BRICS Bank challenges Atlanticist hegemony, offers alternative to
Vulture
Capitalism
Newsletter published on 1 August 2014
(1) BRICS set up bank to counter Western hold on global
finances
(2) The dollar's 70-year dominance is coming to an end
(3) BRICS
Bank challenges Atlanticist hegemony, offers alternative to
Vulture
Capitalism
(4) China increases use of Yuan in trade, but won't float it. 70%
of
Japan's trade is in Yen
(1) BRICS set up bank to counter Western
hold on global finances
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/07/16/us-brics-summit-bank-idUSKBN0FK08V20140716
By
Alonso Soto and Anthony Boadle
FORTALEZA Brazil Wed Jul 16, 2014 12:42am
EDT
(L-R) Russian President Vladimir Putin, Indian Prime Minister
Narendra
Modi, Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff, Chinese President Xi
Jinping
and South African President Jacob Zuma talk at a group photo session
during the 6th BRICS summit in Fortaleza July 15, 2014. REUTERS/Nacho
Doce
FORTALEZA Brazil (Reuters) - Leaders of the BRICS emerging market
nations launched a $100 billion development bank and a currency reserve
pool on Tuesday in their first concrete step toward reshaping the
Western-dominated international financial system.
The bank aimed at
funding infrastructure projects in developing nations
will be based in
Shanghai, and India will preside over its operations
for the first five
years, followed by Brazil and then Russia, leaders of
the five-country group
announced at a summit.
They also set up a $100 billion currency reserves
pool to help countries
forestall short-term liquidity pressures.
The
long-awaited bank will be called the New Development Bank.
It is the
first major achievement of the BRICS countries - Brazil,
Russia, India,
China and South Africa - since they got together in 2009
to press for a
bigger say in the global financial order created by
Western powers after
World War Two and centered on the International
Monetary Fund and the World
Bank.
The BRICS were prompted to seek coordinated action following an
exodus
of capital from emerging markets last year, triggered by the scaling
back of U.S. monetary stimulus.
The new bank reflects the growing
influence of the BRICS, which account
for almost half the world's population
and about one-fifth of global
economic output.
The bank will begin
with a subscribed capital of $50 billion divided
equally between its five
founders, with an initial total of $10 billion
in cash put in over seven
years and $40 billion in guarantees. It is
scheduled to start lending in
2016 and be open to membership by other
countries, but the capital share of
the BRICS cannot drop below 55 percent.
The contingency currency pool
will be held in the reserves of each BRICS
country and can be shifted to
another member to cushion
balance-of-payments difficulties. This initiative
gathered momentum
after the reverse in the flows of cheap dollars that
fueled a boom in
emerging markets for a decade.
BID TO CONTAIN
VOLATILITY
"It will help contain the volatility faced by diverse
economies as a
result of the tapering of the United States' policy of
monetary
expansion," Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff said.
"It is
a sign of the times, which demand reform of the IMF," she told
reporters at
the close of the summit.
China, holder of the world's largest foreign
exchange reserves, will
contribute the bulk of the contingency currency
pool, or $41 billion.
Brazil, India and Russia will chip in $18 billion each
and South Africa
$5 billion.
If a need arises, China will be eligible
to ask for half of its
contribution, South Africa for double and the
remaining countries for
the amount they put in.
China's official
Xinhua news agency, citing unidentified sources at the
Chinese Finance
Ministry, said the new bank would give developing
countries a greater say in
the international financial order, a theme
President Xi Jinping struck ahead
of the summit.
The new bank "will promote the global system of economic
governance to
develop in a just and fair direction," the agency
said.
IMPASSE BROKEN
Negotiations over the headquarters and first
presidency lasted until the
eleventh hour due to differences between India
and China. The impasse
reflected the trouble Brazil, Russia, India, China
and South Africa have
had in reconciling stark economic and political
differences that made it
hard for the group to turn rhetoric into concrete
action.
"We pulled it off 10 minutes before the end of the game. We
reached a
balanced package that is satisfactory to all," a Brazilian
diplomat told
Reuters.
Negotiations to create the bank dragged on for
more than two years as
Brazil and India fought China's attempts to get a
bigger share in the
lender than the others.
In the end, Brazil and
India prevailed in keeping equal equity at its
launch, but fears linger that
China, the world's No. 2 economy, could
try to assert greater influence over
the bank to expand its political
clout abroad. China, however, will not
preside over the bank for two
decades.
