China’s Holdings of U.S. Securities:
Implications for the U.S. Economy

Wayne M. Morrison
Specialist in Asian Trade and Finance
Marc Labonte
Specialist in Macroeconomic Policy
December 6, 2012
Congressional Research Service
7-5700
www.crs.gov
RL34314
CRS Report for Congress
Pr
epared for Members and Committees of Congress

China’s Holdings of U.S. Securities: Implications for the U.S. Economy

Summary
Given its relatively low savings rate, the U.S. economy depends heavily on foreign capital
inflows from countries with high savings rates (such as China) to meet its domestic investment
needs and to fund the federal budget deficit. The willingness of foreigners to invest in the U.S.
economy and purchase U.S. public debt has helped keep U.S. real interest rates low. However,
many economists contend that U.S. dependency on foreign savings exposes the U.S. economy to
certain risks, and some argue that such dependency was a contributing factor to the U.S. housing
bubble and subsequent global financial crisis that began in 2008.
China’s policy of intervening in currency markets to limit the appreciation of its currency against
the dollar (and other currencies) has made it the world’s largest and fastest growing holder of
foreign exchange reserves, especially U.S. dollars. China has invested a large share of these
reserves in U.S. private and public securities, which include long-term (LT) Treasury debt, LT
U.S. agency debt, LT U.S. corporate debt, LT U.S. equities, and short-term debt. As of June 2011,
China was the largest holder of U.S. securities, which totaled $1.73 trillion. U.S. Treasury
securities constitute the largest category of China’s holdings of U.S. securities—these totaled
$1.16 trillion as of September 2012, but were down from their peak of $1.31 trillion in July 2011.
China’s large holdings of U.S. securities have raised a number of concerns in both China and the
United States. For example, in 2009, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao stated that he was “a little
worried” about the “safety” of China’s holdings of U.S. debt. The sharp debate in Congress over
raising the public debt ceiling in the summer of 2011 and the subsequent downgrade of the U.S.
long-term sovereign credit from AAA to AA + by Standard and Poor’s in August 2011 appears to
have intensified Chinese concerns. In addition, Chinese officials have criticized U.S. fiscal
monetary policies, such as quantitative easing by the U.S. Federal Reserve, arguing that they
could lead to higher U.S. inflation and/or a significant weakening of the dollar, which could
reduce the value of China’s U.S. debt holdings in the future. Some Chinese analysts have urged
the government to diversify its reserves away from U.S. dollar assets, while others have called for
more rapid appreciation of China’s currency, which could lessen the need to hold U.S. assets.
Many U.S. policymakers have expressed concern over the size of China’s holdings of U.S.
government debt. For example, some contend that China might decide to sell a large share of its
U.S. securities holdings, which could induce other foreign investors to sell off their U.S. holdings
as well, which in turn could destabilize the U.S. economy. Others argue that China could use its
large holdings of U.S. debt as a bargaining chip in its dealing with the United States on economic
and non-economic issues. In the 112th Congress, H.R. 2166 and S. 1028 would seek to increase
the transparency of foreign ownership of U.S. debt instruments, especially China’s, in order to
assess if such holdings posed potential risks for the United States. The conference report
accompanying the National Defense Authorization Act of FY2012 (H.R. 1540, P.L. 112-81)
included a provision requiring the Secretary of Defense to conduct a national security risk
assessment of U.S. federal debt held by China. Many analysts argue that China’s holdings of U.S.
debt give it little leverage over the United States because as long as China continues to hold down
the value of its currency to the U.S. dollar, it will have few options other than to keep investing in
U.S. dollar assets. A Chinese attempt to sell a large portion of its dollar holdings could reduce the
value of its remaining dollar holdings, and any subsequent negative shocks to the U.S. (and
global) economy could dampen U.S. demand for Chinese exports. They contend that the main
issue for U.S. policymakers is not China’s large holdings of U.S. securities per se, but rather the
high U.S. reliance on foreign capital in general, and whether such borrowing is sustainable.
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China’s Holdings of U.S. Securities: Implications for the U.S. Economy

Contents
China’s Foreign Exchange Reserves ................................................................................................ 2
China’s Holdings of U.S. Securities ................................................................................................ 4
China’s Ownership of U.S. Treasury Securities ........................................................................ 8
Concerns over China’s Large Holdings of U.S. Securities ............................................................ 10
Growing Bilateral Tensions over the U.S. Public Debt ........................................................... 11
Does China’s Holdings of U.S. Debt Give it Leverage? ......................................................... 12
What If China Reduces its Holdings of U.S. Securities? ............................................................... 16
Concluding Observations ............................................................................................................... 17

Figures
Figure 1. Major Holders of Foreign Exchange Reserves Through 3rd Quarter 2012 ...................... 4
Figure 2. China’s Holdings of Foreign Exchange Reserves and Public and Private U.S.
Securities: 2002-2011 ................................................................................................................... 6
Figure 3. China’s Holdings of U.S. Securities by Major Category as a Percent of Total
Holdings as of June 2011 .............................................................................................................. 8
Figure 4. Annual Change in China’s Holdings of U.S. Treasury Securities: 2002-2011
and Year-on-Year Change in September 2012 .............................................................................. 9

Tables
Table 1. China’s Foreign Exchange Reserves: Totals and as a Percent of GDP, 2001-2011
and Estimates for 2012 ................................................................................................................. 3
Table 2. Top Three Foreign Holders of U.S. Securities and China’s Share of These
Holdings by Category as of June 2011 ......................................................................................... 7
Table 3. China’s Year-End Holdings of U.S. Treasury Securities: 2003-2011 and Holdings
as of September 2012 ................................................................................................................... 9
Table 4. Top 10 Foreign Holders of U.S. Treasury Securities as of September 2012 .................... 10

Contacts
Author Contact Information........................................................................................................... 19

