How Nixon's Currency Deal With China Accidentally Created a Manufacturing Giant

MarketDash Editorial Team
8 days ago
Former White House Communications Director Anthony Scaramucci explains how a 1970s decision to link China's currency to the dollar gave Beijing an unexpected advantage that transformed it into the world's factory floor.

Sometimes the biggest strategic mistakes happen quietly, with handshakes and currency agreements rather than dramatic policy announcements. That's the thesis Anthony Scaramucci, former White House Communications Director, laid out recently when explaining how America accidentally helped create its biggest economic rival.

The Nixon-Era Setup

Speaking on The Rest Is Politics US podcast, Scaramucci traced China's manufacturing dominance back to a decision most people have forgotten about. "Nixon allows Mao to link his currency to the US dollar. By 1979, Deng Xiaoping takes over and he realizes that he needs to reform and he needs to bring capitalist ways into a communist system, and he has this good fortune of having his currency linked to the U.S. currency. Now, why is this important? US is spending lots of money in deficit spending, and so what are we, we're inflating our dollars," he explained.

The mechanism was almost elegant in its simplicity. "We want to pay our deficits back with dollars that are worth less than the dollars that we borrowed, and so we're running pretty high inflation in order to do this, and this is good for the Chinese, because as our dollar is going down in value, their currency is also going down in value because it's linked to our currency, and it allows them to become an oasis of exportation, an oasis of manufacturing," Scaramucci continued.

The Broader Picture

China's manufacturing dominance didn't happen in a vacuum. The country built its position through massive labor resources, strategic economic planning, and enormous infrastructure investments. But Scaramucci's point highlights an often-overlooked advantage: while America inflated away its debt burden, China got a free ride to currency competitiveness without having to make any difficult monetary policy decisions of its own.

It's a reminder that today's global economic landscape was shaped by decisions made decades ago, often with consequences nobody fully anticipated at the time.

How Nixon's Currency Deal With China Accidentally Created a Manufacturing Giant

MarketDash Editorial Team
8 days ago
Former White House Communications Director Anthony Scaramucci explains how a 1970s decision to link China's currency to the dollar gave Beijing an unexpected advantage that transformed it into the world's factory floor.

Sometimes the biggest strategic mistakes happen quietly, with handshakes and currency agreements rather than dramatic policy announcements. That's the thesis Anthony Scaramucci, former White House Communications Director, laid out recently when explaining how America accidentally helped create its biggest economic rival.

The Nixon-Era Setup

Speaking on The Rest Is Politics US podcast, Scaramucci traced China's manufacturing dominance back to a decision most people have forgotten about. "Nixon allows Mao to link his currency to the US dollar. By 1979, Deng Xiaoping takes over and he realizes that he needs to reform and he needs to bring capitalist ways into a communist system, and he has this good fortune of having his currency linked to the U.S. currency. Now, why is this important? US is spending lots of money in deficit spending, and so what are we, we're inflating our dollars," he explained.

The mechanism was almost elegant in its simplicity. "We want to pay our deficits back with dollars that are worth less than the dollars that we borrowed, and so we're running pretty high inflation in order to do this, and this is good for the Chinese, because as our dollar is going down in value, their currency is also going down in value because it's linked to our currency, and it allows them to become an oasis of exportation, an oasis of manufacturing," Scaramucci continued.

The Broader Picture

China's manufacturing dominance didn't happen in a vacuum. The country built its position through massive labor resources, strategic economic planning, and enormous infrastructure investments. But Scaramucci's point highlights an often-overlooked advantage: while America inflated away its debt burden, China got a free ride to currency competitiveness without having to make any difficult monetary policy decisions of its own.

It's a reminder that today's global economic landscape was shaped by decisions made decades ago, often with consequences nobody fully anticipated at the time.