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Trump can earn his ‘King of Debt’ moniker in deal with China

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President Trump has a knack for nicknames, calling North Korea’s Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un “Rocket Man,” while standing before the U.N. General Assembly. He does not limit his targets to dictators. Elizabeth Warren and Rosie O’Donnell receive similar treatment. 

Trump calls himself a “Tariff man” and “King of Debt.” As he hurtles toward a moving deadline for China trade talks, Trump should remember his self-applied labels and lob a new deal onto the negotiating table: The U.S. will remove its 25-percent tariff threat if China tears up some of its massive holdings of U.S. debt.

Why connect trade barriers to U.S. debt? Aren’t they distant planets circling in disparate orbits? Not really.  Canceling debt would partly offset China’s currency manipulation and trade infractions.

The People’s Bank of China currently holds about $1.12 trillion of U.S. Treasuries. How did a poor country amass as much U.S. debt as Japan and the U.K.?  By generating mountainous trade surpluses, which shunt U.S. dollars into its bank account. 

A portion of those dollars flowed to China precisely because it held down the value of the yuan and held up the ability of U.S. firms to run their businesses in China in a fair and non-pirated way. This assertion may be the only thing that prior President Obama and President Bush agreed on, aside from their love for March Madness.  

Now you could play a very long mahjong game before economists would settle on the exact statistical relationship between the exchange rate and exports (the elasticity). You could play an even longer game before we would agree on the degree to which the yuan is undervalued. 

But Trump would stand firmly among the mainstream research if he asserted that the yuan is undervalued by a modest 15 percent (The Economist’s “Big Mac” index suggests 40 percent). A 15-percent rise in the yuan could erase perhaps $50 billion from the annual $390 billion bilateral trade deficit. 

Therefore, Trump, U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer and National Economic Council Director Larry Kudlow could request that the Chinese write off $50 billion of their holdings of U.S. Treasuries, to represent ill-gotten or, shall we say, cleverly-gotten gains.  

To raise this proposal, the U.S. would have to make clear to global investors that it is not reneging on its debt.  Article 4 of the 14th Amendment states that the debt of the U.S. “shall not be questioned” (though commentators question whether Congress’s “debt ceiling” does just that). 

Instead, the U.S. would be offering China access to its markets in exchange for:

  • opening its markets;
  • refraining from intellectual property piracy; and
  • surrendering a small portion of gains earned through currency manipulation. 

How would the U.S. treat those Chinese-owned Treasuries if China walked away from the table? They would still be treated as 100-percent valid, tradable and backed by the full faith and credit of the United States America. In other words, the debt is sacrosanct; but the holder has the option to give them up.           

Why would Trump want to do this? First, he could claim that he alone among U.S. presidents is wresting reparations for China’s tactical economic strikes on U.S. factories. Second, the U.S. debt is spiraling upward, and Gallup reports that 51 percent of Americans “worry a great deal” about federal spending.

The ratio of public debt-to-GDP has leapt past 100 percent for the first time since World War II. Moreover, we are hitting these risky levels during a time of relative peace and prosperity. What happens when peace or prosperity falter? 

Third, a marginal decline in the supply of U.S. debt would marginally hold down interest rates, further feeding the economic expansion. 

The Chinese will not love this idea. It might justify their view of Americans as barbarians at the gate. But China’s chief trade adviser, Liu He, has already kowtowed by promising to buy $200 billion of semiconductors, as well as virtually every soybean that pokes out of Nebraska’s soil.  

When the Chinese rebuff my proposal, Trump would have an interesting fallback position. He could tell Liu and President Xi Jinping that instead of totally erasing $50 billion of bonds, the bonds could be surrendered to the U.S. Treasury, and then Secretary Steve Mnuchin would mail $25 billion of zero-coupon infrastructure bonds to Beijing that would kick off Trump’s long-awaited drive to rebuild America’s roads and bridges. 

And if Trump wants to get particularly crafty, he could sneak away with $5 billion and try to build a wall. Sure, the president would be called nasty names, but he would be living up to his billing as “King of Debt.”

Todd G. Buchholz, a former White House director of economic policy and managing director of the Tiger hedge fund, is the author most recently of “The Price of Prosperity: Why Rich Nations Fail and How to Renew Them” (HarperCollins). Follow him on Twitter @EconTodd.

Tags Businesspeople China–United States trade war Currency intervention Donald Trump Donald Trump Economic policy of Donald Trump Economy of the United States Elizabeth Warren Government debt National debt of the United States Robert Lighthizer United States United States fiscal cliff

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