Friday, January 28, 2011

It takes one spark

2011-01-28 / Andy Xie

Tusisian Mohamed Bouaziz, a 26-year-old with a university degree, set himself on fire on December 17 after police confiscated the fruits and vegetables he was selling without permit. One month late the Tunisian government has been toppled and the Egyptian government is on the ropes. Why and what is happening? What would be the impact on us?

Inflation is the factor pushing people into taking the desperate act. The people who were barely surviving couldn't go on when food price is up 50%. There isn't a cushion in these economies for such a large price increase.

There is a saying that demographics is destiny. After the World War II birth rate surged across the world. Two decades later, China had the Cultural Revolution, the US Woodstock, and France 1968 revolution. As birth control went mainstream in the west and China adopted one-child policy three decades ago, aging is shaping their economies today.

The Islamic World has had much higher birth rate in the past three decades. Its bulging youth population is the force behind the change. Well educated, knowledgeable, and hungry, they will change their world, regardless of what rest of the world thinks. If you look at the events from this prism, big changes are coming regardless of what the US wants. The Egyptian government is unlikely to survive.

The West is having a second thought about the change. They are worried that radical Islamic regimes could replace aging dictators and turn hostile to the west. I am sure the western governments are trying to shape the events in North Africa. People never learn. Such interventions will only make the new regimes there more hostile to the west.

Would the revolution spread to Arabia and the Middle East? That would have a big impact ton us through the oil market. The oil rich countries have had the money to buy off their youth. They may be unemployed but are not starving. Hence, they are less motivated to act. Some like Jordan don't have the financial resource to buy off their people. The revolution is distinctly possible.

If the revolution does spread to oil rich countries, the oil price could spike like nothing we have seen before. One grievance from the revolution is surely about 'low' oil price, because these governments have to keep the price low in exchange for the US's military protection.

Even if oil producing countries are not affected, the rising risk to their stability will increase oil price anyway. The Fed's zero interest rate doesn't give people a good reason not to push up oil price. This risk gives people an added incentive to buy oil.

Inflation is shaping the world this year. Central banks pumped money to fuel asset bubbles in the decade before 2007 and pumped more money to ease the pain from their bursting. The inflation seeds they sowed are sprouting everywhere. The consequences can be catastrophic.

I still think that the world would experience another crisis in late 2012. The trigger would be either a collapse of the US treasury market or an inflation-induced hard landing in the emerging economies. The political events in the Arab World point to another possibility: surging oil price could sink us all earlier.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Supporting euro

2011-01-24 / Andy Xie,  The New Century Weekly

Summary

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China and Japan are supporting eurozone by purchasing government bonds that the market shuns today. Chin and Japan have $4 trillion in foreign exchange reserves and are capable of bridging liquidity problems that some eurozone economies are facing. What China and Japan can do is to stop market panic from leading some otherwise viable economies down a vicious spiral of rising interest rate, rising debt burden, and bankruptcy. The economies that are not viable in the first place shouldn't be helped.

China and Japan's action helps themselves in two ways. First, euro is the only alternative to the dollar for global trade, commodity pricing, and storing foreign exchange reserves. If the euro falls apart, the Federal Reserve will be further emboldened to pursue inflation to decrease the US's leverage or indebtedness at the expense of dollar holders. China and Japan hold vast dollar assets and have most lose from dollar devaluation.

Second, Europe is the largest trading partner for China and the third largest for Japan. It is in both's economic interest for Europe to avoid a vicious cycle and remain a healthy trading partner.



Stopping self-fulfilling vicious cycle

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The watchword for monitoring developed economies is debt and for developing economies inflation. In this article I want to discuss the debt situation in developed economies and the implications for their currency values. The market is panicking over the sovereign debt situation in some eurozone economies and is demanding high interest rates for rolling over their debts or providing new money for financing their deficits. When interest rate rises above some level, an otherwise healthy debtor can go bankrupt. This element of self-fulfilling prophesy is a major force in speculative attack against a company or country.

China has recently pledged to support the debt issuances by Spain and Portugal. Japan has committed to purchasing one fifth of the debt issuance by the European Financial Stability Facility ('EFSF'). China's actions were instrumental in the successful debt issuances by Spain and Portugal. Japan is taking risk behind the EFST that is guaranteed by strong economies like Germany and France. This is not enough. China and Japan should work closely together in their European Project. They have common interests.

