Archive for April, 2017

Critics Fear Donald Trump Is Backing Off China Trade Crackdown – Huffington Post

President Donald Trump announced in a Wednesday interview with The Wall Street Journal that he would not try to label China a currency manipulator.

It was one of several recent about-faces on policy from Syria to NATO to the Federal Reserve hailedby mainstream political analysts as evidence that Trump is finally walking back some of the more unorthodox stances from his presidential campaign.

But some economists who agree that China is not presently depressing its currency nonetheless worry that Trumps evolving thinking could signal a diminished appetite for tackling the broader issue of Chinas currency policies and the closely related issue of its massive global trade surplus.

Jared Bernstein, a senior fellow at the liberal Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, welcomed Trumps recognition that China is no longer manipulating its currency as an indication that the president is being more connected to the reality of the situation than he was.

He is nonetheless concerned that Trumps comments could reflect the rising influence of Goldman Sachs alumni such as National Economic Council Director Gary Cohn and deputy national security adviser Dina Powell who, by virtue of their backgrounds, are more sympathetic to the status quo.

There is still the potential for significant and distortionary imbalances in international trade and finance. One worries that the Goldman [Sachs] wing of the White House is kind of assuming that away, said Bernstein, who was former Vice President Joe Bidens chief economist from 2009 to 2011.

Former finance executives are less likely to view rebalancing trade with China and other trading partners as an urgent priority, since making it easier to import cheaper foreign goods has fattened the profits of companies they invest in, Bernstein argued.

If you are a multinational corporation your stakes in the game are pretty different than a family in a manufacturing community in the Rust Belt, he said.

As Bernstein noted, Trump was technically correct when it comes to Chinas current behavior.

Currency manipulation is when a country uses foreign currency it earns from exporting goods to buy up assets denominated in that currency. By stockpiling foreign currency, such as U.S. dollars, the purchasing country can raise a currencys value on the global market, thereby making goods sold in that currency more expensive and less competitive.

The exact criteria used to determine whether a countrys currency policies have crossed the line into manipulation vary.

It is clear though that China has not been manipulating its currency in a way that would advantage its exports for a few years now. In fact, for over a year and a half, Chinas central bank has been propping up the yuan by steadily selling off its foreign currency reserves. It now holds some $3 trillion in foreign reserves, down from a peak of almost $4 trillion in 2014.

Of course, China is acting to stave off a precipitous drop in the yuans value as an economic slowdown prompted its citizens to move their money overseas. Its actions have not resulted in an appreciable rise relative to the dollar. The yuan has roughly the same value relative to the dollar that it had in 2010.

Some centrist and liberal economists who disagree with Trump on other matters, however, were sympathetic to his insistence that the U.S. needed to reduce its trade deficit with China even when they disliked the way he went about saying it. From the early to mid-2000s through about 2013, China was indeed manipulating its currency, the largest of several techniques it used to become a net exporter of goods to both the United States and the world.

A broad array of experts now agree that these practices contributed to a massive loss in U.S. manufacturing jobs that harmed the American middle class. A January study released by Robert Scott, director of trade and manufacturing policy research at the labor-backed Economic Policy Institute, estimated that trade with China cost the U.S. 3.4 million jobs from 2001 to 2015, the vast majority of them in manufacturing. An academic study using more conservative assumptions concluded that Chinese trade deprived the U.S. of as many as 2.4 million jobs from 1999 to 2011.

Economists who believe the trade deficit should be smaller argue that Chinas accumulated surplus of foreign currencies still tilts the scales for its exports.

While it may be technically true that China is no longer acquiring dollar-denominated assets, they still hold more than $3 trillion in foreign currency reserves, and probably $1 trillion in other investments, Scott said. It is clear that Chinas currency needs to rise in value.

The yuan would need to rise in value by 25 to 30 percent to reasonably rebalance global trade, he estimated.

Few dispute that China needs less than the $3 trillion in foreign currency reserves it currently holds to withstand a major financial shock.

In fact, it needs no more than $2 trillion and probably significantly less, according to Joseph Gagnon, a senior fellow at the centrist Peterson Institute for International Economics who has co-authored a book on currency manipulation due out in June, Currency Conflict and Trade Policy: A New Strategy for the United States.

Gagnon agrees with Scott about the need for the U.S. to rebalance trade with China, albeit for different reasons. He maintains that importing so many goods from China and other nations is financially unsustainable for the United States because of the private and public borrowing it requires.

But Chinas steady drawdown of its currency reserves in recent years has convinced Gagnon that Trump should not pressure China to further reduce its stockpile at this stage.

I would be hard-pressed to justify asking China to do more than its already been doing in the past two years on the currency, said Gagnon, a former economist at the Federal Reserve and the Treasury. To fault them right now would be insane because it would be punishing good behavior.