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China’s Holdings of U.S. Securities: Implications for the U.S. Economy

ecause of its low savings rate, the United States borrows to finance the federal budget
deficit and its private capital needs. It therefore depends on countries with high savings
B rates, such as China, to invest some of their capital in the United States. Such investments
help to keep U.S. interest rates relatively low and enable the United States to consume more than
it produces. According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), in 2011, the United States was
the world’s largest importer of foreign capital (at 38.5% of global total), while China was the
largest exporter of capital (at 12.5%).1 From 2002 to 2011 (yearend), the amount of U.S. public
debt that is privately held grew from $3.0 trillion to $8.8 trillion; as a share of GDP, this level rose
from 28.4% to 57.9%.2 Of the U.S. public debt that is privately held, more than half is held by
foreigners.3 Many analysts argue that heavy U.S. reliance on foreign savings is not sustainable
and may undermine U.S. economic interests over time.
China’s central bank is a major purchaser of U.S. financial assets, largely because of its exchange
rate policy. 4 In order to limit the appreciation of China’s currency, the renminbi (RMB), against
the dollar, China must purchase U.S. dollars. This has led China to amass a huge level of foreign
exchange (FX) reserves, which totaled nearly $3.3 trillion as of September 2012. Rather than hold
dollars (and other foreign currencies), which earn no interest, the Chinese central government has
converted some level of its foreign exchange reserve holdings into U.S. financial securities,
including U.S. Treasury securities, U.S. agency debt, U.S. corporate debt, and U.S. equities.
U.S. Treasury securities, which are used to finance the federal budget deficit, constitute the
largest category of U.S. securities held by China. As of September 2012, these totaled $1.16
trillion and accounted for 21.8% of total foreign holdings of U.S. Treasury securities. Some U.S.
policymakers have expressed concern that China’s large holdings of U.S. securities could pose a
risk to the U.S. economy, especially if China attempted to divest itself of a large share of its
holdings. Others argue that China’s large and growing holdings of U.S. securities give it leverage
over the United States on economic and noneconomic issues. On the other hand, many analysts
contend that, given the current state of the global economy, China has few options for investing
its FX holdings, other than to buy U.S. securities. They further argue that any attempt by China to
sell off a large share of its current holdings would diminish the value of its remaining holdings
and could further destabilize the global economy, which would likely negatively impact China’s
economy. Hence, it is argued, China’s large holdings of U.S. securities give it very little leverage
over U.S. policy.
This report examines the importance to the U.S. economy of China’s investment in U.S.
securities, as well as the policy implications of its holdings for both the United States and China.5
For the United States, the issue of China’s large holdings of U.S. securities is part of a broader
question that has been raised by many economists: what are the implications of the heavy U.S.

1 IMF, Global Financial Stability Report, the Quest for Lasting Stability, April 2012, Statistical Appendix, p.3
2 U.S. Department of the Treasury, Treasury Bulletin, September 2012.
3 That level was 56.9% at the end of 2011. Foreign private holders of U.S. public debt include both private investors
and government entities. The People’s Bank of China, which is controlled by the Chinese government, is the biggest
Chinese holder of U.S. public debt.
4 China contends that its currency policy is intended to promote financial stability in China, while critics contend the
main purpose is to keep the value of its currency low in order to benefit Chinese exporters. See, CRS Report RS21625,
China's Currency Policy: An Analysis of the Economic Issues, by Wayne M. Morrison and Marc Labonte
5 China’s investment in U.S. securities far exceed its foreign direct investment (FDI) in the United States. FDI data
reflect ownership or investment in U.S. businesses (and are not covered by this report). For additional detail on China’s
FDI flows to the United States, see CRS Report RL33536, China-U.S. Trade Issues, by Wayne M. Morrison.
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reliance on foreign investment in U.S. securities to maintain healthy economic growth and to
finance the budget deficit?6 Since 2008, private savings in the United States has risen but public
savings has declined (i.e., the budget deficit has grown). Borrowing from abroad fell by $681
billion in 2009 over the previous year, but then rose by $1,050 billion in 2011 and by $1,749
billion in 2011.7 Thus, economic imbalances in the United States have become less of an issue of
inadequate private saving and more of an issue of high government borrowing since the financial
crisis began. It remains to be seen whether the rise in private savings was a permanent shift or a
temporary response to the recession, however.
The broader issue for China is whether its current unbalanced economic policies, especially those
that have contributed to its large savings rate, over-reliance on exports for its economic growth,
and accumulation of huge FX reserves, are sustainable in the long-run, especially given economic
slowdowns in Europe and the United States. Some have argued that these factors may induce
China to accelerate efforts to boost consumer demand and improve domestic living standards,
which could include further appreciation of the RMB against the dollar. Such policies could
lessen China’s need to buy U.S. securities.
China’s Foreign Exchange Reserves
China’s economic policies, including those that induce high levels of domestic savings and
promote export-related activities as the main engine of China’s economic growth, have
contributed to a surge in China’s FX reserves over the past decade, as indicated in Table 1.
China’s exchange rate policies attempt to slow (and sometimes halt) the appreciation of the RMB
against the dollar. This makes Chinese exports less expensive and foreign imports into China
more expensive than would occur if China maintained a floating currency. The main purpose of
this policy is to promote China’s export industries and encourage foreign investment. To that end,
the Chinese central bank must intervene heavily in currency markets by buying up as many
dollars as necessary to meet the government’s targeted RMB-dollar exchange rate.8 Chinese
policies that induce high savings rates dampen domestic consumption and demand for imports,
while shifting financial resources (i.e., low-cost bank credit) largely to export-oriented industries.
As a result, China consumes much less than it produces. Such policies have contributed to
China’s large annual trade surpluses. The combination of China’s large merchandise trade
surpluses ($185 billion in 2010), inflows of foreign direct investment into China ($106 billion in
2010), and inflows of “hot money” into China have been the main components of China’s rapid
accumulation of FX reserves.9

6 For a discussion of the implications of a possible global sell-off of U.S. securities, see CRS Report RL34319, Foreign
Ownership of U.S. Financial Assets: Implications of a Withdrawal
, by James K. Jackson.
7 These data are annual (end-June) changes in foreign holdings of U.S. public and private securities
8 China states that it maintains a managed peg with a number of major currencies, but U.S. officials contend that, in
fact, the RMB is pegged largely to the dollar.
9 “Hot money” refers to inflows of capital from overseas investors who attempt to bypass Chinese government capital
restrictions. Some attempt to purchase Chinese currency in the belief that the Chinese government will continue to
appreciate the RMB in the near future, while others are seeking to invest in certain “high growth” sectors, such as real
estate. The inflows of hot money force the government to intervene to buy the inflows of foreign currency, such as the
dollar, to maintain its exchange rate targets.
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According to Chinese government figures, its FX reserves rose from $216 billion in 2001 to $3,290
billion as of September 2012, a $3 trillion increase.10 From 2001 to 2011 (year-end), China’s FX
reserves grew at an annual average rate of 28.7%. However, from September 2011 to September
2012, its reserves increased by only 2.8%.11 China’s reserves as a percent of nominal GDP grew from
16.3% in 2001 to 48.4% in 2010—an unusually high level for a large economy. That level dropped to
44.1% in 2011 and is projected to fall to 40.8% in 2012.
A listing of the world’s top holders of FX reserves as of the third quarter of 2012 is shown in Figure
1
. Not only was China by far the world’s largest holder of FX reserves, its reserves were greater than
the combined reserves of Japan, Saudi Arabia, Switzerland, Russia, and Taiwan. (Besides Japan,
these countries had much smaller economies than China.)
Table 1. China’s Foreign Exchange Reserves: Totals and as a Percent of GDP, 2001-
2011 and Estimates for 2012
Year
Billions of U.S. Dollars
As a % of Chinese GDP
2001 215.6
16.3
2002 291.1
20.0
2003 403.3
24.6
2004 609.9
31.6
2005 818.9
36.5
2006 1,068.5
40.2
2007 1,528.2
45.2
2008 1,946.0
45.0
2009 2,399.2
48.1
2010 2,847.3
48.4
2011 3,181.1
44.1
2012 (projected)
3,300.0
40.8
Source: Global Insight, Economist Intelligence Unit, and the Chinese State Administration of Foreign Exchange.
Note: Year-end values. Data for 2012 are projections.