If China and Japan stick together, they can play a critical role in preventing the eurozone from suffering unnecessary economic hardship due to financial market panic and, by extension, supporting euro as an alternative reserve currency to the dollar.



The developed economies must deleverage

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The developed economies suffered a massive credit bubble in the decade before the 2008 Financial Crisis. Their leverage rose roughly by 50%. Low interest rates and related rising asset prices powered the rising indebtedness, especially in household mortgage debt. McKinsey Global Institute published a comprehensive report on the phenomenon ('Debt and Deleveraging: The Global Credit Bubble and Its Economic Consequences'). Globalization brought low inflation, low interest rate, and low wage growth to the developed economies. As the supply side growth shifted to the developing economies, they used low interest rates to stimulate the demand side, which led to debt fueled asset bubbles.

When the Crisis hit, all infected countries pursued a similar strategy to stabilize the situation-extending government help to crashing financial institutions through capital injection, liquidity support, and sovereign guarantee. While it has mostly achieved its purpose, it has brought catastrophic consequences for some countries like Ireland. The resulting liability is bankrupting the Irish government that was quite frugal before the Crisis. The bailout cost has greatly increased government indebtedness in general, limiting their ability to help their economies in the future.

As the global credit bubble burst, we are seeing diverging trends in how the developed economies respond to it. The challenge is to bring down leverage. A good measurement for national indebtedness is the ratio of the total debt level of the real economy-government, non financial companies and households relative to GDP. For example, the US government debt is $14 trillion, the household sector 13.4, and the non-financial corporate sector 11. The total debt is $37.4 trillion. The US's nominal GDP in 2010 is probably $14.8 trillion. That would put the US's national indebtedness at 253%. The same indicator for the eurozone is about 250%, for the UK 280%, and Japan 370%.

In addition to the indebtedness of the real economy the financial system has leverage too. It is similar to borrowing money for buying stocks. It distorts asset prices but doesn't add to the indebtedness of the real economy. There is correlation between real economy indebtness and financial leverage. The later creates cheap money and incentivizes the real economy to gear up. One can assume that high real economy indebtedness has a financial counterpart. In the discussion here I will focus on the real economy leverage.

The real leverage in the developed economies increased by 50% in the decade before the financial crisis. Hence, one can argue that they need to decrease the leverage by one third to normalize. How fast it should happen depends on how dependent an economy is on foreign capital. And in what way it can be achieved is sometimes a policy choice.



Diverging deleveraging policies

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Some are behaving like nothing has happened. Australia stands out in that regard. Its household debt has surged by 20% since the Crisis hit and recently surpassed 100% of GDP. Its household debt to disposable income ratio at 156% is the highest among major economies in the world. Australia has had 4.5% of GDP in annual current account deficit for two decades, i.e., its household debt is funded by foreign capital inflow. Its property market is still booming. When you see rapidly rising household debt, big current account deficit, and booming property market, it is a credit-cum-property bubble for sure. Australia's bubble has survived the 2008 crisis because commodity prices came back on the back of the Fed's zero interest rate policy and China's massive credit growth. The Australian bubble is very likely to burst when commodity prices fall sharply. Either a substantial economic slowdown in China or spiking US interest rate would trigger it.

Australia is an exception. The booming commodity market is giving it the choice not to adjust. Some economies must adjust and fast, because they depend on foreign capital for financing. Iceland, Greece, and Ireland are small economies that depend on foreign capital to fund their fiscal deficits, i.e., they run large current account deficits and don't have sufficient domestic savings to fund their government deficits.

Japan is another economy that hasn't decreased its leverage; the belt tightening in the private sector has been offset by the government's deficit spending. Japan's debt level is truly frightening. But, it has been that way for two decades. The reason for its stability is due to its high domestic savings rate. Japan has been consistently running large current account surplus, i.e., sending its savings surplus abroad, for decades. Japanese people have extremely high home bias in deploying their savings. Japan's government can borrow at extremely low interest rate. Hence, it has no incentive to change its behavior.

