Wall Street: The Trump-China missing link
October 02, 2016
Thesaker.is
by Pepe
Escobar for RT
The yuan is about to enter the IMF’s basket of reserve currencies this
coming Saturday – alongside the US dollar, pound, euro and yen. This is no less
than a geoeconomic earthquake.
Not only does this
represent yet another step in China’s irresistible path towards economic
primacy; the Chinese currency’s inclusion in the Special Drawing Rights (SDR)
basket will also lead central banks and hyper-wealthy funds – especially from
the US – to increasingly buy more Chinese assets.
At the first US
presidential debate, Donald Trump took no prisoners, criticizing China’s
currency manipulation. This is what he said:
“You look at what China’s doing to our country in terms of making our
product, they’re devaluing their currency and there’s nobody in our government
to fight them… They’re using our country as a piggy bank to rebuild China, and
many other countries are doing the same thing.”
Well, China is not “making
our product”; the manufacturing process is Made in China – then exported to
the US. Most of the profits benefit US corporations – everything from design,
licensing and royalties to advertising, financing and retail margins. If the
mantras manage to spell out a partial truth – the US has lost manufacturing
jobs to China, China is the “factory of the world” – they
don’t spell out the hidden truth that those who profit are essentially major
corporations.
China does not “devalue
their currency”; the People’s Bank of China periodically adjusts the yuan
according to a very narrow band. The major practitioners of quantitative easing
(QE) are actually the US, as well as Japan and the European Central Bank (ECB).
And the currency of global consumer goods manufacturing continues to be the US
dollar, not the yuan.
Beijing also is not “using
our country as a piggy bank to rebuild China.” This is all about
balance of payments. What US consumers spend on Made in China products – many
of them delocalized by US corporations – is pumped back to the US as capital
inflows that keep interest rates down and help to support the Empire of Chaos’s
global hegemony.
Win-win, Wall Street-style
Trump’s attention
span is notoriously minimalist. If his advisers managed to imprint – tweet? – a
few one-liners on his brain, he would be able to explain to US public opinion
how the US-China game is really played, something that all relevant parties in
both nations know by heart.
And the – crucial –
missing link in the whole game is Wall Street.
This is how it
works. A mighty hedge fund approaches a US corporation and/or large company
with “an offer you can’t refuse”: Delocalize to China. This
necessarily implies that all the company’s assets are re-hypothecated on a
double-entry ledger in Wall Street.
Wall Street “wins” both
ways; either by financing the delocalization (and corresponding US job
extinction) to China, or buying companies that refuse to delocalize.
Then they go for
wage arbitrage concerning products that used to be Made in USA and are now Made
in China; that concerns the huge wage gap between the US and China, which also
factors the exchange rate between the US dollar and the yuan.
China for their
part recycles their US dollars buying US Treasury Bills. This, of course, holds
bond prices high, and that helps to keep US interest rates low.
Everything in fact
is on a high; bond prices, the US dollar perceived value all over the world,
the exchange rate. US dollars keep frantically entering the US economy, then –
in theory – used to keep frantically buying Made in China products.
Of course the price
of a Made in China product in the US is low – and that is “incentive” enough
for US companies to essentially keep Main Street USA unemployed. As Steve Jobs
once famously proclaimed,“these jobs are not coming back”.
The US dollar
exchange rate will continue to be high as long as China – and others – recycle
their excess US dollars to buy US Treasury Bills en masse. The crucial point is
that these US dollars never enter the real economy. They are sort of “trapped” either
in the extremely cozy upper strata of Wall Street casino capitalism or Too Big
To Fail rarefied banking. And the Fed wants the game to go on indefinitely, to
prevent a rate collapse.
Beijing for its
part plays the game with relish; as the prime global export powerhouse, the
agenda is to solidify – and expand – manufacturing know how on the way to
achieve a status of “moderate income” nation by the start of the next decade.
The bottom line is
that to recover US manufacturing jobs – as Trump has been forcefully promising
– he will have to stare down the whole Wall Street finance oligarchy.
So no wonder these
oligarchs – responsible for shipping all those US manufacturing jobs to Asia
and lavishly profiting from bailouts to the ‘Too Big To Fail’ racket – hate him
with all their golden-plated guts.
Hellfiring those Too Big to Fail
For all his
incapacity to formulate thoughts above the language skills of a third grader,
Trump has been piling up astonishing proposals that resonate wildly, way beyond
the “basket of deplorables” spectrum.
He is against Cold
War 2.0 and the pivot to Asia, when he says “wouldn’t it be nice to get
along with Russia and China for a change?”
He no less than
pre-empted WWIII when he said he would be against a US nuclear first-strike.
He totally abhors
global “free trade” – from NAFTA to TPP and TTIP – because it has “hollowed
out the lives of American workers”, as US corporations (under Wall Street’s “incentive”)
delocalize and then import back into the US tariff-free.
Trump was even open
to nationalizing Wall Street banks after the 2008 financial crisis.
So we’re faced with
the ultimate surrealist spectacle of a billionaire denouncing corporate
globalization, which has been responsible for stripping the US lower middle
classes of countless, decent blue-collar jobs and social benefits – not to
mention turning them into hostages of rotting public infrastructure. And all
that with absolutely no one among the US establishment condemning the most
astonishing wealth transfer to the 0.0001% in history.
If in the next two
presidential debates Trump points to the crucial missing link in the whole plot
– Wall Street – he might as well lock on as a surefire winner.
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