10 Some analysts contend that China’s actual FX reserves are much higher than official Chinese data. For example,
Brad Setser and Arpana Pandey contend that China’s official data on FX reserves do not include holdings and assets
held by China’s main sovereign wealth fund, China Investment Corporation (CIC), and those held by state banks. They
estimated that China’s actual FX holdings were 18% higher than its official estimates. See Council on Foreign
Relations, China’s $1.7 Trillion Bet: China’s External Portfolio and Dollar Reserves, by Brad Setser and Arpana
Pandey, January 2009.
11 The level of China’s FX reserves peaked at $3,310 billion in February 2012.
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Figure 1. Major Holders of Foreign Exchange Reserves Through 3rd Quarter 2012
($ billions)
3,500
3,290
3,000
2,500
2,000
1,500
1,197
1,000
621
457
454
399
367
500
313
291
260
0


Sources: IMF International Financial Statistics, and Central Bank of the Republic of China (Taiwan).
Notes: Data for Saudi Arabia include gold reserves. Data for China, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Hong Kong, and
Switzerland are through September 2012. Data for Japan, Brazil, India, South Korea, and Taiwan are through
October 2012.
China’s Holdings of U.S. Securities12
Although the Chinese government does not make public the dollar composition of its FX
holdings, many analysts estimate this level to be around 70%.13 U.S. assets have generally been
favored by China for its investment needs for a number of reasons. First, in order to maintain the
exchange rate effects that lay behind the acquisition of U.S. dollars, those dollars must be
invested in dollar-denominated securities. Second, the United States is the world’s largest
economy and has the biggest capital market. In 2009, the combined value of U.S. private and
public debt securities was $31.7 trillion (compared with $11.9 trillion for Japan and $5.7 trillion
for Germany) and accounted for 34.4% of global debt securities. Many analysts contend that the
U.S. debt securities market is the only global market that is big enough to absorb a big part of
China’s large and growing FX holdings. U.S. securities have also been favored by China because,
historically, they have been considered to be safe and liquid (i.e., easily sold) relative to other

12 For additional information on foreign ownership of U.S. securities, see CRS Report RL32462, Foreign Investment in
U.S. Securities
, by James K. Jackson.
13 See testimony of Brad Setser, Senior Economist, Roubini Global Economics and Research Associate, Global
Economic Governance Programme, University College, Oxford, before the House Budget Committee, Foreign
Holdings of U.S. Debt: Is our Economy Vulnerable
?, June 26, 2007, p. 11. In addition, the People’s Daily Online
(August 28, 2006) estimated China’s dollar holdings to total FX reserves at 70%.
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types of investments.14 Finally, U.S. Treasury securities are backed by the full faith and credit of
the U.S. government, which guarantees that interest and principal payments will be paid on time.
The global economic slowdown and the European sovereign debt crisis may have also boosted
the attractiveness of U.S. securities for China.15 According to China’s State Administration of
Foreign Exchange (SAFE), its main principles for administrating China’s FX reserves are
“security, liquidity, and increases in value, among which security is the primary principle.” 16
U.S. financial securities consist of a mix of securities issued by the U.S. government and private
sector entities and include long-term (LT) U.S. Treasury securities (which are discussed in more
detail in the next section), LT U.S. government agency securities,17 LT corporate securities (some
of which are asset-backed), equities (such as stocks), and short-term debt. LT securities are those
with no stated maturity date (such as equities) or with an original term to maturity date of more
than one year. Short-term debt includes U.S. Treasury securities, agency securities, and corporate
securities with a maturity date of less than one year.18 The Department of the Treasury issues an
annual survey of foreign portfolio holdings of U.S. securities by country and reports data for the
previous year as of the end of June. 19
The latest Treasury survey of portfolio holdings of U.S. securities was issued on April 30, 2012.20
The report indicates that China’s total holdings of U.S. securities as of June 2011 were $1.7
trillion. Treasury data indicated that China’s holdings of U.S. securities have increased much
faster than those of any other country. From 2006-2011, China’s holding increased by over $1
trillion (or 147%).21 China overtook Japan as the largest holder of U.S. securities in 2009, and, as
June 2011, its holdings were 9.0% higher than that those of Japan. As indicated in Figure 2, as
China’s FX reserves have risen rapidly, so has its holdings of U.S. securities.


14 See CRS Report RL34582, The Depreciating Dollar: Economic Effects and Policy Response, by Craig K. Elwell.
15 The global financial crisis, global economic slowdown, and public debt crisis in many countries have induced capital
to flow to the United States, often referred to as a “flight to quality.” This has pushed yields on U.S. Treasury securities
to record lows. For November 30, 2012, the yields on one-year, five-year, and ten-year Treasury nominal constant
maturities were 0.18%, 0.61%, and 1.62%, respectively. In comparison, the yields for the same securities on November
30, 2007, were 3.04%, 3.41%, and 4.40%. Source: Department of the Treasury, Resource Center, Daily Treasury
Yield Curve Rates
.
16 See China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE), FAQs on Foreign Exchange Reserves, July 20, 2010.
17 Agency securities include both federal agencies and government-sponsored enterprises created by Congress (e.g.,
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac) to provide credit to key sectors of the economy. Some of these securities are backed by
assets (such as home mortgages).
18 As of June 2011, 75% of U.S. short-term debt consisted on U.S. Treasury securities, followed by corporate debt
(20.2%) and U.S. agency debt (4.9%).
19 The report is prepared jointly by the Department of the Treasury, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and the
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
20 Department of the Treasury, Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, Report on Foreign Portfolio Holdings of U.S. Securities as of June 30, 2011, April 2012, available at
http://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/data-chart-center/tic/Documents/shla2011r.pdf.
21 Data on China’s holdings of U.S. securities exclude holdings by Hong Kong and Macao. These entities, though part
of China, are reported separately by Treasury.
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Figure 2. China’s Holdings of Foreign Exchange Reserves and Public and Private U.S.
Securities: 2002-2011
($ billions)
3,500
3,181
3,000
2,866
2,416
2,500
1,949
2,000
1,727
1,611
1,530
1,464
1,500
1,205
1,068
922
1,000
822
699
615
527
408
500
291
341
255
181
0
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
U.S. Securities
Foreign Exchange Reserves