Only sustained current deficit would change Japan's dynamics. An aging and declining population is slowly bringing down Japan's savings rate. But Japan's investment need is declining too. Hence, it is still running a significant current account surplus. The situation will change in a decade or so. Japan is unlikely to change without an external constraint. I suspect that Japan would look the same a decade from now.

Many economists think that Greece and Ireland are suffering because they don't have their own central bank. This is an erroneous observation. Small economies cannot use monetary policy to deal with a financial crisis with a large foreign debt component. When the crisis hits, foreigners want their money back. One must tighten belt to pay up or at least to demonstrate convincingly its ability to do so soon. Printing money will surely lead to currency collapse and foreign debt impossible to service, making bankruptcy inevitable.

Eurozone is pursuing belt tightening to address their debt overhang in general. It is not due to market pressure. The Maastrich Treaty of 1993 that laid the foundation for the euro implanted the DNAs of responsible fiscal and monetary policies in the eurozone. The up limit on fiscal deficit to 3% of GDP, though violated frequently, centers policy conversations on the 'right' level. Further, the mandate for the ECB is just price stability, unlike the dual mandate of price stability and employment maximization for the Fed.

The US is pursuing a different strategy to bring down its leverage. It is trying to grow out of it. It is adding more and more monetary and fiscal stimulus to accelerate the economy. Even though the approach leads to rising indebtedness, its advocates believe that the economy would grow faster on its own and bring the leverage down and employment up on its own.

The US's approach hasn't worked well so far. Its government debt has risen to $14 trillion now from $8 trillion in the third quarter of 2008 when the Crisis hit. The increase is equal to 40% of last year's GDP. The Federal Reserve's balance sheet has bloomed to $2.6 trillion from $900 billion during the same period and is likely to rise to $3.2 trillion on QE 2 early next year. Yet, the US's unemployment rate is at 9.4%. If including the people who stopped looking for job or are underemploymend, one sixth of the US's labor force is unemployed.



Euro is better than dollar

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The dollar has been firm since the Obama Administration introduced a new tax cut package. The dollar index ('DXY') has hovered tightly around 80 lately. It was as low as 74 mid last year. Its long cycle high was over 120 in 2002 and low was 71 in 2008. The dollar's strength is due to market's optimism over the US's economic growth outlook for 2011. The double kick from QE 2 and the Obama tax cut could lead to strong growth.

I do believe that the US's economy would have a growth spurt in the first half of 2011. But it would sputter later on. Beyond the government stimulus the economy doesn't have an engine to sustain fast growth. The household sector has 100% of GDP in debt and cannot support consumption through borrowing like before. The US's corporate sector is sitting on record cash. Hence, the Fed's QE 2 is unlikely to change their investment behavior. Indeed, they are investing aggressively in emerging economies. They would invest aggressively in the US when either its consumption grows on a sustainable basis or the US becomes a low cost producer. Neither is likely in the foreseeable future.

When this round of stimulus-inspired growth spurt peters out, the US doesn't have room for more fiscal stimulus. The Federal government already borrows $4 for every $10 that it spends. If it wants to increase the deficit, it runs into two constraints. First, the treasury market could get spooked. The government is adding $1.5 trillion to its $14 trillion debt stock. When the interest rate normalizes, the short-term policy rate should be 5% and 10Y treasury 6%. The interest payment for the government could rise to over $1 trillion in five years. The government finance would be in a vicious cycle. Hence, the market would pull back from more financing for the deficit spending.

The Federal Reserve would be left to support the economy on its own soon. It has only one instrument-printing money to devalue the debt and cheapen the dollar. The former works through inflation. But, it is a high risk strategy. When the market panics, the treasury market may crash, causing the US's interest rates to spike, defeating the benefit of inflation for bringing down the debt burden. A cheap dollar may generate more income through boosting exports. But, a cheap dollar can generate inflation that offsets the dollar weakness in cutting cost.

The Fed probably wants to pull off an impossible task-creating enough inflation to cut debt burden and weakening dollar enough for boosting exports but without panicking the treasury market. I call it an impossible task because the US depends on foreign capital to fund its deficit. The US is likely to run 4-5% of GDP in current account deficit for the foreseeable future, i.e., half of its fiscal deficit needs to be funded by foreign capital. It would be insane for foreigners to continue to buy the treasuries while the Fed is trying to weaken the dollar. It is working now because the dollar is the dominant currency in the global economy. Hence, the US can abuse the dollar and get away with it.

