Monday, December 08, 2008

A Reasonable Guy?

Gao Xiqing certainly sounds so. He's the president of China Investment Corporation. In the current The Atlantic James Fallows summarizes an interview he had with Gao in October.

I suppose why I think Gao is reasonable is because I agree with most of what he says:

People, especially Americans, started believing that they can live on other people’s money. And more and more so. First other people’s money in your own country. And then the savings rate comes down, and you start living on other people’s money from outside. At first it was the Japanese. Now the Chinese and the Middle Easterners.

We—the Chinese, the Middle Easterners, the Japanese—we can see this too. Okay, we’d love to support you guys—if it’s sustainable. But if it’s not, why should we be doing this? After we are gone, you cannot just go to the moon to get more money. So, forget it. Let’s change the way of living. [By which he meant: less debt, lower rewards for financial wizardry, more attention to the “real economy,” etc.]

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I have to say it: you have to do something about pay in the financial system. People in this field have way too much money. And this is not right.

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But I think at the end of the day, the American government needs to talk with people and say: “Why don’t we get together and think about this? If China has $2 trillion, Japan has almost $2 trillion, and Russia has some, and all the others, then—let’s throw away the ideological differences and think about what’s good for everyone.” We can get all the relevant people together and think up what people are calling a second Bretton Woods system, like the first Bretton Woods convention did.

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Americans are not sensitive in that regard. I mean, as a whole. The simple truth today is that your economy is built on the global economy. And it’s built on the support, the gratuitous support, of a lot of countries. So why don’t you come over and … I won’t say kowtow [with a laugh], but at least, be nice to the countries that lend you money.

Talk to the Chinese! Talk to the Middle Easterners! And pull your troops back! Take the troops back, demobilize many of the troops, so that you can save some money rather than spending $2 billion every day on them. And then tell your people that you need to save, and come out with a long-term, sustainable financial policy.

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The current conditions can’t go on. It is time for the new government, under Obama or even McCain, to really tell people: “Look, this is wartime, this is about the survival of our nation. It’s not about our supremacy in the world. Let’s not even talk about that any more. Let’s get down to the very basics of our livelihood.”

I have great admiration of American people. Creative, hard-working, trusting, and freedom-loving. But you have to have someone to tell you the truth. And then, start realizing it. And if you do it, just like what you did in the Second World War, then you’ll be great again!

If that happens, then of course—American power would still be there for at least as long as I am living. But many people are betting on the other side.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

interesting, and refreshing breeze of cold air for us Americans, but ultimately Gao is as deluded if not more so than we are. for one he speaks of only half the equation and none of the mojo of globalization.

The sequence he quotes, all reflect countries and regions who have made their fortune selling us goods and services. No doubt they have worked mightily, to accomplish the task, but never-the-less, the driver of all that wealth accumulation is a combination of many key factors, one of which is the very dynamism of their main customer, and the critical policy post WWII decision, to build an inclusive integrated economic order that provided the basis for our mutual success. The bretton woods sisters, the dollar policy, and open trade regimen that they so relied on for they're SURPLUSES were all conscious policy choices to include them into our program.

The MOJO is all the technological and management innovations emanating from the open system of their main customer, they have been busy adopting. The Japanese have joined the pioneering side of the team, but the other two are second and third oarsmen.

So, excuse me if I have little respect for a co-dependent, complaining about our cheap money addictions. At least we sense we have a problem. I haven't met a Chinese person yet who even remotely realizes they built their house on this American talent.