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2010-01-13
美国知名经济学家保罗·克鲁格曼近日发表文章《中国人的新年》,再次向人民币汇率发难。与一个多月前他的一篇语焉雷同的文章相比,除了在“抛售美元储备”这一怪论上继续表达满不在乎的态度外,此文还为保护主义辩护,鼓动与中国展开贸易对抗。针对这篇文章,《华尔街日报》记者阿兰·贝克撰文指出,新年伊始,一位美国最受推崇的经济学家喊着要和中国打一场贸易战,这实在令人吃惊。贝克质疑克鲁格曼:何以在大量抛售美国国债这一不现实、不可取的臆测上如此津津乐道?何以竟然反对全球普遍认同的自由贸易?又何以居然鼓吹以保护主义来解决美国就业不足的问题?  阿兰·贝克认为这篇文章在论证上存在明显的断裂和缺失。纵观全文,除了给中国扣上诸如“重商主义”“掠夺性”的大帽子外,未能为其“新颖”的观点提供论据。文中声称开打贸易战不会有什么损失。但人们不会忘记,1929年全球经济大萧条,翌年美国出台带有保护主义的《斯穆特-霍利关税法》,引发全球贸易大战,令此后5年世界贸易规模急剧萎缩2/3!
  文章称:“稍加计算就知道中国的重商主义未来几年将导致美国失去大约140万个就业岗位。”美国当前的失业难题缘于金融危机引发的经济萧条、美国不断加重的“产业空心化”等问题,要通过美国经济的复苏和调整来解决。一甩手就将美国的失业问题丢给了中国,实在是疑人窃斧的无稽之说。
  在人民币汇率问题上,绝不能以一笔“钉住汇率”,就勾销了人民币过去几年一直处于升值通道并且涨幅达21%的事实,以及中方不断完善人民币汇率形成机制的积极努力。反倒是美元存在的问题和变数,须要美国方面负起责任。
  滥觞于美国的全球金融危机的背景原因,已有公论。至于世界经济的当前应对和未来走势,需要全球群策群力,同舟共济。然而,类似克鲁格曼的观点、言论一段时间以来不时出现,就如同伦敦《金融时报》一篇文章所指,许多国际学者、要人的类似文章弥漫着“西方有理论”、“美国例外论”,却罔顾其他国家的国情乃至生存发展权益,这样的心态,让人想起“替罪羊”的典故。
  记得美国财长盖特纳去年6月访华前曾明确说,他不会继续“抱怨式外交”的做法。这一观点广受舆论关注和肯定,因为这应和了世界各国为应对危机,共同促进世界经济复苏、稳定和发展应采取的立场和原则。想起美国密苏里州和平人士威尔·鲍温写的一本书《不抱怨的世界》。该书主张人们正面思考,积极作为,远离抱怨。作者认为,从人际关系和人的健康角度看,不良情绪是百病之源,而抱怨少的人自然易于亲近,自身则心情舒畅,过得快乐而和谐。其实,危机应对乃至国际关系也同理。
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2010-1-13 12:50:21
Chinese New Year By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: December 31, 2009
It’s the season when pundits traditionally make predictions about the year ahead. Mine concerns international economics: I predict that 2010 will be the year of China. And not in a good way.

Actually, the biggest problems with China involve climate change. But today I want to focus on currency policy.

China has become a major financial and trade power. But it doesn’t act like other big economies. Instead, it follows a mercantilist policy, keeping its trade surplus artificially high. And in today’s depressed world, that policy is, to put it bluntly, predatory.

Here’s how it works: Unlike the dollar, the euro or the yen, whose values fluctuate freely, China’s currency is pegged by official policy at about 6.8 yuan to the dollar. At this exchange rate, Chinese manufacturing has a large cost advantage over its rivals, leading to huge trade surpluses.

Under normal circumstances, the inflow of dollars from those surpluses would push up the value of China’s currency, unless it was offset by private investors heading the other way. And private investors are trying to get into China, not out of it. But China’s government restricts capital inflows, even as it buys up dollars and parks them abroad, adding to a $2 trillion-plus hoard of foreign exchange reserves.

This policy is good for China’s export-oriented state-industrial complex, not so good for Chinese consumers. But what about the rest of us?

In the past, China’s accumulation of foreign reserves, many of which were invested in American bonds, was arguably doing us a favor by keeping interest rates low — although what we did with those low interest rates was mainly to inflate a housing bubble. But right now the world is awash in cheap money, looking for someplace to go. Short-term interest rates are close to zero; long-term interest rates are higher, but only because investors expect the zero-rate policy to end some day. China’s bond purchases make little or no difference.

Meanwhile, that trade surplus drains much-needed demand away from a depressed world economy. My back-of-the-envelope calculations suggest that for the next couple of years Chinese mercantilism may end up reducing U.S. employment by around 1.4 million jobs.

The Chinese refuse to acknowledge the problem. Recently Wen Jiabao, the prime minister, dismissed foreign complaints: “On one hand, you are asking for the yuan to appreciate, and on the other hand, you are taking all kinds of protectionist measures.” Indeed: other countries are taking (modest) protectionist measures precisely because China refuses to let its currency rise. And more such measures are entirely appropriate.

Or are they? I usually hear two reasons for not confronting China over its policies. Neither holds water.

First, there’s the claim that we can’t confront the Chinese because they would wreak havoc with the U.S. economy by dumping their hoard of dollars. This is all wrong, and not just because in so doing the Chinese would inflict large losses on themselves. The larger point is that the same forces that make Chinese mercantilism so damaging right now also mean that China has little or no financial leverage.

Again, right now the world is awash in cheap money. So if China were to start selling dollars, there’s no reason to think it would significantly raise U.S. interest rates. It would probably weaken the dollar against other currencies — but that would be good, not bad, for U.S. competitiveness and employment. So if the Chinese do dump dollars, we should send them a thank-you note.

Second, there’s the claim that protectionism is always a bad thing, in any circumstances. If that’s what you believe, however, you learned Econ 101 from the wrong people — because when unemployment is high and the government can’t restore full employment, the usual rules don’t apply.

Let me quote from a classic paper by the late Paul Samuelson, who more or less created modern economics: “With employment less than full ... all the debunked mercantilistic arguments” — that is, claims that nations who subsidize their exports effectively steal jobs from other countries — “turn out to be valid.” He then went on to argue that persistently misaligned exchange rates create “genuine problems for free-trade apologetics.” The best answer to these problems is getting exchange rates back to where they ought to be. But that’s exactly what China is refusing to let happen.

The bottom line is that Chinese mercantilism is a growing problem, and the victims of that mercantilism have little to lose from a trade confrontation. So I’d urge China’s government to reconsider its stubbornness. Otherwise, the very mild protectionism it’s currently complaining about will be the start of something much bigger.
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2010-1-13 12:53:16
如果跟我们打贸易战,中国能应付的了吗?我们的内需是不是足够的大了呢?
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2010-1-13 12:55:00
想打就打吧,该来的总是躲不掉的!
中国应该有经济战争意识,培养自己的经济战士!!
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2010-1-13 12:55:47
金融强权的御用文人啊
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2010-1-13 12:55:52
说的太好了,反对贸易保护主义!美国经济学家克鲁格曼的论点必将遭到世界各国人民的反对!
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