Even if the Fed pulls off the impossible, it wouldn't be rewarding for the dollar. The current dollar strength is likely to be short-lived. When the Fed starts to talk about QE 3, possibly late in the year, the dollar would resume its decline.

Eurozone is pursuing belt tightening to decrease its indebtedness or leverage. It is painful in the short term. The risk to growth scares away euro buyers and attracts short sellers. Hence, euro has been under pressure. But, short-term growth difference has no bearing over the long term value of a currency. Competitiveness and money supply ultimately determine a currency's value. Japan's economy has stagnated for two decades. But, yen against dollar has appreciated from 140 to 80.

In today's world an economy's competitiveness derives from technology, resource endowment, and brands. While the whole world is focusing on technology, its benefits tend to spread out quickly and don't bring much competitiveness to the country of its origin. The US is very strong in mobile internet. Its benefits, however, have quickly spread around the world. The technology may have boosted productivity globally but without conferring a unique advantage to the US.

We need to distinguish between corporate and national competitiveness. The two no longer overlap closely. Apple is highly competitive. It reaps billions in profits from global sales. In terms of unique benefit to the US, it is to the small number of programmers based in the US and Apple's US shareholders. The US is full of companies that are very competitive but don't benefit the US much. This is why I'm optimistic on the US corporate earnings, but not the US economy or the dollar.

Brands and resources, on the other hand, are sticky relative to the countries of their origins. French luxury brands, German cars, and Italian tourist attractions bring benefits mostly to themselves. Southern European countries have lost their competitiveness in labor intensive manufacturing. The rest of eurozone's tradeable sector is quite sticky.

The eurozone has stronger macro fundamentals than the US's also. Its current account deficit is about 1% of GDP and fiscal deficit 6.5%, compared to 4.5% and 10% for the US. The ECB is worried about inflation, as the eurozone's CPI is increasing above its up limit of 2%, while the Fed is explaining away energy and food inflation by focusing on the so-called core CPI. The former is more likely to tighten than the later. It would be good news for euro. Indeed, without short selling euro would be quite strong today.



China and Japan are right to support euro

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While euro's fundamentals are much better than dollar, market panic could push the eurozone down a vicious cycle and make euro crash self-fulfilling. Eurozone doesn't have a central fiscal authority. The small economies in the zone are vulnerable to market pressure. When market panics, it pushes interest rate sky high and makes the borrower bankrupt. If some buyer is willing to step in to replace the market, it gives the borrower time to restructure. The result could be a happy situation for both borrowers and lenders.

IMF exists for that purpose. But, it is clearly not big enough for eurozone's problem. China and Japan have $4 trillion foreign exchange reserves and are much more powerful than the IMF in steadying the market's nerves. Of course, if a country isn't viable, it shouldn't be supported. Debt restructuring-a form of bankruptcy should be pursued. I suspect that Greece falls into this category. Ireland may need some restructuring too

Spain is undoubtedly the key battle. It is large, suffering from 20% unemployment rate, and, if given time, capable of paying off its debts. As long as enough resources are marshaled to maintain liquidity for Spain's debt market, euro is quite safe. China and Japan can play a decisively role in the area. China is already providing direct support. Japan should too.

Supporting euro is in China and Japan's best interest. They hold more dollar assets than anyone else and have strong vested interest to safeguard the dollar's value. The only viable alternative to the dollar is euro. If it is discredited, the Fed would be emboldened to print more money. Euro's value in that regard is worth enough support from China and Japan to provide sufficient liquidity to Spain.

Down the road, China and Japan should work with the OPEC countries to prepare for the post-dollar world. The three hold most dollar assets in the world. If they don't prepare an alternative, they are always at the Fed's mercy. When the Fed stimulates the economy by printing money, it dilutes their wealth. If they prepare a credible alternative, the Fed will have to think twice before it starts the print press.

The key step for replacing the dollar is for oil to be priced in a different currency. For now euro is the only possibility. China, Japan, and the OPEC should begin to discuss on trading oil in euro. Oil is mostly traded in London and New York now. Euro-denominated trading systems could be created in Dubai, Shanghai and Tokyo.