Facing efforts by leading
Western nations to isolate Russia for annexing
Crimea and stirring revolt in
eastern Ukraine, the BRICS summit provided
President Vladimir Putin with a
welcome geopolitical platform to show he
has friends elsewhere, economic
powers seen as shaping the future of the
world.
The BRICS abstained
from criticizing Russia over the crisis in Ukraine
and called instead for
restraint by all actors so the conflict can be
resolved
peacefully.
(Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard in BEIJING; Editing by
Tom Brown,
Jonathan Oatis and Richard Borsuk)
(2) The dollar's
70-year dominance is coming to an end
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/liamhalligan/10978178/The-dollars-70-year-dominance-is-coming-to-an-end.html
The
dollar's 70-year dominance is coming to an end
Within a decade,
greenback's could be replaced as the world's reserve
currency
By Liam
Halligan
5:30PM BST 19 Jul 2014
In early July 1944, delegates from
44 countries gathered at the Mount
Washington Hotel in Bretton Woods, New
Hampshire. A three-week summit
took place, at which a new system was agreed
to regulate the
international monetary and financial order after the Second
World War.
The US was already the world’s commercial powerhouse, having
eclipsed
the British Empire several decades earlier. America was also on
course
to be among the victors of “Europe’s conflict”, even though its
economy
was largely unscathed by war. As such, Bretton Woods was
US-dominated
and produced a settlement largely on US terms.
Seventy
years ago this week, that fateful summit ended. Its close marked
the moment
the dollar’s unquestionable supremacy was secured. Since
then, global
commerce has been conducted largely in dollars and leading
economies have
held the greenback as their primary reserve currency.
The same system
remains intact today, with the lion’s share of
commercial settlements
worldwide still clearing the US banking system –
even if the parties
involved have nothing to do with the States.
The dollar’s hegemony
continues to be cemented, meanwhile, by the
operations of the International
Monetary Fund and World Bank. Founded at
Bretton Woods, they’re both
Washington based, of course, and controlled
by America, despite some
Francophone window-dressing.
The advantages this system bestows on the US
are enormous. “Reserve
currency status” generates huge demand for dollars
from governments and
companies around the world, as they’re needed for
reserves and trade.
This has allowed successive American administrations to
spend far more,
year-in year-out, than is raised in tax and export
revenue.
By the early Seventies, US economic dominance was so assured
that even
after President Nixon reneged on the dollar’s previously
unshakeable
convertibility into gold, amounting to a massive default, dollar
demand
kept growing.
So America doesn’t worry about balance of
payments crises, as it can pay
for imports in dollars the Federal Reserve
can just print. And
Washington keeps spending willy-nilly, as the world buys
ever more
Treasuries on the strength of regulatory imperative and the vast
liquidity and size of the market for US sovereign debt.
It is this
“exorbitant privilege” – as French statesman Valéry Giscard
d’Estaing once
sourly observed – that has been the bedrock of America’s
post-war hegemony.
It is the status of the dollar, above all, that’s
allowed Washington to get
its way, putting the financial squeeze on
recalcitrant countries via the IMF
while funding foreign wars. To
understand politics and power it pays to
follow the money. And for the
past 70 years, the dollar has ruled the
roost.
This won’t change anytime soon. Something just took place, though,
which
illustrates that dollar reserve currency status won’t last forever and
could be seriously diluted. Last week, seven decades on from Bretton
Woods, the governments of Brazil, Russia, India and China led a
conference in the Brazilian city of Fortaleza to mark the establishment
of a new development bank that, whatever diplomatic niceties are put on
it, is intent on competing with the IMF and World Bank.
It’s long
been obvious the BRICs are coming. The total annual output of
these four
economies has spiralled in recent years, to an astonishing
$29.6 trillion
(£17.3 trillion) last year on a PPP-basis adjusted for
living costs. That’s
within spitting distance of the $34.2 trillion
generated by the US and
European Union combined.
America’s GDP, incidentally, was $16.8?trillion
on World Bank numbers,
and China’s was $16.2?trillion – within a whisker of
knocking the US off
its perch. The balance of global economic power is on a
knife-edge.
Tomorrow is almost today.
