【推荐】中国人的确错了
ROLAND VAUBEL Monday, June 11, 2007
Roland
Vaubel: I agree with Martin that the Chinese are making a mistake. We do not know whether China is saving too much. But we do know that China is not investing its savings efficiently. The problem is not just that foreign exchange reserves are low yielding assets. The Chinese central bank prevents the country from importing capital on a net basis: its official capital exports are larger than private capital imports. However, an emerging economy like China ought to be a net capital importer. In particular, it should not export capital to capital-abundant countries like the US. It is this misal
location of the world capital stock which economists should be concerned about.
China's policy of offsetting private capital imports with official capital exports may be viewed as an attempt to import foreign technology without importing foreign capital on a net basis. Is China's accumulation of foreign exchange reserves merely the unwanted by-product of an export-oriented exchange rate policy? Is it not also the deliberate but misguided strategy of a proud but economically backward people to get hold of the technological achievements of the West without becoming indebted to and dependent on it? The Chinese, or more precisely their political leaders, want our technology but not our capital.
(Roland Vaubel is professor for economics at University of Mannheim in Germany)