As the U.S. teeters closer to the brink of debt default, the political stalemate is being watched closely by its biggest foreign creditor, China. At last count, Beijing owned almost $1.2 trillion of U.S. Treasury debt.
Chinese officials have been quietly expressing their concern, but Beijing's options are limited.
As Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met senior Chinese official Dai Bingguo in Shenzhen on Monday, the mood was friendly. But behind the scenes, anxiety in China is rising as the minutes tick closer toward that Aug. 2 deadline.
Earlier in Hong Kong, Clinton had tried to calm Chinese nerves.
"I'm confident that Congress will do the right thing and secure a deal on the debt ceiling, and work with President Obama to take the steps necessary to improve our long-term fiscal outlook," Clinton said.
State Department officials now admit that China has been using diplomatic channels to express its concern. It has sent several official demarches urging Washington to abide by its financial commitments.
Hoping Against A Default
Publicly, Chinese officials are still holding out hope that a default won't happen, arguing that it would betray the U.S. national interest. Huang Weiping, an economist from Renmin University, echoes what many believe to be true.
"We believe maybe the last-minute deal will be reached," Huang says.
In any case, there's little that China can do. Few believe Beijing would be willing to use its debt holdings as a weapon, since any move to sell off Treasuries would move the market, harming the value of its own holdings.
And even if there was a downgrade of U.S. sovereign ratings, Patrick Chovanec from Tsinghua University says it probably wouldn't change that much.
"They're very concerned, but in many respects, the Chinese — whether they like it or not — are along for the ride," Chovanec says. "By and large, they're stuck holding Treasuries and, in fact, they're stuck buying more because it's embedded in their growth model. There are no markets that are as deep and liquid as the U.S. Treasury market for them to put all their dollars."
For the past three years, China has tried to diversify its foreign exchange holdings away from U.S. Treasuries. Some, like Huang Weiping, wonder if that asset diversification should now be sped up.
"In the future, maybe China will buy not [as] much as before [in] Treasury bills. But maybe we do more kinds of ODI — that is, outward direct investment — either into USA [or] into other economies," Huang says.
'Co-Dependent Economies'
"We're both superpower economies locked in a battle over monetary policy," goes a satirical Taiwanese rap song. "For social stability, we've got to export — and we're sick of being the consumers of last resort ... They're not enemies, but frenemies, with co-dependent economies."
The song dates back to last year, but its point about the economic co-dependence between China and the U.S. is as true as ever today.
Chovanec says despite being the banker, China's still in a vulnerable position.
"If you owe the bank a million dollars, the bank owns you. If you owe the bank a billion dollars, you own the bank. Right now, the problem that China's in is that it's owed probably around $2 trillion ... Even though supposedly they're the creditor, they're actually in the weaker position, because they're not a creditor by choice, and they're not a creditor in their own currency. They're a creditor in someone else's currency, and that puts them in a very vulnerable position," Chovanec says.
One outspoken Chinese official, Mei Xinyu, has said this crisis shows up the ugliest aspects of the U.S. political system. And a Chinese paper, the Global Times, has accused the U.S. of hypocrisy, for lecturing other countries about democracy while depending on those same countries to bail it out from its economic quagmire.
So as Beijing watches and waits for action, it seems there's little it can do except use this crisis to score political points.
Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.