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BOAO, Hainan, Nov. 2 (Xinhuanet) -- It would be "a serious mistake" to ask
China to revalue its currency, said Stephen S. Roach, chief economist of Morgan
Stanley at the luncheon speech delivered at the 2003 Boao Forum for Asia (BFA)
held here Sunday.
Roach attributed the recent outbreak of protectionist
sentiment against China to several reasons in his speech.
First, he believed that the world had formed an erroneous impression that
newly emerging Chinese companies were capturing global market share with
reckless abandon. In fact, nothing could be further from the truth.
Roach said for more than a decade, foreign-invested enterprises, or the
Chinese subsidiaries of global multinationals and joint ventures with
industrial-world partners had accounted for fully 65percent of the total
increase Chinese exports over the period.
Authoritative statistics showed that last year alone, a record 52.7 billion
US dollars of foreign direct investment flowed into China, making the country
the largest recipient of foreign direct investment in the world.
A big-cost industrial world had made a conscious decision that it needed
China to enhance its competitiveness, said Roach.
He pointed out that dismantling the RMB peg would destabilize the very
supply chain that had become so integral to new globalized production models and
exert serious negative impact on Japan, the US and Europe, which had led the
rush to Chinese outsourcing.
By putting pressure on China to change its currency regime, the industrial
world ran the risk of squandering the fruits of its owncost-cutting efforts,
said Roach.
Roach's second argument in support of China's currency peg was the nature
of the China's competitive prowess. Contrary to widespread perception, China did
not compete on the basis of an undervalued currency. It competed mainly in terms
of labor costs, technology, quality control, infrastructure and an unwavering
commitment to reform.
Third, Roach said China had consistently reiterated its long-term
commitment to opening its capital account and making its currency fully
convertible. To accomplish the objective, China had deepened its reform, but
still a lot more needs to be done in capital-market reforms and the clean-up of
the banking problems.
"Until there is more progress on financial reforms. it would be premature
and risky for China to float its currency in my view. That is a critical lesson
of the Asian financial crisis of 1997 to1998 that an impatient world should not
lose sight of when putting pressure on China," said Roach.
Roach said the so-called Chinese export threat had overlooked the increased
power of the Chinese import machine, a force that was putting China in an
increasingly prominent role as a new engine on the supply side of the global
economy.
In the first nine months of 2003, Chinese imports were up 40.5 percent over
the same period a year ago, the fastest annual increase of the last ten years.
This powerful import dynamic was at the heart of China's "demand pull" on other
nations in its supply chain, according to Roach.
Roach said the Chinese growth engine was making a real difference in
stimulating demand elsewhere in Asia and in the broader global economy. "I
continued to believe that China is the world's greatest development story of the
21st century," he said. Enditem
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