The point of competitive devaluation, aka currency war, is that a cheaper
currency gives a country several advantages over its trading partners,
leading to better growth and generally happier voters. The trading partners,
meanwhile, get the ugly mirror image -- slowing growth and disgruntled
citizens -- so they eventually respond in kind, with devaluations of their
own. If nothing happens to stop the war, everyone's currency ends up being
worth a lot less and a whole generation of savers is partially wiped out.
In the current skirmish, Europe is crushing the US, which is to say the
dollar is soaring against the euro. So if the script holds, the US should be
suffering. And -- despite all the breathless reports of plentiful jobs and
plunging unemployment -- the recent numbers do paint a picture of a country
hobbled by a too-strong currency. From Bloomberg this morning:
Surprise:
U.S. Economic Data Have Been the World's Most Disappointing
It's not only the just-released University of Michigan
consumer confidence report and February retail sales on Thursday that
surprised economists and investors with another dose of underwhelming news.
Overall, U.S. economic data have been falling short of prognosticators'
expectations by the most in six years.
The Bloomberg ECO U.S. Surprise Index, which measures whether data beat or
miss forecasts, fell to the lowest since 2009, when the nation was in the
deepest recession since the Great Depression.
There's been one notable exception to the gloom, and it's a big one:
payrolls. The economy added 295,000 jobs in February and 1.3 million over
four months, a reflection of a healthier labor market in which the
unemployment rate has fallen to the lowest in almost seven years.
Most everything else? Blah.
This month alone, personal income and spending, manufacturing as measured
by the Institute for Supply Management, auto sales, factory orders, and
retail sales have all come in a bit weak.
Citigroup keeps economic surprise indexes for the world, and its
scoreboard shows the U.S. is most disappointing relative to consensus
forecasts, with Latin America and Canada next, as of March 12. Emerging
markets were supposed to be hurt by falling oil prices but are now delivering
positive surprises. U.S. policymakers frequently talk about weakness in
Europe and China, though both are exceeding expectations.
Some thoughts
Coming after five years of huge deficits and zero interest rates, a US
slowdown would either invalidate the concept of QE -- or invalidate the
concept of finite QE.
Since giving up on easy money would leave the authorities with zero policy
tools to hype during the coming election cycle, surrender is a non-starter.
So the idea that we haven't done enough will soon be embraced by everyone
from Paul Krugman (who's been saying it all along) to the entire democrat party
to most major corporations (who have had enough of a strong currency and long
for a euro-style 1/3-off sale).
But the timing depends on the stock market. If it keeps rising then hope
will endure of a "wealth effect" boost to second-half growth. If it
tanks then all hesitancy will evaporate and the Fed will see Draghi's
trillion and raise him another. Bond yields will go negative, and bank
savings accounts even more so.
At which point the question will shift from "is there really a
currency war?" to "where will they find more stuff to buy once they
have all the bonds?"