It's starting to look like Chinese labor
has had enough. Led by workers at the Honda Motors plant in
Zhangshan, and perhaps spurred by the suicides of ten workers this
year at Foxconn Technology (a supplier to high technology companies
such as Apple, Dell, and Hewlett-Packard), Chinese factory workers
and other laborers across the country are going on strike. In so
doing, these workers are defying the orders of their government-run
unions and risking dismissal by their employers. I believe that this
monumental step in the development of China's economy will result in
a positive outcome. From an international perspective, these strikes
may do more than improve working conditions in Chinese factories;
they may, in fact, force a currency reform (long-delayed by the
Chinese Communist Party) that will have serious implications for the
global economy.
Since at least 2001, when China acceded to
the World Trade Organization and accelerated its dramatic export-led
growth, American businesses and workers have complained bitterly
that Chinese manufacturers enjoy an unfair advantage by virtue of
the PRC's currency manipulation. The argument - which Americans also
alleged against the Japanese in the 1970s and '80s - is that by
inflating its currency, the government of China is deliberately
keeping the prices of its goods low, thereby taking market share
from US businesses and jobs from US workers.
The Economic Policy Institute recently
estimated that the United States lost 2.4 million jobs since 2001 to
China alone. Economist Peter Morici estimated that the US economy
would likely be $1 trillion larger than it is now were it not for
our trade deficits with China.
For years, the Chinese government has
steadfastly refused to allow its currency to float freely, fearing
that a higher yuan would choke off exports, leading to slower
economic growth. There was a brief respite a few years ago, when the
People's Bank of China allowed the yuan to appreciate by
approximately 20% from July 2005 to July 2008. However, the Chinese
government has generally taken the approach that it will not bow to
external pressures, but rather manage its currency in accordance
with China's own internal needs.
This situation has led to increased
tension in Sino-American relations. The US recently came close to
branding China a "currency manipulator," a label which implies the
threat of trade sanctions. And once again, Beijing reiterated its
policy of not succumbing to foreign influences in managing the yuan.
As of this writing, the dollar-yuan exchange rate remains fixed.
But with Chinese workers now striking
across their industrial heartland, China's internal pressures are
beginning to exceed the anemic pressure brought by Washington. This
may finally push the Communist Party toward reform.
Officials in Beijing know that, in
reality, the Chinese workers are not striking against management, as
we might expect in the West, but against the ruinous inflation
caused by the People's Bank of China (PBoC). In order to maintain
the 'peg' of the strengthening yuan to the weakening US dollar, the
PBoC has been forced to print new money in lockstep with the Federal
Reserve. Since the start of the financial crisis, the Federal
Reserve has more than doubled the number of dollars in circulation.
This inflation, exported to China via the peg, has resulted in
frothy real estate prices in some Chinese markets, as well as
consumer prices increasing at a rate of more than 3% per year (and
probably much higher, given the propensity for all governments to
systematically understate this data). According to the Washington
Post, there is widespread "frustration among younger, urbanized
workers that their wages have stayed relatively meager even as
prices all around them -- particularly for housing -- have soared."
With over one billion citizens, the
Chinese government cannot afford widespread unrest. They must find a
way to nip their labor issues in the bud. The best policy approach
would involve yuan revaluation. By reducing the rate of inflation of
the Chinese yuan, the purchasing power of the yuan will increase,
thereby allowing Chinese workers to better enjoy the fruits of their
labor. As living standards rise, worker unrest will subside, and the
impetus to strike will vanish.
In this way, raising the value of the yuan
will relieve both internal (labor) and external (foreign government)
pressures; it is an elegant solution to a seemingly complex problem.
In the short-term, employers have already
agreed to wage hikes, in order to placate their employees. But in
the long-term, the best answer is for the Chinese to stop inflating
their currency and allow their workers to enjoy a (much deserved)
higher standard of living - while silencing their foreign critics.
Please note: Opinions expressed are
those of the writer.
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