Sources: U.S. Treasury Department, Report on Foreign Portfolio Holdings of U.S. Securities as of June 30, 2011, April
2012, and Global Insight Database.
Note: Data on foreign exchange reserves are end of year values while data on holdings of U.S. securities are
through the end of June.
Table 2 lists the top three holders of U.S. securities as of June 2010, broken down by the type of
securities held and Figure 3 provides a breakdown of China’s holdings of U.S. securities by
category. These data indicate that as of June 2011:
• China accounted for 13.9% of total foreign-held U.S. securities (compared with
4.1% in 2002).
• LT Treasury securities constituted the bulk of China’s holdings of U.S. securities
(at 75.3% of total), followed by long-term agency debt (14.2%) and U.S. equities
(9.2%).22
• China was the largest foreign holder of LT Treasury debt (32.2% of the foreign
total) and the second largest holder of U.S. agency debt (23.8%) after Japan.23

22 In June 2008, China’s holdings of LT U.S. Agency debt constituted 43.7% of its holding of U.S. securities, which
were greater than its holdings of LT U.S. Treasury securities (43.3%). However, the bursting of the U.S. housing
bubble and the subsequent federal takeover of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae in 2008 led China to significantly reduce
its holdings of U.S. Agency debt, while increasing its holdings of other securities, especially Treasury securities.
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• China was the 8th largest holder of U.S. equities at $159 billion, which was 4.2%
of total foreign holdings.
Table 2. Top Three Foreign Holders of U.S. Securities and China’s Share of These
Holdings by Category as of June 2011
($ billions)
LT
LT
Short
Type of Security
Total
Treasury
LT Agency
Corporate
Equities
Term Debt
China 1,727
1,302
245
16
159
5
Japan
1,585 818 258 140 302 67
United
Kingdom 982 118 12 394 441 16
Foreign
Total
12,440 4,049 1,031 2,651 3,830 878
China’s June 2011
Holdings as a
Percent of Total
13.9% 32.2% 23.8% 0.6% 4.2% 0.6%
Foreign Holdings
Source: U.S. Department of the Treasury, Report on Foreign Portfolio Holdings of U.S. Securities as of June 30, 2011,
April 2012.
Note: LT securities are those with no stated maturity date (such as equities) or with an original term to
maturity date of more than one year. Short term securities have a maturity period of less than one year. Data on
China exclude Hong Kong and Macau.

(...continued)
23 China was the largest holder of Agency LT debt in 2010 at 33.2% of total).
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Figure 3. China’s Holdings of U.S. Securities by Major Category as a Percent of Total
Holdings as of June 2011
LT Corporate and
Short-Term Debt
1%
Equities
9%
LT Agency
14%
LT Treasury
76%

Source: U.S. Department of the Treasury, Report on Foreign Portfolio Holdings of U.S. Securities as of June 30,
2011, April 2012.
China’s Ownership of U.S. Treasury Securities24
U.S. Treasury securities are the largest category of U.S. securities and are main vehicle the U.S.
government uses to finance the federal debt, which totaled $14.3 trillion at the end of March
2011.25 As indicated in Table 3, China’s holdings increased rapidly from 2003 to 2010, both in
dollar terms and as a percent of total foreign holdings. In September 2008, China overtook Japan
to become the largest foreign holder of U.S. Treasury securities (it was 7th largest in 1997). From
2003 to 2010, China’s holdings increased by nearly $1 trillion, which were by far the largest
dollar increase in holdings of any country, and accounted for 34% of net new foreign holdings of
U.S. Treasury securities over this time. As indicated in Figure 4, China’s purchases of new
Treasury securities from 2008 to 2010 averaged about $224.2 billion per year. China’s share of
foreign holdings of U.S. Treasury securities rose from 10.4% in 2002 to 26.1% in 2010.
However, China’s holdings of U.S. Treasury securities fell $8.2 billion in 2011 over the previous
year. China’s holdings as of September 2012 were $114.7 billion less than they were in

24 For a general discussion of foreign ownership of U.S. debt, see CRS Report RS22331, Foreign Holdings of Federal
Debt
, by Justin Murray and Marc Labonte. For a discussion on Treasury's debt management practices, see CRS Report
R40767, How Treasury Issues Debt, by Mindy R. Levit.
25 It was at $14.6 trillion as of August 8, 2011. See the Department of the Treasury, The Debt to the Penny and Who
Holds It
, available at http://www.treasurydirect.gov/NP/BPDLogin?application=np.
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September 2011.26 China’s share of foreign holdings of U.S. securities dropped to 23.0% at year-
end 2011 and as of September 2012 they declined to 21.8%, indicating that the importance of
China as a holder (purchaser) of U.S. Treasury securities has declined somewhat. A listing of the
top 10 foreign holders of U.S. Treasury securities as of September 2012 is shown in Table 4.
China was the largest holder of U.S. Treasury securities (at $1.16 trillion), followed by Japan,
major oil producers, Brazil, and Caribbean Banking Centers.
Table 3. China’s Year-End Holdings of U.S. Treasury Securities: 2003-2011 and
Holdings as of September 2012
($ billions and as a percent of total foreign holdings)

2003
2005 2007
2009 2010 2011
Sept
2012
China’s
Holdings
159.0 310.0 477.6 894.8
1,160.1
1,151.9
1,155.6
($billions)
Holdings as
a % of Total
Foreign
10.4% 15.2% 20.3% 24.2% 26.1% 23.0% 21.8%
Holdings
Source: Department of Treasury, Major Foreign Holders of Treasury Securities Holdings, November 16, 2012.
Figure 4. Annual Change in China’s Holdings of U.S. Treasury Securities: 2002-2011
and Year-on-Year Change in September 2012
($ billions)
300
265.3
239.8
250
200
167.4
150
87.1
86.9
100
80.7
63.9
40.6
50
0
-8.2
-50
-100
-114.7
-150
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
Sept 2012

Source: U.S. Department of the Treasury.

