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westicle | 12 years ago
I have no formal background in economics, but I'd really appreciate it if someone who does could explain this statement in some context.
I would have thought as a general rule: a debtor at risk (even theoretical risk) of default constitutes a concern to its creditor.
I also don't see what giving favours has to do with buying and selling bonds.
bradleyjg|12 years ago
There's lots of theories about how this or that or the other thing might cause high inflation and/or devaluation. But when you look at the track record of these theories they are pretty horrible. QE1 and QE2 was supposed to lead to imminent hyperinflation. It didn't happen. The S&P downgrade was supposed to lead to yield spikes in treasuries (which in turn was supposed to lead to heavy inflation). It didn't happen. Deficit spending was supposed to lead to bond vigilantes coming out of the woodwork and cause catastrophic inflation. It didn't happen.
As a formal matter the government doesn't even need to issue bonds. Under this view (which broadly speaking goes by the name MMT) the government doesn't have a budget per se at all. When a bill comes due they can just create dollars out of thin air to pay it. When taxes or other fees are paid to the government they don't get stored anywhere to be used to pay bills, but instead cease to exist. Advocates of MMT suggest that the government tweak outflows and inflows not with the aim of balancing a non-existing budget but rather based on managing observed metrics (mainly inflation).
Critics claim that a move to such a system would cause hyperinflation. Who knows, they might even be right for once. The important take away is that the US government is not just a really big household, and US treasury bonds are not just like a credit card.
aliston|12 years ago
RyanZAG|12 years ago
jbooth|12 years ago
The US offers bonds in $ at a certain very low interest rate and China buys them in order to maintain their low yuan valuation. As stated in the article, this is to manipulate currency prices for domestic reasons to keep their exported goods "cheap" in terms of the global reserve currency, dollars.
Your cons are all messed up. They're making the dollar stronger and the yuan weaker, deliberately, and that makes our firms over-priced when exporting. We've had 1% inflation for like 5 years now.
If they didn't have that industrial policy, we'd probably have to be selling our 30-year tbonds at 3-4% instead of sub-1% as they are now. They do have the policy, so we should frankly be selling more bonds and spending the money on infrastructure, but hey, that's a hard story to sell for some reason.
bkmartin|12 years ago
huply|12 years ago
While it certainly is correct that a debtor at risk would have some concern for default, the point of the article is that (the author asserts) China doesn't particularly care for the stream of interest payments on it's bonds, or even the principal payment back at maturity, but rather the tool that the "investment vehicle" (Treasury) provides, it is China's most powerful weapon in sustaining its relatively devalued currency.
rtkwe|12 years ago
aliston|12 years ago
onebaddude|12 years ago
There is constant fear that someday China (and the rest of the world) will simply lose faith in the credit of the US and stop buying bonds. In the same way that you might decide CitiGroup is no longer a good investment, and stop buying (or selling) their bonds.
But in reality, it's not like the Chinese are looking around at all the sovereign debt in the world and deciding where to put their money. They have an excess of dollars from the sale of manufactured goods to go put to use. They could spend those dollars on American made products (and they do, to some degree), but the Chinese economy isn't quite in need of most of what we manufacture yet, and they have a lot of dollars to get rid of. So they buy US bonds. It's a mutually beneficial arrangement.
I'm glad some of this is reaching the mainstream media. I'm no expert myself, but this crisis, and the past few years have revealed that when it comes to the economy, we have a very misinformed, ignorant population.
jusben1369|12 years ago
rayiner|12 years ago
balabaster|12 years ago
efalcao|12 years ago
They don't care what the return is, they just want to offload dollars. If you don't care about the return, then something is not an investment - the quality of the borrower (based on their ability/history of repayment) is moot.
anoncowherd|12 years ago
Ignore the mainstream "Talking Heads" -economists in the media - they serve two main purposes: 1) Help Wall Street fleece unsuspecting "retail investors", and 2) Maintain the illusion that everything is alright.
Austrian Economics is right, and everything else is either wrong or meant to mislead you.
You see, you shouldn't be thinking naughty thoughts like: "Since I personally can't keep living beyond my means for ever and ever, why could any government? Don't the 'laws' of economics apply to governments?" (Hint: they do.)
Go forth and educate thyself: http://mises.org
( Oh, and ignore all the clueless pontificators on HN too )
jusben1369|12 years ago
brohee|12 years ago
anoncowherd|12 years ago