(3) BRICS Bank challenges
Atlanticist hegemony, offers alternative to
Vulture Capitalism
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/World/WOR-01-150714.html
http://mycatbirdseat.com/2014/07/65598-brics-against-washington-consensus/
BRICS
against Washington consensus
Pepe Escobar July 16, 2014 0
This
Russia-China commercial/diplomatic offensive fits the concerted
push towards
a multipolar world – side by side with political/economic
South American
leaders.
by Pepe Escobar
Asia Times
The headline news is
that this Tuesday in Fortaleza, northeast Brazil,
the BRICS group of
emerging powers (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South
Africa) fights the
(Neoliberal) World (Dis)Order via a new development
bank and a reserve fund
set up to offset financial crises.
The devil, of course, is in the
details of how they’ll do it.
It’s been a long and winding road since
Yekaterinburg in 2009, at their
first summit, up to the BRICS’s long-awaited
counterpunch against the
Bretton Woods consensus – the IMF and the World
Bank – as well as the
Japan-dominated (but largely responding to US
priorities) Asian
Development Bank (ADB).
The BRICS Development Bank
– with an initial US$50 billion in capital –
will be not only
BRICS-oriented, but invest in infrastructure projects
and sustainable
development on a global scale. The model is the
Brazilian BNDES, which
supports Brazilian companies investing across
Latin America. In a few years,
it will reach a financing capacity of up
to $350 billion. With extra funding
especially from Beijing and Moscow,
the new institution could leave the
World Bank in the dust. Compare
access to real capital savings to US
government’s printed green paper
with no collateral.
And then there’s
the agreement establishing a $100 billion pool of
reserve currencies – the
Contingent Reserve Arrangement (CRA), described
by Russian Finance Minister
Anton Siluanov as “a kind of mini-IMF”.
That’s a non-Washington consensus
mechanism to counterpunch capital
flight. For the pool, China will
contribute with $41 billion, Brazil,
India and Russia with $18 billion each,
and South Africa with $5 billion.
The development bank should be
headquartered in Shanghai – although
Mumbai has forcefully tried to make its
case (for an Indian take on the
BRICS strategy, see here )
Way beyond
economy and finance, this is essentially about geopolitics –
as in emerging
powers offering an alternative to the failed Washington
consensus. Or, as
consensus apologists say, the BRICS may be able to
“alleviate challenges”
they face from the “international financial
system”. The strategy also
happens to be one of the key nodes of the
progressively solidified
China-Russia alliance, recently featured via
the gas “deal of the century”
and at the St. Petersburg economic forum.
Let’s play geopolitical
ball
Just as Brazil managed, against plenty of odds, to stage an
unforgettable World Cup – the melting of the national team
notwithstanding – Vladimir Putin and Xi Xinping now come to the
neighborhood to play top class geopolitical ball.
The Kremlin views
the bilateral relation with Brasilia as highly
strategic. Putin not only
watched the World Cup final in Rio; apart from
Brazilian President Dilma
Rousseff, he also met German chancellor Angela
Merkel (they discussed
Ukraine in detail). Yet arguably the key member
of Putin’s traveling party
is Elvira Nabiulin, president of Russia’s
Central Bank; she is pressing in
South America the concept that all
negotiations with the BRICS should bypass
the US dollar.
Putin’s extremely powerful, symbolic meeting with Fidel
Castro in
Havana, as well as writing off $36 billion in Cuban debt could not
have
had a more meaningful impact all across Latin America. Compare it with
the perennial embargo imposed by a vengeful Empire of Chaos.
In South
America, Putin is meeting not only with Uruguay’s President
Pepe Mujica –
discussing, among other items, the construction of a
deepwater port – but
also with Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro and Bolivia’s
Evo Morales.
Xi
Jinping is also on tour, visiting, apart from Brazil, Argentina, Cuba
and
Venezuela. What Beijing is saying (and doing) complements Moscow;
Latin
America is viewed as highly strategic. That should translate into
more
Chinese investment and increased South-South integration.
This
Russia-China commercial/diplomatic offensive fits the concerted
push towards
a multipolar world – side by side with political/economic
South American
leaders. Argentina is a sterling example. While Buenos
Aires, already mired
in recession, fights American vulture funds – the
epitome of financial
speculation – in New York courthouses, Putin and Xi
come offering investment
in everything from railways to the energy industry.
Russia’s energy
industry of course needs investment and technology from
private Western
multinationals, just as Made in China developed out of
Western investment
profiting from a cheap workforce. What the BRICS are
trying to present to
the Global South now is a choice; on one side,
financial speculation,
vulture funds and the hegemony of the Masters of
the Universe; on the other
side, productive capitalism – an alternative
strategy of capitalist
development compared to the Triad (US, EU, Japan).
