If there is one report you will read on China, this is the one. The U.S. China Economic and Security Review Commission releases a report on China every year and it will make the hair on your head stand on end. Beyond the de facto currency manipulation China is doing and how the United States needs to act and should have done so yesterday, did you know China has gotten American corporations to give up their technical know how to them? Yup, that's right, by dangling it's 1.3 billion person mythical consumer market as motive, China has forced U.S. corporations to move there and even worse, literally handed over to China their advanced research and development, technology, manufacturing techniques, never mind the United States manufacturing base.

Graphed above are Chinese imports, zooming up like a weapon of mass destruction pointed at the U.S. economy. Any American policy demanding foreign corporations manufacture here in order to sell to us? Hell no! Gets worse. China took advantage of the financial crisis to gun after two more market sectors, that being the very lucrative aircraft manufacturing sector as well as alternative energies. Yes, the infamous green economy that was going to save the United States is made in China.

Following the 2007–2009 global financial crisis, while much of the world continued to struggle, China’s economy quickly returned to its previous trajectory of double digit growth fueled by an export-led strategy. With this strategy, China’s leadership seemed determined to capitalize on its advantages, even at the expense of its neighbors and major trading partners. Furthermore, over the past year, China has increased its assertiveness when interacting with its neighbors, especially in regard to its maritime territorial disputes in the East and South China Seas. Finally, China continues to develop its military capabilities, some of which appear directly targeted at the U.S. military.

China has provided its solar and wind industries with government subsidies while erecting protectionist trade barriers to keep out American and European suppliers. Of greater concern are restrictions China recently announced on the export of rare earth minerals. These restrictions will likely impact U.S. and European manufacturers of advanced electronics, powerful batteries used for low-emission cars, and precision-guided weapons. Beijing’s move is certain to put foreign competitors in advanced technology products at a disadvantage, requiring them to either produce in China or pay more for a dwindling global supply of the scarce electronics components.

Did you know China literally changed their state secrets laws and made them retroactive? That they can jail foreign persons and companies? Nice, there is no treaty recognizing U.S. judgments and now that we have Americans and U.S. companies in China, magically we can have some report, piece of intellectual property, whatever from the vagueness of China, declared a state secret, a criminal offense! From the report:

Foreign companies may be prosecuted for obtaining financial, investment, managerial, and organizational information about state-owned competitors. For example, an American geologist was sentenced in July to eight years in prison for purchasing publicly available geologic reports that Chinese authorities retroactively deemed to be state secrets.

We can't even get any action on people and businesses which brought the entire economy to it's knees while China is putting in prison Americans, almost on a trumped up charge whim!

Did you know cyber attacks on American companies, to steal intellectual property secrets are originating from China? That' industrial espionage through packet capture is going on? That other Internet censorship acts are also trade barriers?

The above pie chart shows the largest foreign holders of U.S. Treasuries. Wonder why China is the largest holder of U.S. debt? Two words: currency manipulation. The report details how this works and here's the end result:

In order to support its export-promoting economic policies and suppress the value of the RMB, the Chinese government has continued channeling its foreign exchange earnings into U.S. government debt, becoming the single largest foreign purchaser of U.S Treasuries. Although the size of China’s holdings has raised concerns about the degree of influence China has on the U.S. economy the lack of alternatives and the potential detrimental impacts on China’s economy make it unlikely that China would stop buying U.S. debt or liquidate its holdings altogether.

The report also calls cash on the spin that somehow signing the China trade treaty in 2000 would make that nation more democratic and also points out getting any justice on trade deputes with China is almost a farce (this author's words). Even more odious, remember that mythical 1.3 billion member consumer market? The supposed reason so many U.S. based corporations have turned into Benedict Arnolds? As a share of China's GDP, consumer consumption in China has dropped from 46% to 35% of it's share of the economy.

Of course China is now on a media campaign to blast and try to discredit this report. But that's typical China. Anyone reading this site, with it's overviews of U.S. economic reports, knows the U.S.-China Economic and Security commission is telling truth and probably could write even more damning examples of our new bully on the block, China.

Of the many policy recommendations, the commission has specific immediate action recommendations surrounding Chinese currency manipulation:

Section 2: The Implications and Repercussions of China’s Holding U.S. Debt The Commission recommends that Congress evaluate steps that might be necessary to ensure that China’s currency manipulation, undervaluation, or misalignment does not adversely affect the competitiveness of U.S. producers, including whether it should initiate action under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974. The Commission recommends that Congress urge the Department of the Treasury to designate China as a currency manipulator in its semiannual report. The Commission recommends that Congress direct the Department of the Treasury to fully account for all sales of U.S. government debt to foreign governments and holdings of U.S. government debt by foreign governments.

Section 301 of the 1974 Trade Act sounds innocuous enough until you read it. Section 301 of the 1974 Trade act is the legal authority for the President to take all appropriate action, including retaliation, to obtain the removal of any act, policy, or practice of a foreign government that violates an international trade agreement or is unjustified, unreasonable, or discriminatory, and that burdens or restricts U.S. commerce.

What this means is the commission is recommending to the President of the United States to take immediate action, bypassing WTO remedies for validate disputes, and even retaliate against China for their currency manipulation and unfair trade practices. In other words, slap a broad based tariff against all Chinese imports to rebalance the currency exchange rate ourselves.

In other words, unlike our government, this commission is recommending the U.S. stop messin' around with China and do something now.

Below is a graphic representation of the pegged RMB, or Chinese Yuan, their currency, against a broad trade exchange rate of the U.S. dollar. These indexes come from the Fed's foreign exchange indexes. The Yuan was up-scaled and all indexed to January 2006, to show the values on the same graph. What's important to note is the Yuan is relatively flat, while other currencies, even when including China in the Asia exchanges, reflect movement. Notice how flat China's currency was during the financial crisis. China pegged it's currency to protect it's exports. The movement in currencies is not to scale in the graph, it's simply to show in comparison to the broad dollar exchange, China is manipulating their currency by pegging it to the dollar. The Yuan is considered undervalued by 20-40% by most economists.

The Renminbi by itself, shown below, so one can clearly see the currency peg of the Yuan as China catapults to the world's #1 economy.

I strongly recommend reading the entire report. Until then, consider these facts from the section on China's affects on the U.S. economy in the report.