It's time to prepare for the post-dollar world.

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Why China and Japan Need an East Asia Bloc

Withering exports and asset bubbles have forced Asians – especially China and Japan -- to work harder at free trade pacts.

Andy Xie 2009-11-10

(Andy Xie, guest economist to Caijing and a board member of Rosetta Stone Advisors Ltd.)

(Caijing Magazine) All kinds of proposals have been floated about creating an Asian bloc a la European Union. Bilateral and multilateral free trade agreements (FTA) have been suggested for various combinations of Asian countries. Lately, there's been a flurry of new ideas as Japan's recently installed DPJ government seeks to differentiate from the ousted LDP.

By promoting ideas that lean toward Asia, DPJ's leadership is signaling that Japan wants less dependence on the United States. This position offers a hope for the future to Japanese people, whose economy has been comatose for two decades. Closer integration with Asian neighbors could restore growth in Japan.

Whenever global trade gets into trouble, Asian countries talk about regional cooperation as an alternative growth driver. But typically these talks die out as soon as global trade recovers. Today's chatter is following the same old pattern, although this time global trade is not on track to recover to previous levels and sustain East Asia's export model. Thus, some sort of regional integration is needed to revive regional growth.

Which regional organization is in a position to lead an integration movement? Certainly not ASEAN, which is too small, nor APEC, which is too big. Something more is needed – like a bloc rooted in a trade pact between Japan and China.

ASEAN's members are 10 countries in Southeast Asia with a population exceeding 600 million and a combined GDP of US$ 1.5 trillion in 2008. The group embraced an FTA process called AFTA in 1992, which accelerated after the 1997-'98 Asian Financial Crisis and competition with China heated up. When AFTA began, few gave it much chance for success, given the region's huge disparities in per capita income and economic systems. Today AFTA is almost a reality, which is certainly a miracle.

ASEAN has succeeded beyond its wildest dreams. These days China, Japan, and South Korea join annual meetings as dialogue partners, while the European Union and United States participate in regional forums and bilateral discussions.

China and ASEAN completed FTA negotiations last year, demonstrating that they can function as an economic bloc. Now, China is ASEAN's third largest trading partner. Indeed, there is a great upside for economic cooperation between the two.

Before the Asian Financial Crisis, the ASEAN region was touted as a "miracle" by international financial institutions for maintaining high GDP growth rates for more than two decades. But some of that growth was built on a bubble that diverted business away from production and toward asset speculation. This developed after credit expansion, driven by the pegging of regional currencies to the U.S. dollar, encouraged land speculation. ASEAN's emerging economies absorbed massive cross-border capital due to a weak dollar, which slumped after the Federal Reserve responded to a U.S. banking crisis in the early 1990s by maintaining low interest rates.

Back then, I visited companies in the region that produced goods for export. I found that, despite all the talk of miracles, many were making money on financial games -- not business. At that time, China was building an export sector that had started exerting  downward pressure on tradable goods prices. Instead of focusing on competitiveness, the region hid behind a financial bubble and postponed a resolution. Indeed, ASEAN's GDP was higher than China's before the Asian financial crunch; now China's GDP is three times ASEAN's.

China today faces challenges similar to those confronting ASEAN before the crisis. While visiting manufacturers in China, I've often been discovering that their profits come from property development, lending or outright speculation. While asset prices rise, these practices are effectively subsidizing manufacturing operations – an asset game that can work wonderfully in the short term, as the U.S. experience demonstrates. When property and stock markets are worth more than twice GDP, 20 percent appreciation would be equivalent to four years of business profits in a normal economy. You can't blame businesses for shifting their attention to the asset game in a bubbly environment. Yet as they focus on finance rather than manufacturing, their competitiveness erodes. And you know where that leads.

I digress from the main focus for this article -- regional integration, not China's bubble challenge.

So let's look again at ASEAN's success. In part, this reflects its soft image: Other major players do not view ASEAN as a competitive threat. Rather, the FTA with China has put pressure on majors such as India and Japan to pursue their own FTAs with ASEAN. Another dimension is that the region's annual meetings have become important occasions for representatives from China, Japan and South Korea to sit down together.