26 On the other hand, Japan’s holdings of Treasury securities have grown sharply over the past year or so, rising from
$765.7 billion in December 2009 to $1,130.7 billion in September 2012, a $365 billion increase ( or 47.7%).
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Table 4. Top 10 Foreign Holders of U.S. Treasury Securities as of September 2012
Country Holdings as a Share of

Total Foreign Holdings ($ billions)
Total Foreign Holdings (%)
China 1,155.6
21.8
Japan 1,130.7
20.7
Oil Exporters
267.0
4.9
Brazil 250.5
4.6
Caribbean Banking Centers
240.4
4.4
Taiwan 200.4
3.7
Switzerland 195.8
3.6
Russia 162.8
3.0
Luxembourg 148.1 2.7
Hong Kong
135.7
2.5
Belgium 133.7
2.5
Total Foreign Holdings
5,455.0
100.0
Source: Department of Treasury, Major Foreign Holders of Treasury Securities Holdings, November 16, 2012.

Concerns over China’s Large Holdings of U.S.
Securities

The growing U.S. dependency on China to purchase U.S. Treasury securities to help fund the
U.S. budget deficit has become a major concern to many U.S. policymakers. Some have raised
concerns that China’s large holdings may give it leverage over the United States on economic as
well as noneconomic issues. Others have expressed concern that China might lose faith in the
ability of the United States to meet its debt obligations, and, thus, might seek to liquidate such
assets or significantly cut back on purchases of new securities, a move some contend could
damage the U.S. economy. Still others contend that China’s purchases of U.S. securities was a
major contributing factor to the U.S. sub-prime mortgage crisis and subsequent global economic
slowdown because such purchases helped to keep real U.S. interest rates very low and increased
global imbalances. 27 Some warn that similar bubbles could occur in the future if imbalances
between the United States and China are not addressed.28 Chinese officials, on the other hand,
have expressed concerns over the safety of their large holdings of U.S. debt, and some have
argued that China should either diversify away from U.S. Treasury securities or implement
policies that slow the accumulation of FX reserves, which would lessen the need to buy U.S.
assets.

27 See CRS Report RL34742, The Global Financial Crisis: Analysis and Policy Implications, coordinated by Dick K.
Nanto.
28 Low U.S. interest rates sharply contributed to U.S. demand for housing. Homeowners viewed growing home values
as a source of income to draw from through home equities, which were used to buy consumer goods. The rise in U.S.
domestic consumption boosted foreign imports, such as from China, which sharply increased the U.S. trade deficit.
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Growing Bilateral Tensions over the U.S. Public Debt
Since the beginning of the global financial crisis in 2008, U.S. government officials have
increasingly sought to offer assurances to Chinese officials regarding the safety of China’s
holdings of U.S. government debt securities and to encourage China to continue to purchase U.S.
securities. For example, during her first visit to China on February 21, 2009, Secretary of State
Hillary Rodham Clinton was quoted as saying that she appreciated “greatly the Chinese
government's continuing confidence in the United States Treasuries,” and she urged the
government to continue to buy U.S. debt.29 However on March 13, 2009, Chinese Premier Wen
Jiabao at a news conference stated: “We’ve lent a huge amount of capital to the United States, and
of course we’re concerned about the security of our assets. And to speak truthfully, I am a little bit
worried. I would like to call on the United States to honor its words, stay a credible nation and
ensure the safety of Chinese assets."30 On March 24, 2009, the governor of the People’s Bank of
China, Zhou Xiaochuan, published a paper calling for replacing the U.S. dollar as the
international reserve currency with a new global system controlled by the IMF.31
The recent contentious U.S. debate over raising the debt ceiling and over how to address long-
term U.S. debt issues, along with the downgrade of the long-term sovereign credit rating of the
United States from AAA to AA + by Standard and Poor’s in August 2011, appear to have
intensified China’s concerns over its U.S. debt holdings.32 Several government-controlled Chinese
newspapers issued sharp criticism of U.S. economic policies (as well as the U.S. political
system). For example:
• A July 28, 2011, Xinhua News Agency (Xinhua) editorial stated: “With its debt
approximating its annual economic output, it is time for Washington to revisit the
time-tested common sense that one should live within one's means.”
• An August 3, 2011, a Xinhua editorial stated: “Should Washington continue
turning a blind eye to its runaway debt addiction, its already tarnished credibility
will lose more luster, which might eventually detonate the debt bomb and
jeopardize the well-being of hundreds of millions of families within and beyond
the U.S. borders.”
• A Xinhua August 6, 2011, editorial said: “The U.S. government has to come to
terms with the painful fact that the good old days when it could just borrow its
way out of messes of its own making are finally gone. International supervision
over the issue of U.S. dollars should be introduced and a new, stable and secured
global reserve currency may also be an option to avert a catastrophe caused by
any single country.”
• A Xinhua editorial on August 8, 2011, stated: “The days when the debt-ridden
Uncle Sam could leisurely squander unlimited overseas borrowing appeared to be
numbered as its triple A-credit rating was slashed by Standard & Poor's (S&P)
for the first time on Friday. China, the largest creditor of the world's sole

