The Largest Currency Manipulation Country Is, in Fact, the US

Published in Huanqiu
(China) on 16 September 2012
by Wan Zhe (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Emily Zhang. Edited by Steven Stenzler.
The Federal Reserve held a monetary policy meeting on September 12 and 13 (GMT-8). The market has predicted that the Fed will announce its third-round quantitative easing (Q3) policies, which has resulted in the decline of the U.S. dollar exchange rate in the past two days. Up until today, in the last half month, the U.S. dollar exchange rate has been experiencing dramatic ups and downs, which has also caused price fluctuations in the global financial and raw materials market. All these market activities are merely results of some news released by the Fed.

Just three days ago, the U.S. dollar started to rebound from a four-month low. The U.S. dollar rebound was caused by the media saying that the Fed will release polices that are in favor of an economic rebound.

Ten days prior to the rebound, the U.S. dollar suffered a severe fall following the speech given by Ben Bernanke at the Global Central Bank Conference—he said that QE3 wouldn’t be easily used; however, the Fed “would never give it up” and “would use it at any moment.” His suspenseful speech gave the global market a shock. The exchange market, stock market, oil market, and gold market all started to make adjustments.

Before Bernanke’s speech, the U.S. announced a series of positive economic data, which signals that the U.S. just experienced a wave of significant economic rise.

In just a two-week period, market performance went through a roller-coaster ride that overwhelmed all passengers. This made people suspicious: not only because the U.S. dollar economic data seemed strange, which made American people unable to judge the situation of the American economy, but also because of the fact that the Fed would cry out loud to easy monetary policy when the dollar value is high and declare that the economy has a bright future when the dollar value is low—are these only coincidences?

If we look back to earlier times, it is not difficult to discover that such a technique has been continuously and consistently used for a long time. Especially after the 2008 financial crisis, the U.S. dollar exchange rate has been fluctuating around the two topics of “whether the U.S. economy will recover” and “whether QE3 will be released.” The dollars have been following a desired exchange rate that leads the U.S. economy to recover while global investors scratch their heads and try to figure out the directions of the market.

In fact, the U.S. government and the Fed are not using policies; rather they are using psychological effects through market prediction to realize their tight control over the U.S. dollar exchange rate.

Such control is inseparable from U.S. interests. On the one hand, after World War II, the U.S. dollar helped the U.S. to establish a solid foundation in the world economy, finance and politics. Any doubt against the U.S. dollar hits at America's economic roots, which is intolerant for America; therefore, the U.S. dollar cannot depreciate. On the other hand, appreciation of a country’s currency can inevitably hit heavily on industries like manufacturing, export, tourism, etc. To achieve economic recovery, of course America does not want to see its dollar appreciate.

If the Fed does dramatic policy adjustments like easing monetary policies, the side effect that follows cannot be overlooked. Besides, the international credit concerns caused by printing money would shake the dollar’s sturdy position. Thus, the U.S. decided not to fight its exchange rate with a sword but with Tai Chi. This is the reason why Bernanke decided not to release the Fed’s QE3 polices even when the economic data was gloomy. When the economic data cheered up and the market cooled down for QE3, the Fed, however, ignited the market’s hope of QE3. The U.S. uses the release of dazzling economic indicators to make the world’s economists fail; it uses ambiguous policy predictions to disturb organizational analysts’ thoughts.

Behind the anti-RMB policies and the attempts to categorize China into “Currency Manipulation Countries” lies the U.S.’s own economic and political gains. Its vain attempts at currency control have the same goal of protecting its own interests. The largest currency manipulation country is not some other country, but the U.S. itself.


The author is chief economist of the China National Gold Group Corporation.


美联储货币政策会议美国时间12日-13日召开,市场预期将公布第三轮量化宽松政策(QE3),于是,两天来美元汇率持续走软。至此,在半个多月时间内,美元汇率经历了戏剧般的几起几落,全球金融和原材料市场也随之浮沉跌宕,而这一切只源于美联储释放的几个消息。
就在3天前,美元从4个月来的低点开始反弹。原因是有消息称,美联储本周将推出有利于经济反弹的利率政策。
此前10天,美元经历了一轮猛烈的下跌,原因是8月31日美联储主席伯南克在全球央行年会作演讲时,强调QE3不会轻易使用,但“绝不放弃”而且“随时会启动”。伯南克的故弄玄虚令全球市场为之大震。汇市、股票、石油、黄金纷纷调整。
而在伯南克讲话前,美国公布的一连串经济数据表现正面,美元刚刚经历了一波显著的上涨行情。
仅仅半个月时间,市场表现如同坐过山车般令人应接不暇。这使人不禁生疑:除了美元经济数据过于诡异,以致美国人无法判断经济形势的理由之外,这种美元高了就哭喊着要宽松,美元低了就信誓旦旦声称经济很光明的反反复复,难道只是巧合?
如果再往前回顾,不难发现,这种技巧是长期、持续且不厌其烦地上演着的。尤其在2008金融危机之后,美元随着“美国经济是否复苏”和“QE3是否推出”这两大议题起起伏伏,在全球投资者抓耳挠腮不明所以的观望下,带着美国所期望的汇率,引领美国经济渐渐走向复原。
事实上,美国政府和美联储不是用政策,而是用对市场预期的心理操控,牢牢控制着美元的汇率。
这种操控与美国的利益紧密契合。一方面,二战后美元为美国在世界经济、金融以及政治上的强势地位奠定了坚实基础。对美元信用的怀疑是对于美元强势的釜底抽薪,这是美国所不能容忍的。因此美元汇率决不能大跌。另一方面,一国货币的走高无疑会对其制造业、出口、旅游等造成沉重打击,正在恢复中的美国自然也不愿美元过于坚挺。
如果进行猛烈的政策调整,如量化宽松,其副作用如通货膨胀等不可小觑。此外,印钞引起的国际信用担忧也会动摇美元的坚固地位。因此,美国的决定是,兵不血刃,用太极手段操纵汇率。这就是为何在美国经济数据黯淡之时,伯南克却不释放QE3的积极消息;在数据振作、QE3预期降温时,美联储却主动点燃QE3希望。美国用眼花缭乱的经济指标发布将全球经济学家考得焦糊,用模棱两可的政策预告将机构分析者的思路全然打乱。
在激烈抨击人民币政策、一次次试图把中国列为“汇率操纵国”的背后,是美国自身的经济和政治利益。美国百试不爽的汇率操纵手段,同样是为了本国的利益。世界上最大的汇率操纵国,不是别人,正是美国。▲(作者是中国黄金集团首席经济学家)
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