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Home Publications Blogs Beat the Press When It Comes to China, Manufacturing Workers and Goldman Sachs Have Opposite Interests

When It Comes to China, Manufacturing Workers and Goldman Sachs Have Opposite Interests

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Wednesday, 11 January 2012 05:40

This point would have been worth making in an NYT article on Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner's trip to China. The article notes that Geithner will likely try to prod China to raise the value of its currency against the dollar. It also reports that:

"American corporations in industries like telecommunications and financial services have increasingly complained that China continues to restrict their access to domestic markets, despite pledges of openness when China joined the World Trade Organization a decade ago."

Insofar as Geithner makes a priority of pushing for increased market access for the financial and telecommunications industry it will almost certainly mean less progress on raising the value of the yuan against the dollar. The United States is not in a position to simply dictate conditions to China, so getting more concessions in one area almost certainly means getting fewer concessions in other areas.

This means that if Geithner succeeds in getting concessions from China on market access for financial and telecommunications firms, it will likely be at the expense of achieving more progress on lowering the dollar against the yuan. This would mean in effect that he will have placed the interest of these industries ahead of the interest of U.S. manufacturing workers, since we could potentially gain millions of manufacturing jobs from a lower valued dollar.

This trade-off should have been made clearer in the article.

Comments (3)Add Comment
Geithner's Zero Sum Austerity Move
written by izzatzo, January 11, 2012 5:14 AM
As any economist knows, austerity requires understanding opportunity cost which in turn reflects scarcity. One can have market access or a lower dollar but not both.

Stupid liberals.
Geither's Real Task
written by Paul, January 11, 2012 9:20 AM
Should be to convince China to increase imports of American goods and services in order to reduce our trade deficit. Obviously China has enough dollars to buy lots of goods and services from us, so why is prodding them to increase their imports from us NEVER on the agenda?

Shouldn't Huntsman have been doing this instead of plotting his failed presidential campaign?
...
written by sherparick, January 11, 2012 11:11 AM
The chronic long term unemployment and declining real wages are a "feature" not a "bug," and along with Chinese inflation will eventually make manufacturing U.S. workers once again competitive (although living once again in 19th century conditions). But the Rentier class and CEOs will get to keep their strong dollar through the "internal devaluation."

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About Beat the Press

Dean Baker is co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, D.C. He is the author of several books, his latest being The End of Loser Liberalism: Making Markets Progressive. Read more about Dean.

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