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Rebalancing Trade in East Asia: Evidence from the Electronics Industry

Willem Thorbecke

Emerging Markets Finance and Trade, 2017, vol. 53, issue 12, 2696-2705

Abstract: China’s trade surplus remains huge. Researchers reported that China’s exports decimate manufacturing job abroad and stoke protectionist pressures. China’s surplus is concentrated in the electronics sector. Much of the value-added of China’s exports of smartphones, tablet computers, and consumer electronics goods comes from processors, sensors, and other parts and components (p&c) produced in Taiwan, South Korea, Japan, and ASEAN. This article finds that the exchange rates in countries supplying p&c are crucial for understanding China’s electronics exports. A concerted appreciation of East Asian currencies is needed to rebalance the region’s exports. However, because of underdeveloped financial markets, the U.S. dollar remains the most important currency in the currency baskets of many East Asian economies. Countries resist appreciation against the dollar to maintain competitiveness vis-à-vis neighboring economies. This article considers ways to overcome this coordination failure and develop stronger consumption-oriented economies in the region.

Date: 2017
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DOI: 10.1080/1540496X.2017.1318751

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