The best paragraph I read today
From The Atlantic's James Fallows:
Through the quarter-century in which China has been opening to world trade, Chinese leaders have deliberately held down living standards for their own people and propped them up in the United States. This is the real meaning of the vast trade surplus--$1.4 trillion and counting, going up by about $1 billion per day—that the Chinese government has mostly parked in U.S. Treasury notes. In effect, every person in the (rich) United States has over the past 10 years or so borrowed about $4,000 from someone in the (poor) People’s Republic of China. Like so many imbalances in economics, this one can't go on indefinitely, and therefore won't. But the way it ends--suddenly versus gradually, for predictable reasons versus during a panic—will make an enormous difference to the U.S. and Chinese economies over the next few years, to say nothing of bystanders in Europe and elsewhere.Read the whole thing. Lou Dobbs ought learn some economics; might do him some good.
If I were Evan Smith, I'd point out that Fallows once worked for Texas Monthly.
Posted by Evan @ 01/11/08 06:45 AM
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