29 ABC News International, Clinton Seeks to Reassure China on T-Bills, February 21, 2009.
30 China Daily, March 14, 2009, http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2009-03/14/content_7578931.htm.
31 Financial Times, China Calls for New Reserve Currency, March 24, 2009.
32 Failure to extend the debt ceiling could have put the U.S. government in default of its debt obligations.
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superpower, has every right now to demand the United States to address its
structural debt problems and ensure the safety of China's dollar assets.”
The U.S. debt issue was a major topic during Vice President Joe Biden’s trip to China in August
2011. At a meeting with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabo on August 19, 2011, Vice President Biden
stated that “we appreciate and welcome your concluding that the United States is such a safe
haven because we appreciate your investment in U.S. treasuries. And very sincerely, I want to
make clear that you have nothing to worry about in terms of their—their viability.”33 In a speech
at Sichuan University, he stated that “the concern that we will not make good on the investments
that people have made—in your case up to $1.7 trillion total out of a very large economy is not to
worry about. We could not afford—we could not afford not to make good on that requirement.”34
Some analysts contend that China’s main concern is not a possible U.S. default on its debt, but
rather U.S. monetary policies that have been utilized by the Federal Reserve in recent years to
stimulate the economy, namely the purchases of U.S. Treasury securities, agency debt, and
agency mortgage-backed securities. Such measures, often referred to as “quantitative easing”
(QE), have led the Federal reserve to purchase over $2 trillion in U.S. securities since March
2009 in an effort to lower long-term interest rates.35 An August 25, 2011, editorial in China Daily
stated that “China is not worried that Standard & Poor's has downgraded the U.S. credit rating
from AAA to AA+. Rather it is concerned about the Fed announcing QE3. If the U.S.
administration chooses to make the irresponsible choice of devaluating the dollar further, China
would not only stop buying U.S. debt, but also gradually decrease its holdings, which would
certainly not be in the interests of the U.S. or in accordance with Biden's wishes.”36 Chinese
officials have expressed concerns that actions by the Federal Reserve to boost the U.S. money
supply will undermine the value of China’s holdings of U.S. dollar assets, either by causing the
dollar to depreciate against other major currencies or by significantly increasing U.S. inflation. To
date, quantitative easing has not led to a noticeable increase in U.S. inflation, and the Federal
Reserve has argued that it has sufficient tools to maintain low inflation in the future.
Does China’s Holdings of U.S. Debt Give it Leverage?
It is difficult to determine whether China’s holdings of U.S. securities give it any leverage over
U.S. policies.37 The importance of China’s debt holdings to the U.S. economy can be measured in
a number of different ways (see text box below). During his confirmation hearing to become U.S.
Ambassador to China before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in May 2011, Gary Locke,
in response to a question on this issue, stated that China’s holdings of U.S. Treasury securities did
not “in any way influence U.S. foreign policy.”38

33 The White House, Office of the Vice President, Remarks by Vice President Biden at a Meeting with Chinese Premier
Wen
, August 19, 2011, available at http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2011/08/19/remarks-vice-president-
biden-meeting-chinese-premier-wen.
34 The White House, Office of the Vice President, Remarks by Vice President Biden, on U.S.-China Relations followed
by Q&A with Students, Sichuan University, Chengdu, China, August 21, 2011.
35 CRS Report R41540, Quantitative Easing and the Growth in the Federal Reserve’s Balance Sheet, by Marc Labonte.
36 China Daily, Dilemma of Yuan revaluation, August 25, 2011, available at
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/opinion/2011-08/25/content_13185617.htm.
37 China has attempted to use the U.S. debt crisis to criticize U.S. economic policies and its political system, implying
that Chinese economic and political policies are more stable.
38 Congressional Quarterly, Congressional Transcripts, Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, Hearing on the
(continued...)
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Indicators of the Size of China’s Ownership of U.S. Public Debt
China’s ownership of U.S. Treasury securities, or U.S. federal debt, is significant, but the relative importance of those
holdings to the overall U.S. federal debt can be measured in different ways. The U.S. public debt totaled $14.8 trillion
and the end of FY2011. Of this amount, 43% was held by U.S. government trust funds and 57% was privately held. Of
the total level of privately-held U.S. Treasury securities ($8.4 trillion), foreigners owned 58% of the total ($5
trillion).39 China’s holdings of U.S. Treasury securities as of September 2011 were $1.27 trillion. The importance of
China’s holdings of U.S. debt securities (as of September 2011) can be measured as fol ows. They constituted: 25.9%
of total foreign holdings of U.S. Treasury securities, 15.0% of U.S. privately-held Treasury securities, and 8.6% of the
total level of U.S. federal debt (privately-held and intergovernmental).
The amount of interest payments the U.S. government makes to China each year is not precisely known since a
breakdown of the types of Treasury securities, their maturity dates, and their yields, is not published.40 A rough
estimate can be made by taking the Treasury Department’s data on interest paid on the debt held by foreigners in
FY2011($150.2 billion) and multiplying it by China’s holdings of U.S. federal debt as percent of the total foreign debt .
Based on these data, it is estimated that U.S. interest rate payments to China on its holdings of U.S. Treasury
securities were $38.9 billion in FY2011, or about $107 million per day41 China’s holdings of U.S. Treasury debt in
FY2011 was roughly equal to $4,073 for every American and $961 for every Chinese. According to one observer:
“Never before has a country as poor as China provided so much financing to a country as rich as the United
States.”42
Some Chinese officials in the past have suggested that its holdings of U.S. debt could be used in
regard to economic and political disputes with the United States. To illustrate, an August 7, 2007,
article in the Telegraph (an online British newspaper) cited interviews with officials from two
leading Chinese government think tanks who reportedly stated that China had the power to make
the dollar collapse (if it chose to do so) by liquidating large portions of its U.S. Treasury
securities holdings if the United States imposed trade sanctions to force an appreciation of the
RMB, and that the threat to do so could be used as a “bargaining chip.” Ding Gang, a senior
editor with China’s People’s Daily wrote in an editorial in August 2011 that China should directly
link the amount of U.S. Treasury holdings with U.S. arms sales to Taiwan, stating that “now is the
time for China to use its ‘financial weapon’ to teach the United States a lesson if it moves forward
with a plan to sale arms to Taiwan. In fact, China has never wanted to use its holdings of U.S.
debt as a weapon. It is the United States that is forcing it to do so...to defend itself when facing
threats to China's sovereignty.” 43
The likelihood that China would suddenly reduce its holdings of U.S. securities is questionable
because doing so could have a significant negative impact on the Chinese economy. First, a large
sell-off of China’s U.S. holdings could diminish the value of these securities in international
markets, which would lead to large losses on the sale, and would, in turn, decrease the value of
China’s remaining dollar-denominated assets.44 This would also occur if the value of the dollar

