The End of Influence

China is one of the big themes of the moment, as it will be for some time to come. For the most part, the western authors turning their thoughts to the question of what China's rise implies for America and Europe are rather pessimistic. I've just finished an interesting and nuanced take on this theme by Stephen Cohen and Brad DeLong, The End of Influence: What Happens When Other Countries Have the Money.

They don't predict absolute American decline or immediate disastrous consequences of Chinese growth. However, they have written an interesting reflection on the way American spending and Chinese lending have locked the two countries in an economic embrace which will prove both uncomfortable and long-lasting. A secondary theme is the inevitable adverse impact of the loss of economic power on America's 'soft power', its wider cultural influence and the seeming desirability of the American way of life.

The book starts by exploring the role of sovereign wealth funds in general, including China's massive investments in US assets. The western economies have been in recent decades reasonably relaxed about foreign investments in their companies and infrastructure as well as government bonds. The 1980s were the last time there was great anxiety about foreign investors. However, when investors take the form of government-owned funds which might not be pure returns-maximisers, that attitude is bound to change. “Truly great piles of US obligations are in the hands of the governments of Asia,” they write (p22). Japan has $1 trillion, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Singapore together $500bn, Korea $200bn, and China $2.5 trillion in its reserves. In the latter case, China's holdings of US assets are about $20,000 per US household – and three quarters of China's GDP. This could not be either repaid or divested in any short time period. So the nub of the argument lies in this fact: “Neither side can walk away; we're locked.”

The book interestingly puts the blame for the why neoliberal delusions about global financial markets went so badly wrong mainly on central bankers. The authors argue that while the west came to disown the idea of industrial policy, and emphasised the role of markets, an exception was made in the case of finance. Central banks had great powers to shape the economy in ways that favoured the finance sector. They call central banks “this immense island of central planning”, which sets interest rates and has power of life and death over financial institutions.

The economic worldview which prevailed “carried with it a cultural content of the primacy of finance …., of new business practices and styles, and of celebratory income inequality on the consumption and lifestyle side. Until it crashed, this American view was willingly adopted by more and more people and governments around the world.” (p57)

In contrast, China has operated an industrial policy, the most successful possible kind, a low exchange rate. The authors argue that this is better than the 'picking winners' variety, and it's impossible to deny its success in transforming China on a huge and rapid scale. It also depended on America acting as importer of last resort for China and other Asian countries. This can't continue – China can't continue to pile up US dollar reserves which couldn't ever be repaid. Nor can it lightly see the dollar decline, devaluing its existing reserves. It will seek, the book predicts, to turn the financial assets into real assets. The encounter between the Chinese and American states is not likely to be a comfortable one.

Money is power because it has cultural sway. America's having so much money for so long made it culturally confident and pre-eminent for over a century. This is changing now, Cohen and DeLong argue. Another new book predicts China's authoritarian approach will set the model for the next century. Stefan Halper's The Beijing Consensus was reviewed in the Financial Times this weekend. The subtitle encapsulates the thesis: How China's Authoritarian Model Will Dominate the 21st Century. The blurb says:

Instead of promoting democracy through economic aid, as does the West,
China offers no-strings-attached gifts and loans, a policy designed to
build a new Beijing Consensus. The autonomy China offers, together with the appeal of its illiberal
capitalism, have become the dual engines for the diffusion of power away
from the West. The Beijing Consensus is the one book to read to
understand this new Great Game in all its complexity.

Reviewer Gideon Rachman praises it although suggests it over-states the previous degree of buy-in to the Washington Consensus. He also argues that the co-ordinated power of the BRIC countries is more of a threat than China's investments in Africa to US economic interests.

There are plenty of other books on China at present. In my pile but not yet read is Awakening Giants: Assessing the Economic Rise of China and India by Pranab Bardhan. I'll review it soon – the compare and contras between the two Asian economies seems potentially fruitful.

I've also been reminded by Charles Dumas of Lombard Street Research about his 2006 book with Diana Choyleva, The Bill from the China Shop. With hindsight it looks very prescient. It was favourably reviewed in the SBE journal.

Brad DeLong's website has links to other reviews of their book.

Digital Money Reader 2010

Regular readers of this blog will know Dave Birch as a thoughtful reviewer – see for example his review of Newton and the Counterfeiters. Sparing his blushes, it only seems right to announce the publication of his own book, the 2010 Digital Money Reader. I can recommend it as full of insights, information and even humour, so I hope lots of you will order a copy.

Dave also organises the annual Digital Money Forum which is one of the must-attend events of the year for anyone even remotely interested in the subject in all its dimensions, and goes from strength to strength. You can find him on Twitter as @dgwbirch

Injustice

A new book by the University of Sheffield geographer Danny Dorling has caught my eye. It's Injustice: Why Social Inequality Persists and his website provides all the data the book cites. I'm a big fan of his earlier work, which addresses the same terrain as the best urban and regional economists, with added passion to combat inequality and injustice. He's recently done superb stuff on the visualization of social data.

Without having read his new book, I'm confident it will be a far more rigorous attack on inequality and its effects than the much hyped but statistically feeble The Spirit Level by Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett (reviewed on this blog).

Today's Society supplement in The Guardian has a feature about Dorling . He's quoted thus on his book: “I feel very wimpy saying this, but I'm hardly saying, 'We
want a revolution, we want a utopia.' I'm just saying, 'Can we be
slightly less stupid, and we'll all be better off for it.'” It sounds spot on.

New books

There have been quite a few new and forthcoming books arriving recently. I already wrote about the marvelous Red Plenty by Francis Spufford.

Out next month is Aftershock by Philippe Legrain, which is about globalization after the financial and economic crisis. Definitely one I'll review in due course – Philippe has the gift of being at the same time grounded in evidence and provocative.

Further along the pipeline are two books about economics itself: The Puzzle of Modern Economics by Roger Backhouse, author of The Ordinary Business of Life, a vivid history of economic ideas; and The Heart of Teaching Economics by Simon Bowmaker, who edited the excellent Economics Uncut.

More on the aid industry

A year ago I reviewed Dambisa Moyo's Dead Aid here. It subsequently became a bestseller and has dramatically changed the terms of the debate about aid effectiveness. This year's criticism of the aid business comes from Linda Polman – reviewed in the Guardian today (although bizarrely it doesn't seem to be online) and recently in a number of papers in other country's such as Sri Lanka's Sunday Times.

Polman is a war correspondent who's seen aid organisations swing into action time and again. Her main point seems to be that they've become a large and self-perpetuating business whose arrival in crisis spots has many counter-productive effects. The book seems to be published by Penguin currently under the title With Friends Like These and is due out later in the year as The Crisis Caravan – slightly puzzling, but I look forward to reading it.