Still, it will be a
long way for the BRICS to project a productive model
independent of the
casino capitalism speculation “model”, by the way
still recovering from the
massive 2007/2008 crisis (the financial bubble
has not burst for
good.)
One might view the BRICS’s strategy as a sort of running,
constructive
critique of capitalism; how to purge the system from
perennially
financing the US fiscal deficit as well as a global
militarization
syndrome – related to the Orwellian/Panopticon complex –
subordinated to
Washington. As Argentine economist Julio Gambina put it, the
key
question is not being emergent, but independent.
In this piece,
La Stampa’s Claudio Gallo introduces what could be the
defining issue of the
times: how neoliberalism – ruling directly or
indirectly most of the world –
is producing a disastrous anthropological
mutation that is plunging us all
into global totalitarianism (while
everyone swears by their
“freedoms”).
It’s always instructive to come back to Argentina. Argentina
is
imprisoned by a chronic foreign debt crisis essentially unleashed by the
IMF over 40 years ago – and now perpetuated by vulture funds. The BRICS
bank and the reserve pool as an alternative to the IMF and World Bank
offer the possibility for dozens of other nations to escape the
Argentine plight. Not to mention the possibility that other emerging
nations such as Indonesia, Malaysia, Iran and Turkey may soon contribute
to both institutions.
No wonder the hegemonic Masters of the Universe
gang is uneasy in their
leather chairs. This Financial Times piece neatly
summarizes the view
from the City of London – a notorious casino capitalism
paradise.
These are heady days in South America in more ways than one.
Atlanticist
hegemony will remain part of the picture, of course, but it’s
the
BRICS’s strategy that is pointing the way further on down the road. And
still the multipolar wheel keeps rolling along.
(4) China increases
use of Yuan in trade, but won't float it. 70% of
Japan's trade is in
Yen
http://www.businessspectator.com.au/article/2014/7/16/china/dont-believe-hype-about-renminbi
Don't
believe the hype about the renminbi
* John Lee
* 16 Jul,
8:15 AM
A report by the Institute of International Finance last week
showing
that the use of the Chinese renminbi has become the sixth most used
currency in global transactions is being used to support arguments that
the genuine internationalisation of the RMB is close, rapid and all but
inevitable. I have consistently argued that this is far from the
case.
In this article, I will reiterate the argument that we should not
get
too excited by RMB internationalisation. Genuine RMB
internationalisation is not possible without genuine and profound
Chinese economic reform. And until that occurs, RMB will remain a niche
and speculative currency rather than one reflecting China’s status as a
great trading nation and the second largest economy in the
world.
Let’s start with some numbers. The RMB has become the ninth most
traded
foreign currency on foreign exchange markets, in addition to being
number six in all global transactions mentioned above. In 2010, $US34
billion per day was traded, rising to $US120bn per day
currently.
This appears a dramatic rise, but from a very low base.
Payments in RMB
still only accounts for about 1.6 per cent of forex
transactions. In
March 2014, the US dollar accounted for 40.19 per cent and
the Euro
31.78 per cent.
Since the majority of transactions in RMB
are for the purpose of
settling trade, so-called ‘swap agreements’ with the
People’s Bank of
China will become more important. China conducts the
majority of its
trade in American dollars, and a small percentage in
Japanese yen. In
2012, RMB was used in only 15 per cent of China’s imports
and nine per
cent of its exports. (This is in contrast to the US, where 90
per cent
of its trade is in US dollars and Japan where 70 per cent of its
trade
is in Japanese yen.)
This means that local currency needs to be
converted to the greenback,
and then into RMB (and vice versa) when trading
with China. The extra
cost of intermediary conversions to and from the US
dollar in IOUs
increases the transactions costs of trade, and precludes
businesses from
hedging against rises or falls in the American dollar. It
also carries
the additional risk of a liquidity crunch during transactions
with China
should American dollars be in short supply into the future, even
though
the prospect of this is minimal for the moment.
To minimise
transaction costs and other settlement risks, the PBoC has
signed over
twenty currency swap agreements with central banks of major
trading partners
including Australia. These agreements differ in the
maximum amount of
currency available for the swap. They also vary as to
whether the direct
swap applies to the principal or only the interest
payment of any IOUs from
bilateral trade. But the point of these
agreements – besides providing
central banks a buffer against possible
shortages in American dollars
required for trade with China – is to
establish a future foundation for
importers and exporters to exchange
RMB with local currency without having
to sign IOUs that are denominated
in American dollars.