(...continued)
Nomination of Secretary of Commerce Gary Locke to Be Ambassador to People's Republic of China, May 26, 2011.
39 U.S. Treasury Department, Financial Management Service, Ownership of Federal Securities, available at
http://www.fms.treas.gov/bulletin/index.html.
40 For example, Treasury securities maturity dates range from one month to 30 years. Yields change on a daily basis.
41 For an overview of the types of securities issue by Treasury and its management of U.S. debt, see CRS Report
R40767, How Treasury Issues Debt, by Mindy R. Levit.
42 Council on Foreign Relations, China’s $1.7 Trillion Bet: China’s External Portfolio and Dollar Reserves, by Brad
Setser and Arpana Pandey, January 2009.
43 People’s Daily, China must punish US for Taiwan arm sales with 'financial weapon’, August 8, 2011, at
http://english.people.com.cn/90780/91342/7562776.html.
44 Since there are many other holders of U.S. assets, it is possible that if China believed a decline in asset values was
(continued...)
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were greatly diminished in international currency markets due to China’s sell-off.45 Second, such
a move would diminish U.S. demand for Chinese imports, either through a rise in the value of the
RMB against the dollar or a reduction in U.S. economic growth (especially if other foreign
investors sold their U.S. asset holdings, and the United States was forced to raise interest rates in
response).46 It is estimated that nearly one quarter of Chinese exports went to the United States in
2010. A sharp reduction of U.S. imports from China could have a significant impact on China’s
economy, which heavily depends on exports for its economic growth (and is viewed by the
government as a vital source of political stability).47 Any major action by the Chinese government
that destabilized (or further destabilized) the U.S. economy (whether deliberate or not) could
provoke “protectionist” sentiment in the United States against China. One analyst described the
financial interdependency between the United States and China as “a kind of balance of financial
terror.” According to Derek Scissors, a Research Fellow with the Heritage Foundation:
One area of concern in the U.S. is Chinese financial influence. As noted, Chinese investment
is largely involuntary, a function of having a great deal of money and no place else to put it.
This refines the usual analogy of banker and customer to one where the banker has a choice
of "lending" to one particular customer for the better part of her business, or crafting an
exceptionally large mattress. The influence is mutual.” Who needs the other more varies with
American and international financial conditions. The more money the U.S. borrows, the
more the American economy needs the PRC. The more desirable Treasury bonds are, the
more China needs us. The U.S. is planning to run a federal deficit of over $1 trillion but there
has been a flight to quality and American Treasury bonds are highly desired. There is
balance on this score. The PRC can exercise little or no leverage over American policy by
virtue of its purchase of our bonds.
However, Scissors goes on to state:
There is future danger in the possibility that we will run sustained, gigantic deficits. The
longer these last, the more likely it is that U.S. treasuries will become relatively less
attractive, thereby tipping the balance of influence toward China. The U.S. could come to
need Chinese purchases more than the PRC needs American bonds, yet another argument to
control the federal budget.48
Many analysts contend that the U.S. debt securities market is the only global market that is big
enough to absorb a big part of China’s large and growing FX holdings. Economic problems in
Japan and Europe do not leave China with many alternatives for investing its massive FX
reserves. According to Andrew Peaple, a writer for the Wall Street Journal: “Some say China

(...continued)
imminent, it could minimize its losses by dumping its U.S. assets first.
45 Selling off U.S. dollar assets could cause the RMB to appreciate against the dollar, which would lower the value of
remaining U.S. assets since the assets are dollar-denominated.
46 In addition, if a “dollar collapse” occurred, U.S. imports from other major trade partners would decline, which could
slow their economies. This in turn could weaken their demand for Chinese products.
47 Although a falling dollar may harm China’s short-term growth via reduced Chinese exports (and export sector-
related employment), it would also improve China’s terms of trade with the United States, raising China’s overall
consumption since it could now spend less to acquire the same amount of American goods (which would also create
jobs in other sectors of the economy because of increased consumer purchasing power).
48 The Heritage Foundation, Testimony before the U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission on China's
Role in the Origins of and Responses to the Global Recession, by Derek Scissors, Ph.D., March 3, 2009, available at
http://www.heritage.org/Research/Testimony/Testimony-before-the-US-China-Economic-and-Security-Review-
Commission-on-Chinas-Role-in-the-Origins-of-and-Responses-to-the-Global-Recession.
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could switch holdings into gold—but that market's highly volatile, and not large enough to absorb
more than a small proportion of China's reserves. It's not clear, meanwhile, that euro, or yen-
denominated debt is any safer, more liquid, or profitable than U.S. debt—key criteria for China's
leadership.”49
Legislation has been introduced in the 112th Congress that would seek to assess the implications
for the United States of China’s ownership of U.S. debt.
• H.R. 2166 (Sam Johnson) and S. 1028 (Cornyn), both titled “Foreign-Held Debt
Transparency and Threat Assessment Act,” would seek to increase the
transparency of foreign ownership of U.S. debt instruments, especially in regard
to China, in order to better assess the potential risks such holdings could pose for
the United States. The bills state, for example, that under certain circumstances,
China’s holdings of U.S. debt could give it a tool with which it can try to
manipulate U.S. domestic and foreign policymaking, including the U.S.
relationship with Taiwan; and that China could attempt to destabilize the U.S.
economy by rapidly divesting large portions of its holdings of U.S. debt
instruments. The bills would require the President to issue a quarterly report on
foreign holders of U.S. debt instruments, which would include a breakdown of
foreign ownership by country of domicile and by the type of creditor (i.e., public,
quasi-public, private); an analysis of the country’s purpose and long-term
intentions in regard to its U.S. debt holdings; an analysis of the current and
foreseeable risks to U.S. national security and economic stability of each nation’s
U.S. debt holdings; and a determination whether such risks are “acceptable or
unacceptable.” If the President determined that a foreign country’s holdings of
U.S. debt instruments were an unacceptable risk, he would be required to
formulate an action plan to reduce that risk.
• The conference report accompanying the National Defense Authorization Act of
FY2012 (H.R. 1540, P.L. 112-81) included a provision requiring the Secretary of
Defense to conduct a national security risk assessment of U.S. federal debt held
by China. The Secretary of Defense issued a report in July 2012, stating that
“attempting to use U.S. Treasury securities as a coercive tool would have limited
effect and likely would do more harm to China than to the United States.” As the
threat is not credible and the effect would be limited even if carried out, it does
not offer China deterrence options, whether in the diplomatic, military, or
economic realms, and this would remain true both in peacetime and in scenarios
of crisis or war.

49 Wall Street Journal, China's Limited Options on Treasurys, March 16, 2009, available at
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123694305633018403.html?mod=googlenews_wsj.
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What If China Reduces its Holdings of U.S.
Securities?50