In contrast to ASEAN's success, APEC has been an abject failure.
Today, it's simply a photo opportunity for leaders of member countries from the Americas, Oceania, Russia and Asia. APEC was set up after the Soviet bloc collapsed, and served a psychological purpose during the post-Cold War transition. It was reassuring for the global community to see leaders of former enemy countries shaking hands.

However, APEC is just too big and diverse to provide a foundation for building a trade structure. So general is the scope that anything APEC members agree upon would probably pass the United Nations. Now, two decades after end of the Cold War, APEC has clearly outlived its usefulness and is withering, although it may never shut down. APEC's annual summit still offers leaders of member countries a venue for meetings on the sidelines to discuss bilateral issues. Maybe the group is useful in this way, offering an efficient venue for multiple summits concurrently.

Although ASEAN has succeeded with its own agenda, and achieved considerable success in relation to non-member countries, it clearly cannot assume the same role as the European Union. Besides, should Asia have an EU-like organization? Asia, by definition, clearly cannot. It's a geographic region that includes the sub-continent, Middle East and central Asia. Any organization that encompasses Asia as a whole would be as unwieldy as APEC.

I am always puzzled by the word "Asia," which the Greeks coined. In his classic work Histories, it seems ancient Greek historian Herodotus primarily referred to Asia Minor -- today's Turkey, and perhaps Syria -- as Asia. I haven't read much Greek, but I don't recall India being included in ancient Greek references. So as far as I can determine, there is no internal logic to treating Asia as a region. It seems to encompass all places that are neither European nor African. Africa is a coherent continent, and Europe has a shared cultural past. Asia belongs to neither, so it shouldn't be considered an organic entity.

Malaysia's former prime minister Tun Mahathir bin Mohamad Mahathir was a strong supporter of an East Asia Economic Caucus (EAEC) which would have been comprised of ASEAN nations plus China, Japan and South Korea. But because Japan refused to participate in an organization that excluded the United States, the idea failed.

Yet there is some logic to Mahathir's proposal. East Asia has a shared history, and intra-regional trade goes back centuries. Population movements have been significant, and as tourism takes off, regional relations should strengthen. One could envision a future marked by free-flowing capital, goods and labor in the region.

Yet differences among the region's countries are much greater than in Europe. ASEAN's overall per capita income is US$ 2,000, while it's US$ 3,500 in China and US$ 40,000 in Japan. China, Japan, South Korea and Vietnam share Confucianism and Mahayana Buddhism, while most Southeast Asian countries embrace Islam or Hinayana Buddhism, and generally are more religious. I think an EU-like organization in East Asia would be very hard to establish, but something less restrictive would be possible.

Because Japan turned down Mahathir's EAEC idea, there was a lot of interest when recently elected Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama's proposed something similar – an East Asia Community -- at a recent ASEAN summit. Hatoyama failed to clarify the role of the United States in any such organization. If the United States is included, it would not fly, as it would be too similar to APEC. Nor could such an organization be like the EU. But if Japan is fully committed, the new group could assume substance over time.

The Japanese probably proposed the community idea for domestic political reasons. Yet the fundamental case for Japan to increase integration with the rest of Asia and away from the United States grows stronger every day. Despite high per capita income, Japan remains an export-oriented economy, having missed an opportunity to develop a consumption-led economy in the 1980s and '90s. In the foolish belief that rising property prices would spread wealth beyond the industrial heartland in the Tokyo-Osaka corridor, the government of former Prime Minister Kakuei Tanaka pursued a high-price land policy, discouraging the middle class from pursuing a consumer lifestyle as they saved for property purchases.

Even more seriously, high property prices have been a major reason for Japan's rapidly declining birth rate, as land prices inflated living costs. Now, facing a declining population and public debt twice GDP, Japan has few options for rejuvenating the economy by promoting domestic demand. It needs trade if it hopes to achieve any growth at all. Without growth, Japan will sooner or later suffer a public debt crisis.

Japan's property experience offers a major lesson for China. Every Chinese city is copying the Hong Kong model -- raising money from an increasingly expensive land market to fund urban development, leading to rapid urbanization. But this is borrowing growth from the future. Rising land prices lead to rising costs and, hence, slower growth and the same rapid decline in the birth rate that Japan experienced. Unless China reverses its high-land price policy, the consequences will be even more disastrous than in Japan or Hong Kong, as China shifted to the asset game much earlier in its development.

