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BusinessAnalysis

Desperate move by China a worrying sign: Don Pittis

Letting China's currency slide was supposed to boost its economy by raising exports. But signs that China is willing to take desperate measures may mean it knows there is worse to come, Don Pittis writes.

Instead of boosting economy there is danger China's sudden move will hurt confidence

The Chinese yuan had become so stable it seemed destined for global reserve currency status. But by orchestrating a desperate plunge in the value of its money, Beijing seems to be saying the Chinese economy is in worse shape than anyone thought. (Ng Han Guan/Associated Press)

The father of Western medicine, Hippocrates, had some advice in 400 BCthat has been passed down totoday:"Extreme remedies are very appropriate for extreme diseases."

As the world responds to this week's extremeand unexpecteddevaluation by theChinese central bank, it sounds as if Beijing was taking the good doctor's advice. And while the obvious intent wasto snapthe Chinese economy back to health, the frightening thing is that Beijing's move smacks of desperation.

The modern equivalent of thatHippocratic maxim is: "Desperate times call fordesperate measures." As the Chinese currency and world markets took a dive,investors and trade partners around the world were asking themselves:"What does Beijing know that we don't?"

Falling off a cliff. Chinese currency saw biggest one day decline in decades. (CBC news)

It's not the first time this yearthat China has used strong government action to try to counteract inimical market forces. This spring, Beijing intervened, once to encourage stock markets to inflate, and then repeatedlyin anattemptto stop the irresistibleplunge when savvytraders realized stocks had become unrealistically high.

The trouble is that markets do not like wild swings. And an economy that requires repeated radical intervention is one, like Russia, where no one knows what the government might do next.

Until recently, the fact that China was willing to back its own economy made it seem like agiant island of stability in a volatile world. In the darkest days of the great recession after 2007, Chinapumpedmoney into its economy by encouraging borrowing and keepingthe renminbiundervalued. (The renminbi is the official name of the Chinese currency, meaning "the people's currency." Yuan is the name of a unit of the renminbi.)

The worldwide demand forcommodities soared as it seemed China's building boom would never get enoughcopper or iron. Itsthirst for oil seemed unquenchable. The Chinese currency began to strengthen.

But now all that haschanged. China has become worried that its companies and citizens may have borrowed too much, pushing property prices into the stratosphere. Now it says its currency is too high.

With this latest intervention, rather than making markets cheer, commodities slumped even further. Oil, which for a while this weekseemed to be recovering again, hit fresh lows for the year. World markets fell, with the Dowand TSX facing triple- or double-digit declines on Tuesday. Canada's looniefell.

Part of the trouble this time is that consciously resetting your currency is a zero sum game. A cheaper Chinese yuanmakes the country's exports cheaper. But it hurts all of China'strade partners and competitors. And there are ways for partners and competitors to retaliate, raising fears of a new currency war.

After years of growth, China's economy is bigger than all other countries except for the U.S.No wonder its action comes as a shock to the entire world economy. There are serious concerns the sudden move could spark a new global round of deflation.

As its stature grew and Beijing adopted the institutions of a market economy, the world assumed China would try to become a stabilizing global force. The latest move may mean China is not ready for that role.

Sophisticated advice

And the effect is not just on governments.In the world of trade, where profit margins are narrow anddeals are made months in advance, a two per cent shift in currency is enough to take a company from profit to loss.

Beijing justified the currency shift by saying that it wants the free market to have greater influence in setting the price of the renminbi. Since China's central bank sets a limit of a two per cent change in the value of the currency on any trading day, if Beijing is serious about letting the market set currency prices, the plunge may not be over yet.

Most worrying is that China's leaders have access to some very sophisticated advice. Swarmingwith internationally trained economists, the central bank and finance ministry certainly realized the impact of this move. They went ahead anyway.

China's leaders have repeatedly said the economy remains healthy, if "sluggish." But now this may show they're worriedsomething worse is happening.

Economic worries have become commonplace in China, a country that had seemed like a giant island of stability in a volatile world. (STR/AFP/Getty Images)

That is important because economists and political analysts have repeatedly said that while Chinese people may be dissatisfiedwith many things in the country, high growth rates have kept dissent under control.

This week, even before China's currency move, the San Francisco branch of the U.S. central bank issued a report titled Is China's Growth Miracle Over?,warningthe Asian giant mayfollow the path of the smaller Asian Tigers economies like those in South Korea or Taiwan into lower growth.

"With an aging population, slowing productivity growthand the policy adjustments required to implement structural reforms, growth is projected to slow further," says the report's author Zheng Liu.

And while it would be wonderful if China can indeed follow the path of Japan and South Korea into middle class stability, it is not clear the waywill be easy. Expect more remedies.

Follow Don on Twitter @don_pittis

More analysisby Don Pittis