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Will abandoning the dollar peg help China rebalance its economy?

Will China’s decision to ditch the dollar peg help rebalance the global economy? This column argues that China’s action may facilitate a concerted appreciation in Factory Asia, helping the region redirect production away from western markets and towards domestic consumers.

The People’s Bank of China announced on 19 June that it would abandon its dollar peg and switch to a managed floating exchange rate regime with reference to a basket of currencies. Will this move help to rebalance the global economy?

Figure 1 shows that China’s trade surplus has been concentrated in “processing trade”. Processing trade refers to a customs regime under which parts and components are imported into China duty free and used to produce final goods that are re-exported to the rest of the world. Neither the imported inputs nor the final assembled goods enter China’s domestic market.

Figure 1. China’s trade balance by customs regime

Source: CEIC Database

Table 1 shows some key facts about processing trade:

  • Two-thirds of the imports for processing come from East Asia; the US and Europe account for only 5% each.
  • For processed exports, about 20% goes to East Asia, the US, Europe, and Hong Kong.
  • Imports for processing come largely from East Asia while processed exports go throughout the world, so China runs deficits of about $100 billion with East Asia and surpluses of almost $100 billion with Europe and of more than $100 billion with the US and Hong Kong.
  • Because of “entrepôt” trade, China’s surpluses with Hong Kong and Singapore actually represent surpluses with other countries.

Table 1. China’s processing trade, 2006-2009$

     
South Korea
Taipei, China 
ASEAN4  
Japan        
Singapore
Hong Kong  
US
Europe 
ROW
Imports for processing (%)
2006
15.08
19.04
10.51
15.89
2.63
2.11
5.23
4.99
24.52
2007
15.24
18.75
10.65
16.11
2.40
1.98
4.93
5.03
24.91
2008
15.63
18.07
10.26
16.20
2.28
1.62
5.20
5.72
25.01
2009
16.95
16.96
9.73
15.53
2.18
1.32
4.80
5.51
27.03
Processed exports (%)
2006
3.95
2.19
3.21
10.35
2.96
22.34
25.23
17.85
11.90
2007
3.98
1.92
3.25
9.35
2.84
22.42
23.54
18.59
14.10
2008
4.75
1.88
3.27
9.22
2.79
21.01
22.20
18.71
16.16
2008
4.96
1.86
3.40
9.13
3.36
20.57
22.68
17.50
16.54
Balance in processing trade (billions of dollars)
2006
(28.29)
(50.01)
(17.40)
1.76
6.65
107.24
111.98
75.06
(18.12)
2007
(31.57)
(57.18)
(19.18)
(1.63)
8.73
131.18
127.25
96.29
(4.65)
2008
(27.07)
(55.71)
(16.72)
0.99
10.19
135.76
130.20
104.67
14.46
2008
(25.50)
(43.72)
(11.41)
3.56
12.72
116.46
117.61
84.93
9.92
Notes: ASEAN4 includes Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, and Thailand. Europe includes Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Sweden and UK. Source: China Customs Statistics.

 

Addressing the statistical problems of trans-shipments

Kwan (2006) noted that, in the presence of entrepôt trade, import data are much more accurate than export data. When exports from China are trans-shipped through Hong Kong or Singapore, the Chinese government might not know the final destination of the goods. They thus record the goods as being exported to Hong Kong or Singapore.

When the exports arrive at their final destination, however, the importing country records the goods as having come from China. Kwan thus recommends using import data from trading partners to calculate bilateral trade balances.

Using this approach, China’s surplus with Europe increases by about 20% and China’s surplus with the US increases by 50%. This makes it clear that China’s surplus in processing trade is primarily with Western countries.

Given this pattern (large trade deficits with East Asia and even larger surpluses with the West), an appreciation throughout East Asian supply chain countries would help rebalance the processing trade by affecting the cost competitiveness of a much wider share of the value added than would happen with only a renminbi appreciation. That is, an East-Asia-wide appreciation would affect the relative euro and dollar prices not only of China’s value added but also of the value of imported inputs coming from the rest of Asia. Formal evidence indicating that an appreciation throughout Asia would affect China’s processed exports has been presented by Ahmed (2009) and in my recent research with Gordon Smith (Thorbecke and Smith 2010).

Some estimates

Ahmed (2009) employs an autoregressive distributed lag model and quarterly data over the 1996Q1 – 2009Q2 period and disaggregated renminbi exchange rate changes into those relative to East Asian countries and those relative to other countries. He reports that a 10% appreciation of the renminbi relative to non-East Asian countries would reduce China’s processed exports by 17% and that a 10% appreciation in other East Asian countries would reduce China’s processed exports by 15%. Ahmed concludes that an appreciation throughout East Asia would cause a much larger drop in processed exports than an appreciation of the renminbi alone.

In our recent paper (Thorbecke and Smith 2010), we construct a single integrated exchange rate variable to measure changes in the relative foreign currency costs of China’s entire output of processed exports. Using dynamic ordinary least squares estimation and annual panel data over the 1992-2005 period, we argue that a 10% appreciation throughout the region would reduce processed exports by 10%. Thus, a joint appreciation throughout East Asia would help to rebalance processing trade.

Conclusion

By abandoning its de facto dollar peg and adopting a regime characterised by a multiple-currency basket-based reference rate, China may facilitate a concerted appreciation in the region. China's dollar peg had prevented Asian countries from appreciating together. With China’s currency pegged, neighbouring countries competing with China felt they also had to prevent their currencies from appreciating.

When currency markets opened on 21 June after the announcement by the People’s Bank of China, the renminbi and other East Asian currencies appreciated together. If China can gradually increase the band around its new reference rate, the huge surpluses generated within East Asian production networks would cause currencies in the region to appreciate together.

Market forces could allocate these appreciations across supply chain countries based on their value-added in processing trade. Stronger exchange rates would then reduce processed exports to the US and Europe, helping the region to redirect production away from western markets and towards domestic consumers.

References

Ahmed, Shanghil (2009) “Are Chinese Exports Sensitive to Changes in the Exchange Rate?”, Federal Reserve Board International Finance Discussion Papers No. 987.

Kwan, CH (2006), “The Actual State of the US and Japan’s Trade Imbalances with China– Taking into Consideration Transit Trade through Hong Kong”, Manuscript, Tokyo: RIETI .

Thorbecke, Willem and Gordon Smith. (2010) “How Would an Appreciation of the RMB and other East Asian Currencies Affect China’s exports?Review of International Economics, 18, 95-108.

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