Carlos Barria/Reuters

Trade negotiations are always a give and take between the different parties, however. Eswar Prasad, a Cornell professor who led the International Monetary Funds China desk in the 2000s, told The New York Times that the United States was aware of the currency manipulation issue at the time, but obtaining greater market access, better intellectual property rights protection, easier access to investment opportunities were simply higher priorities.

Prasads comments support the belief of economists such as Dean Baker, co-director of the progressive Center for Economic and Policy Research, that putting more emphasis on issues like currency that affect workers could lead to significantly different outcomes.

The trade-offs to date have been in favor of the pharmaceutical industry, the entertainment industry, the software industry, the financial industry, and against U.S. workers. And Id flip those priorities, he said.

Trump seems to have a different type of bartering in mind when it comes to U.S.-China commerce. He tweeted on Tuesday that he is open to relaxing his trade-related demands on China if it would help defuse tensions with North Korea.

The comments disconcerted Scott of the Economic Policy Institute.

I am increasingly concerned that Trump is going to follow in the footsteps of his predecessors and not sanction China for currency manipulation and trade off the interests of working Americans for other vague foreign policy goals like convincing the North Koreans to slow down production of nuclear weapons. It is a serious mistake, Scott said.

Trying to achieve geopolitical goals through policies that enable offshoring of manufacturing jobs rarely works, he added.

Asked whether Trump still views Chinas currency value as problematic and plans to take steps to address it, the White House referred The Huffington Post to press secretary Sean Spicers comments about Trumps currency manipulation pivot on Thursday.

Its a very complex issue and Im going to leave it to the president to specifically answer that, Spicer said. The president is going to continue to make significant progress when it comes to that issue and to how our relationship is with China.

Spicer also dismissed the notion that Trump had dramatically changed the policy positions that he campaigned on.

If you look at whats happened its those entities or individuals in some casesor issues evolving toward the presidents position, he said.

Here is the original post:
Critics Fear Donald Trump Is Backing Off China Trade Crackdown - Huffington Post

Donald Trump must be taken seriously – Washington Times


Washington Times
Donald Trump must be taken seriously
Washington Times
If chaos is the sign of growth and sometimes that's a fair description of progress Donald Trump is on course to build an administration that can survive the fits, starts and mistakes of a drawn-out opening night. The rest of the world has to ...

See the article here:
Donald Trump must be taken seriously - Washington Times

Meet the new right. Same as the alt-right – Salon.com – Salon

Online personality Mike Cernovich fabricated the existence of a new right movement to downplay his active relationships with alt-right media personalities and white nationalist thought leaders. But like the nonsense diet supplements and self-help books that Cernovich hawks to his audience, the new right should be treated for what it is: a load of marketing bullshit.

The truth is that although Cernovich and his media pals will claim they dont advocate white nationalism in the same way that alt-right leaders likeRichard Spencerdo, the so-called new right has actively parroted the alt-right to build its brands. It is a mistake to give the new right a chance to disown the relationships that helped it blossom.

Cernovich coined the term new right last year after hebannedalt-right media personality Tim Treadstone, known online as Baked Alaska, from attending an inauguration party Treadstone had assisted Cernovich in planning called The Deploraball. Treadstone had published several tweets about the Jewish Question an anti-Semitic conspiracy theory that suggests Jewish people scheme to dominate global media and governments. Cernovich replaced Treadstone withequally terriblealt-right personalityMilo Yiannopoulos, who had been banned from Twitter for inciting a racially motivatedharassment campaignand was laterdisinvitedfrom the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) after a video surfaced in which he appears to condone pedophilia. The drama fractured the alt-right media landscape into factions, with some hoping to rebrand and distance themselves from the openly white nationalist fan base they had used to inspire their brands.

After uninviting Treadstone, Cernovich introduced the concept of the new right in aninterviewwith Paul Joseph Watson, editor-at-large of the conspiracy theory website Infowars, denouncingwhite supremacist messages spread by some members of the alt-right. After the interview, Watson alsopeddled the conceptof a new right to his fan base on social media, claiming that there are two Alt-Rights and that one faction is more accurately described as the New Right. Watson claimed the new right includes people who wear Trump hats, create memes [and] have fun. This group, he wrote, is entirely separate from a tiny fringe minority of people under the alt-right banner who obsess about Jews, racial superiority and Adolf Hitler.

The public relations move worked, and soon many other notable pro-Trump new-media personalities were clustered under the new right brand coined by Cernovich. They includedVox Day, who wrote amanifestoon what it means to be alt-right that claimed diversity + proximity = war; alt-right poster boy Milo Yiannopoulos, whopraisedthe groups membership; The Gateway Pundits Lucian Wintrich, who made an alt-righthand signalin the White House briefing room; and blogger Stefan Molyneux, who receiveswide praiseamong white nationalist groups.