While the vast
majority of payments and settlements in RMB are in the
context of trade
activity, the emergence of financial centres outside
China and Hong Kong
(such as Singapore, Taiwan and London) as a clearing
house for RMB are
intended to be more meaningful and extensive than
merely facilitating more
efficient payments for trade transactions. In
addition to utilising swap
agreements, the prospect is that key
financial centres such as Singapore can
emerge as a global financial
centre to buy, sell and ‘park’ RMB-denominated
assets whether they be
bonds, shares, IOUs or other assets.
Yet while
the RMB is used in increasing but still relatively small
amounts as a medium
of exchange in settling trade transactions, it has
virtually no
international status as a ‘store of value’ for central
banks to accumulate
in official reserves or as an investment currency
for use outside China.
Besides using RMB to settle trade invoices,
currency speculators also
periodically buy RMB (through illicit use of
the trade account and other
methods, otherwise known as ‘hot money’) on
the prospect that the RMB will
be partially liberalised and rise in
value. But until the RMB is seen as a
legitimate and reliable store of
value, international demand for RMB will
not match the top five or six
currencies, meaning that the RMB will have
limited relevance and
penetration in financial centres such as Singapore
beyond trade purposes.
The genuine internationalisation of the RMB -- and
its emergence as a
‘store of value’ for central banks -- is unlikely to
occur for a number
of reasons.
First, China still maintains a de
facto fixed currency regime linked to
a US dollar dominated 'basket of
currencies'. Until this is changed,
there is little incentive to hold too
many assets and IOUs in RMB since
the prospect of dramatic appreciation in
the value of China’s currency
is slight. Bear in mind that Beijing places
significant restrictions on
the band within which conversion rates utilising
swap arrangements can
deviate from official, fixed conversion rates for RMB
into US dollars.
The prospect for dramatic change in China’s fixed
currency regime is
also poor. China’s two largest export markets in America
and the EU are
still deleveraging and will grow relatively slowly; and the
margins of
its exporters are increasingly suffering from competitors in
rising
Asian manufacturing hubs such as Vietnam, Cambodia and Indonesia. To
protect an export-manufacturing sector that employs 50 million people
directly and another 100-150 million people indirectly, Beijing will not
float the RMB and allow it to significantly appreciate into the future.
Besides, rapid appreciation of the RMB against the US dollar would
severely reduce the value of its U.S. dollar-denominated foreign
exchange reserves and dramatically increase the liabilities of the PBoC
vis-à-vis IOUs issued to domestic banks on behalf of exporters as
explained earlier.
Second, foreign governments, firms and individuals
will remain reluctant
to hold too much RMB-denominated assets for the simple
reason that there
is not much use for the currency outside China (and Hong
Kong). This
will remain the case until China opens its capital account,
liberalises
its domestic interest-rate regime (deposit and lending rates),
and
removes obstacles currently in place to restrict the presence and
operation of foreign firms in Chinese financial and other domestic
sectors.
Without an open capital account, foreign holders of
RMB-denominated
assets will not be able to transfer capital in and out of
China freely
and without restriction. Without a liberalised interest rate
regime,
deposit and lending rates in China will remain artificially
suppressed,
decreasing the incentive to ‘park’ capital inside China. Without
being
able to invest freely and openly in major domestic sectors of the
Chinese economy, there will be limited utility and therefore demand for
RMB-denominated assets for investment purposes.
Due to Beijing’s
determination to maintain the dominance of its
state-owned banks in the
domestic financial sector, corporate bond
markets within China will remain
relatively undeveloped, meaning that
RMB fixed-income options will remain
shallow and relatively illiquid
compared to other major
currencies.
The point is that until there are deep, lasting and
irreversible reforms
to the Chinese political-economy – and there is little
evidence of that
so far - the role of the RMB in regional and global
financial markets
will be far smaller than it could be given the size of the
Chinese
economy. In other words, the much lauded ‘capitalism with Chinese
characteristics’ is preventing China from becoming a global financial
player commensurate with its absolute size.
Until you see hard
evidence of reform and opening of the Chinese capital
account, domestic
financial system and corporate sectors, ignore
headlines about the rise of
the RMB as a genuine international currency.
Dr. John Lee is Adjunct
Associate Professor at the University of Sydney,
non-resident senior scholar
at the Hudson Institute in Washington DC,
and a Director of the Kokoda
Foundation.
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