2010-11-20 11:03:28
US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke has criticised countries like China that run large trade surpluses.
"Currency undervaluation by surplus countries is inhibiting needed international adjustment," he said in a speech to the European Central Bank
He said that by buying dollars, these countries were hurting the US recovery and the global economy with it.
He also defended the Fed's policy of "quantitative easing", which has been criticised by China and Germany.
Defending QE
China, Germany and others have attacked the Federal Reserve in recent weeks for its decision to purchase another $600bn of US government debt in a bid to stimulate the US economy.
They say that the policy will unfairly devalue the dollar in currency markets, and that this could lead to inflation and asset bubbles elsewhere in the world.
The Chinese also argued the Fed had failed to take account of its responsibility for protecting the value of the dollar as a global reserve currency.
In his speech, Mr Bernanke defended the policy as the right response to falling inflation and high unemployment in the US.
He also said it was a natural extension of monetary policy, given that interest rates were near zero and could not be cut further.
On the attack
But Mr Bernanke went further than this, hitting back against his critics.
He said that their policy of accumulating dollar reserves in order to weaken their currencies and help maintain a trade surplus would hurt the recovery in industrial economies, and this in turn could harm the entire global economy.
"For large, systemically important countries with persistent current account surpluses, the pursuit of export-led growth cannot ultimately succeed if the implications of that strategy for global growth and stability are not taken into account," he said.
He spoke of a two-speed recovery, in which developing economies like China and India had rapidly bounced back, while industrialised countries like the US, Europe and Japan were growing much more slowly and suffered from high unemployment.
"Because a strong expansion in the emerging market economies will ultimately depend on a recovery in the more advanced economies, this pattern of two-speed growth might very well be resolved in favour of slow growth," he said.
Collateral damage
He also said the currency interventions by countries like China had other iniquitous effects.
He said it was unfair on other countries that allowed their currencies to appreciate, as they would be forced to bear the brunt of the economic adjustment.
Countries such as Brazil and South Africa have already complained that they have been put in exactly this position by the "currency war" between the US and China.
Mr Bernanke also warned that by refusing to let their currencies appreciate, countries like China would be forced to take other measures to stop risky inflows of speculative money, and to cool rising inflation.
On the same day of his speech, China announced a half-point rise in the percentage of cash its banks must hold in reserve - a measure designed to slow down a recent jump in inflation to 4.4%.
China has also taken measures in recent months to tighten up capital controls - designed to stop people speculating on the value of the Chinese currency.