Yet I digress again. The point is that Japan has a strong and genuine case that favors more integration with East Asia. The United States is unlikely to recover soon and with enough strength to feed Japan's export machine again. There is no more room for fiscal stimulus. Devaluing the yen to gain market share is not an option as long as Washington pursues a weak dollar policy. Without a new source of trade, Japan's economy is doomed. Closer integration with East Asia is the only way out.

In addition to Hatoyama's EAC proposal, a study jointly sponsored by China, Japan and South Korea is considering the possibility of a FTA. Of course, ASEAN could offer a template for any new East Asian bloc. ASEAN has signed an FTA with China and is talking with Japan and South Korea. If they all sign, regional integration would be halfway completed.

Whatever proposals for East Asian integration, the key issue is a possible FTA between China and Japan. Adding other parties avoids this main issue. China and Japan together are six times ASEAN's size and 10 times South Korea's. Without a China-Japan FTA, no combination in East Asia would truly support regional integration.

Five years ago, I wrote an op-ed piece for the Financial Times entitled China and Japan: Natural Partners. At the time, a prevailing sentiment was that China and Japan were antithetical: Both were still manufacturing export-led economies and could only gain at the other's expense. I saw complementary demographics and capital: Japan had a declining labor force and China needed to employ tens of millions of youths migrating to cities from the countryside. China needed capital and Japan had surplus capital. And their trade relations indeed tightened, as Japan had increased the Chinese share of its overall trade to 17.4 percent in 2008 from 10.4 percent in '04.

Today, the situation has changed. China has a capital surplus rather than a shortage. Demographic complementarity is still good and could last another decade. As China shifts its development model from resource intensive to environmentally friendly, a new complementarity is emerging. Japan has already made the transition, and its technologies that supported the transition need a new market such as China's. So even without a new trade agreement, bilateral trade will continue growing.

An FTA between China and Japan would significantly accelerate their trade, resulting in an efficiency gain of more than US$ 1 trillion. Japan's aging population lends urgency to increasing the investment returns. On the other hand, as China prepares to make a numerical commitment to limiting greenhouse gas emissions at the upcoming Copenhagen summit on global warming, heavy investment and rapid restructuring are needed for its economy. Japanese technology could come in quite handy.

More importantly, a China-Japan FTA would lay a foundation for an East Asian free trade bloc. The region has a population of 2.1 billion and a GDP of US$ 13 trillion, rivaling the European Union and United States. Blessed with a low base, plenty of capital, sound technology and a huge market, the region's GDP could easily double in a decade.

Trade and technology are twin engines of growth and prosperity. No boom is sustained without one or the other. And when they come together, the boom can be massive. Prosperity seen over the past decade, for example, is due to information technology along with the opening up of China and other former planned economies. But these factors have been absorbed, forcing the world to find another engine. An integration of East Asian economies would be significant enough to play this role.

The best approach would be for China and Japan to negotiate a comprehensive FTA that encompasses free-flowing goods, services and capital. This task may appear too difficult, but recent changes have made it possible. The two countries should give it a try.

It would be wrong to begin by working out an FTA that includes China, Japan and South Korea. That would triple the task's level of difficulty, especially since South Korea doesn't have a meaningful FTA with any country. To imagine that the Seoul government would cut a deal with China or Japan is naive. China and Japan should negotiate bilaterally.

A key issue is that China and Japan should put economics before politics. If the DPJ government wants to gain popularity by increasing international influence rather than boosting the economy, then all the current speculation and discussion about an East Asia bloc would be for nothing. But if DPJ wants to sustain power by rejuvenating Japan's moribund economy, chances for a deal are good.

While Japan is talking, China should be doing. China should aggressively initiate the FTA process with Japan. Regardless of China's current difficulties, its growth potential and vast market are what Japan will never have at home nor anywhere else. Hence, China would be able to compromise from a position of strength.

Some may say a free trade area for East Asia is beyond reach. However, history belongs to the daring. The world has changed enough to make it possible. China and Japan should seize the opportunity.

 
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