How developing countries can save the bankrupt West

Apparently, developing countries must invest in themselves rather than in ‘safe’ Western assets. Philip Delves Broughton agrees
In the circle of hell that is contemporary publishing, one genre offers relief: the quick study of the ongoing financial meltdown. There seem to be no end of books rumbling off the production line either lambasting the greed and stupidity of the era just passed or offering handrails along our descent into depression.
And then there is Martin Wolf, the Financial Times chief economics commentator, who surveys the global economy from Blackfriars Bridge with a preternatural sobriety.
Where the rest of us just see water pouring in from all sides, he sees the flaws in the plumbing. And in his latest book, Fixing Global Finance (Yale UP, £18.99) he does not quite offer solutions, but does at least apply a cold towel to the markets' fevered brow.
Wolf's big idea is that emerging economies need to stop buying American assets, notably US Treasury bonds, and start investing in their own countries. The conservatism which drove them to buy American was understandable. They were sick of currency crises, like the ones which afflicted Asia and Russia in the late 1990s and Argentina in the early 2000s. So they began saving most of their money and buying the safest assets they could find, namely those denominated in dollars and preferably backed by the US government.

The Americans did their part by issuing ever more bonds, which in turn allowed the American consumer to borrow and buy more.
What is refreshing about Wolf's analysis is that it gets us away from discussions of morality and greed, which are inadequate to the problems we now face. The American and British consumer did not spend because he suddenly became insanely greedy and financially irrational. He spent because he could, and because macro-economic trends encouraged, even required him to. We bought holiday homes and maxed out the credit cards so that emerging economies could stabilise their finances. Mission accomplished.
Now it’s emerging economies’ turn to return the favour the West did them
But then came the reckoning. Developed countries' economies teeter on the edge of bankruptcy, banks are effectively nationalised, Keynesianism is back. But Keynesianism is a quick fix: for a longer term fix, I'm with Wolf.
Now it's the emerging economies' turn to return the favour the West did them. China especially. If they don't, the United States has a powerful bazooka at its disposal: the devaluation of its
currency. This would make all of its debt cheaper to repay and
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