Carnegie Council

Shopping Cart

People Topics

Text Size: A A

Print this Page Email this Page Bookmark and Share

Global Ethics Corner: Chinese Currency and Ethics

Global Ethics Corner (Weekly Multimedia Program)

June 25, 2010

Loading the player...

Right-click here to download.

Having trouble with audio or video playback? Click here


If China's currency, the renminbi, gets stronger, it buys more foreign goods. They should then become cheaper for Chinese buyers.

Between the U.S. and China, however, the exchange rate does not float freely. Rather, it is fixed by China, often within a narrow band. Economists estimate that the renminbi must get up to 40 percent stronger to reflect real economic conditions.

China announced it would begin to widen the band. This is positive for American exporters, making American goods more competitive in China, but this potentially threatens the jobs of Chinese workers, and risks labor unrest.

Also, the Chinese government and individuals purchased trillions of dollars of U.S. assets. As the Chinese currency gets stronger, when these assets are sold and converted back, they buy fewer and fewer renminbi.

Ethically a government's first obligation is to its citizens, and China forcefully asserts its sovereignty, its duty to protect. Risking of labor unrest and loss of wealth could be dereliction of duty, and are clearly accentuated by a stronger currency.

The contrasting ethical issue involves China's mutual international obligations. Today the international system is not mercantile, designed only to benefit a country's citizens or to "beggar thy neighbor."

Rather, there is a commitment to fairness and a standard of reciprocity built into the system. This ethical commitment is also supported by mutual self-interest, i.e. a strong American economy with Americans at work increases Chinese exports.

What do you think? Protection of citizens and reciprocal fairness seem to conflict. Both are driven by ethical and pragmatic considerations. How would you balance them?


By William Vocke

Related Resources:

Read More: Ethics, Labor Rights, Trade, World Economy, Business, Ethics, Global Economic Justice, International Trade, Labor Rights and the Global Economy, Asia, East Asia, China



blog comments powered by Disqus

About Global Ethics Corner

Global Ethics Corner is a series of weekly two-minute videos that present both sides of newsworthy ethical issues and ask viewers to make up their own minds.

Features

Policy Innovations Online Magazine

The central address for a fairer globalization.
> More

Ethics & International Affairs

Go to the Journal for articles on ethics and foreign policy.
> More

postprandial-ft