CernovichtoldThe Atlanticthat he for sure pictured himself as the leader of the new right and that he and his media partners want to do nationalism without white identity politics. Cernovichexplained toNew Yorkmagazinethat his initial support for the alt-right was based on a misunderstanding: He didnt realize it was, like, a white, ethno-nationalist thing. Right Side Broadcast Network (RSBN), whichhired Cernovichto host a program on the pro-Trump news stream,defendedCernovich and allowed him to whitewash his track record of vile statements.

But Cernovich and his new-media allies openly pandered to a growing pro-Trump alt-right media audience during the 2016 election by publishing media meant topromotefearof Muslims and pieces thatattackedsocial justice warriors andotherswho speak out against the sexist, misogynistic, and racist rhetoric Cernovich and other alt-right personalities spew. Cernovich also onceannouncedthat his next project would be part alt-right, part fitness, part anti-cuck, and he haspraisedthe alt-right movement as sophisticated, suspicious, and combative anddeclaredit woke. The ignorance defense the new right is using is soiled by these figures year-long track record of employing such rhetoric to bolster one anothers public profiles.

Cernovich and his new-media allies are snake oil salesmen who adopt whatever controversial punditry will earn them publicity and let them promote their bogusproducts. For example, Cernovich uses his platform to sell copies of hisself-help bookfor men and promote his in-development experimental nootropic pills that heclaimedwill regrow neurons inside the brain and build a supercharged mind that most people cant handle.

The new right is nothing more than a shallow attempt to legitimize commentary that draws upon the alt-right philosophy, which has been used to promote conspiracy theories like the Pizzagate claim that top Democratic officials were complicit in a Washington, D.C., child sex-trafficking ring run out of a pizza restaurant. Media should not grant Cernovich and his colleagues a free pass to abandon the alt-right talking points that they used to force themselves into media relevancy in the first place.

Follow this link:
Meet the new right. Same as the alt-right - Salon.com - Salon

Bannon’s decline isn’t the end of the White House’s ‘alt-right’ – ThinkProgress

Stephen Miller, senior adviser to President Donald Trump arrives for a meeting with business leaders in the Roosevelt Room of the White House in Washington, Monday, Jan. 30, 2017. CREDIT: AP Photo/Evan Vucci

President Donald Trumps top adviser, former Breitbart CEO Steve Bannon, is widely viewed as the leader of the administrations nationalist-populist winga more palatable euphemism for the white nationalist coterie that tried to block travel to the U.S. from seven Muslim-majority countries and is currently spearheading a deportation spree across the United States.

As Bannons influence within the administration has diminished, many commentators have taken this as a sign that his ideology has also fallen out of favor with the president, to be replaced by the ostensible technocratic moderation of son-in-law-in-chief Jared Kushner.

But Bannon isnt the only apostle of Bannonism in the White House. And as his star fades, the power of another extreme nationalist seems to be growing.

On Thursday night, Politico reported that senior adviser Stephen Miller has managed to endear himself to Kushner and is now working closely with Kushners Office of American Innovation. Up until now, Millers biggest policy achievement was helping to draft both versions of Trumps Muslim ban executive orderand then inadvertently sinking the second bans chances of surviving a legal challenge by announcing on national television that both orders had the same intent.

Millera protege of Attorney General Jeff Sessions, another member of the administrations hard line ethno-nationalist campalso wrote both Trumps inaugural American carnage address, and, reportedly, his I alone can fix it speech to the Republican National Convention.

If Miller is gaining more sway over the administrations policy agenda, then Bannons apparent demotion means little. The Pepe brigade still has plenty of friends in the West Wing.

See the rest here:
Bannon's decline isn't the end of the White House's 'alt-right' - ThinkProgress

A psychedelic swan song for the alt-right – Washington Post (blog)

Now I know what it must be like for an alt-right devotee to have a bad acid trip. Seemingly overnight, the once solid nationalist credentials of Donald Trump have distorted into some Sgt. Pepper-like fantasy of globalism. His steadfast admiration for Russias strongman has kaleidoscoped into a marshmallow pie of affection for NATO. And those rotten, no-good currency manipulators in China are today as harmless as tangerine trees and marmalade skies. Even Janet Yellen, the head of the Federal Reserve that bastion of globalist financiers who once should have been ashamed of herself has now become a diamond in the sky, and the president says he may even reappoint her to another term.

Many always suspected (even hoped) that Trumps views were not fixed, but they are clearly plasticine, subject to manipulation by those in his favor and adapting to circumstance. One imagines the majority of Americans who didnt approve of him welcome the presidents shifts and wonder what took him so long. Many of his supporters who liked the nationalist rhetoric will probably be fine too. They probably think the media is making too much of them, and, besides, they are invested in him and will stick by him at least a little while longer.

But what of the true believers, like Steve Bannon and Stephen Miller? They must feel like the newspaper taxis have appeared on the shore, waiting to take them away. When youre one of them, what can you do? Well, according to the song, you can climb in the back with your head in the clouds and youre gone.

Go here to read the rest:
A psychedelic swan song for the alt-right - Washington Post (blog)