellen to China: You're doing the same
thing that Japan did, and
we're going to stop it."
How did the United States stop Japan?
In the 1980s, Reagan
starts pushing hard on Japan. Just like with China, they wanted Japan to boost consumer spending and
stop flooding us with their cheap
goods.
You know what happened? Japan moved their manufacturing over to the US
Honda and Toyota opened
production lines here. By 1996 there were three factories that Toyota was running building
cars.
Thus Andrew
expects China to pursue the Japanese example.
"Chinese factories will take ship
at Shanghai and offload at
the Port of Los Angeles...where they will board trains for the American interior."
Upon arrival American
laborers will empty into them.
With these factories comes investment
opportunity, says Andrew:
"So what's the investment play here? Power generation. More US factories mean a higher
demand for reliable electric
generation. I like infrastructure."
Treasury Secretary Yellen refers to "excess
savings".
"Excess savings" is a devilish condition that – happily – your editor has never endured. He
can scarcely conceive its
terrors. He would be reduced to purchasing all his goods and services with money in his actual
possession.
A
credit card would be an unknown. As would monthly interest payments at 23%.
Thus he would shatter the central
pillar of American economic life – debt-based consumption.
Pity the forsaken
land of excess savings,
unblessed by debt. Its debt-to-GDP ratio is not merely zero. It is negative.
Contrast this hell with the
debt-blessed American paradise.
United States national debt runs to $34.6
trillion. United States total debt
– both public and private – runs to a divine $98 trillion.
And the nation's
debt-to-GDP ratio scales
120%.
Gloria in excelsis Deo!
Then you have those poor
Chinese...afflicted with the
plague of excess savings. Their owners fail to appreciate the infinite wonders of debt.
They are evidently
slaves to Say's Law – that production must precede consumption.
That is, a man
must produce before he can
consume.
The government Ms.Yellen represents has long revolted against Mr.Say's
iron law.
It goes along under a sort of Keynesian anti-Say's law – that consumption precedes
production.
She herself rises in active revolt against Mr.Say and his universal law. She does not believe in
it.
What
does Ms.Yellen believe in?
Ms.Yellen believes in the theory that consumer
spending represents 70% of the
United States economy.
Let us now proceed to a central assault upon the
consumption theory itself – the
nearly universal theory that consumer consumption constitutes 70% of the United States
economy.
It likely
constitutes far less.
Official calculations of the gross domestic product
neglect tremendous piles of
economic goings-on.
These goings-on include business investment and spending on
"intermediate"
goods.
These are inputs required for the production of final goods – hence they
are intermediate
goods.
The steel in the automobile, the sugar in the candy, the wood in the
furniture...these are
intermediate goods...for example.
Yet their purchase does not classify as
consumer spending – else they would
be double-counted in the ledgers.
Explains economist Mark Skousen:
"GDP only
measures the value of final output. It deliberately leaves out a big chunk of the economy – intermediate
production or
goods-in-process at the commodity, manufacturing and wholesale stages – to avoid double
counting."
Now mix in
expenditures on intermediate goods. What do we find?
We find that consumer
consumption merely constitutes
perhaps 30% of GDP. Skousen:
"I calculated total spending (sales or receipts)
in the economy at all stages to
be more than double GDP...By this measure – which I have dubbed gross domestic expenditures, or GDE –
consumption represents only
about 30% of the economy, while business investment (including intermediate output) represents over
50%."
To
emphasize: Consumption represents a mere 30% of the gross domestic product. Not the commonly accepted
70%.
We
therefore incline toward the business investment gauge of economic vigor.
And
business investment – over 50%
of the gross domestic product – has been steadily shedding steam.
Thus we
harbor a hearty suspicion about the
lovely economic reports in current circulation.
We do not believe them.











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