As the previous data illustrate, China has accumulated large holdings of U.S. assets in recent
years. These accumulations are the result of U.S. borrowing to finance its large trade deficit with
China (the gap between U.S. exports and Chinese imports). All else equal, Chinese government
purchases of U.S. assets increases the demand for U.S. assets, which reduces U.S. interest rates.
What might happen if China no longer purchased U.S. securities and/or tried to sell a significant
share of its dollar holdings?
If China stopped buying U.S. securities, the United States would need other investors (foreign
and domestic) to fill in the gap. Such investors would presumably require higher interest rates
than those prevailing today to be enticed to buy them. One economist in 2007 estimated that a
Chinese move away from long-term U.S. securities could raise U.S. interest rates by as much as
50 basis points.51 Higher interest rates would cause a decline in investment spending and other
interest-sensitive spending. All else equal, the reduction in Chinese Treasury holdings would
cause the overall foreign demand for U.S. assets to fall, and this would cause the dollar to
depreciate. If the value of the dollar depreciated, the trade deficit would decline, as the price of
U.S. exports fell abroad and the price of imports rose in the United States.52 The magnitude of
these effects would depend on how many U.S. securities China sold; modest reductions would
have negligible effects on the economy given the large size of U.S. financial markets.
Since China held $1.7 trillion of U.S. private and public securities (largely U.S. Treasury
securities) as of June 2011, any reduction in its U.S. holdings could potentially be large. If there
were a large reduction in its holdings, the effect on the U.S. economy would still depend on
whether the reduction were gradual or sudden. It should be emphasized that economic theory
suggests that a slow decline in the trade deficit and dollar would not be troublesome for the
overall economy. In fact, a slow decline could even have an expansionary effect on the economy,
if the decrease in the trade deficit had a more stimulative effect on aggregate demand in the short
run than the decrease in investment and other interest-sensitive spending resulting from higher
interest rates. Historical experience seems to bear this out—the dollar declined by about 40% in
real terms and the trade deficit declined continually in the late 1980s, from 2.8% of GDP in 1986
to nearly zero during the early 1990s. Yet economic growth was strong throughout the late 1980s.
A potentially serious short-term problem would emerge if China decided to suddenly reduce their
liquid U.S. financial assets significantly. The effect could be compounded if this action triggered
a more general financial reaction (or panic), in which all foreigners responded by reducing their

50 From the perspective of the macroeconomic effects on U.S. investment, interest rates, and so on, it does not matter
what type of U.S. security is purchased when foreign capital flows to the United States. Thus, Chinese purchases of all
types of U.S. securities (not just Treasury securities) should be considered when attempting to understand the impact
China’s investment decisions have on the U.S. economy.
51 Testimony of Brad Setser before the House Budget Committee, Foreign Holdings of U.S. Debt: Is our Economy
Vulnerable?
, June 26, 2007. Brad Setser is Senior Economist, Roubini Global Economics, and Research Associate,
Global Economic Governance Programme, University College, Oxford. Setser does not detail how much U.S. debt he
assumes China would sell to reach his estimate.
52 The extent that the dollar declined and U.S. interest rates rose would depend on how willing other foreigners were to
supplant China’s reduction in capital inflows. A greater willingness would lead to less dollar depreciation and less of an
increase in interest rates, and vice versa.
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holdings of U.S. assets. The initial effect could be a sudden and large depreciation in the value of
the dollar, as the supply of dollars on the foreign exchange market increased, and a sudden and
large increase in U.S. interest rates, as an important funding source for investment and the budget
deficit was withdrawn from the financial markets. The dollar depreciation by itself would not
cause a recession since it would ultimately lead to a trade surplus (or smaller deficit), which
expands aggregate demand.53 (Empirical evidence suggests that the full effects of a change in the
exchange rate on traded goods takes time, so the dollar may have to “overshoot” its eventual
depreciation level in order to achieve a significant adjustment in trade flows in the short run.)54
However, a sudden increase in interest rates could swamp the trade effects and cause (or worsen)
a recession. Large increases in interest rates could cause problems for the U.S. economy, as these
increases reduce the market value of debt securities, cause prices on the stock market to fall,
undermine efficient financial intermediation, and jeopardize the solvency of various debtors and
creditors. Resources may not be able to shift quickly enough from interest-sensitive sectors to
export sectors to make this transition fluid. The Federal Reserve could mitigate the interest rate
spike by reducing short-term interest rates, although this reduction would influence long-term
rates only indirectly, and could worsen the dollar depreciation and increase inflation. In March
2007, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke reportedly stated in a letter to Senator Shelby that
“because foreign holdings of U.S. Treasury securities represent only a small part of total U.S.
credit market debt outstanding, U.S. credit markets should be able to absorb without great
difficulty any shift of foreign allocations.” 55
U.S. financial markets experienced exceptional turmoil beginning in August 2007. Over the
following year, the dollar declined by almost 8% in inflation-adjusted terms—a decline that was
not, in itself, disruptive. But as the turmoil deepened and spread to the rest of the world in 2008,
the value of the dollar began rising. Interest rates on U.S. Treasuries fell close to zero, implying
excessive investor demand. Other interest rates also remained low, although access to credit was
limited for some. Although comprehensive data will not be available for some time, a “sudden
stop” in capital inflows does not appear to have been a feature of the downturn. Problems
experienced in U.S. financial markets over the past few years have been widely viewed as “once
in a lifetime” events. If these events failed to cause a sudden flight from U.S. assets and an
unwinding of the current account deficit by China or other countries, it is hard to imagine what
would.
Concluding Observations
Many economists argue that concerns over China’s holdings of U.S. securities represent part of a
broader problem for the U.S. economy, namely its dependence on foreign saving to finance its
investment needs and federal budget deficits. The large U.S. current account deficit (the
manifestation of the high U.S. saving/investment gap) cannot be sustained indefinitely because

53 A sharp decline in the value of the dollar would also reduce living standards, all else equal, because it would raise the
price of imports to households. This effect, which is referred to as a decline in the terms of trade, would not be recorded
directly in GDP, however.
54 Since the decline in the dollar would raise import prices, this could temporarily increase inflationary pressures. The
effect would likely be modest, however, since imports are small as a share of GDP and import prices would only
gradually rise in response to the fall in the dollar.
55 Reuters, Bernanke-China Holdings of US Debt Not Problematic, March 26, 2007.
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the U.S. net foreign debt cannot rise faster than GDP indefinitely.56 Some economists argue that at
some point foreign investors may view the growing level of U.S. foreign debt as unsustainable or
more risky, or they may no longer view U.S. securities as offering the best return on their
investment, and shift investment funds away from U.S. assets, thus forcing U.S. interest rates to
rise to attract needed foreign capital. This would result in higher interest rates and lower
investment rates, all else equal, which would reduce long-term growth.57 A reliance on foreign
governments such as China to finance the U.S. current account deficit (which includes the U.S.
merchandise trade deficit) by increasing their foreign exchange reserves may prolong the
necessary adjustment process. Thus, it is argued, the United States must boost its level of savings
in the long run in order to reduce its vulnerability to a potential shift away from U.S. assets by
foreign investors. It remains to be seen whether this adjustment process began in the United
States in 2008, or whether the rise in private saving and decline in the current account deficit was
only a temporary response to the recession. Some economists contend that, although the low U.S.
savings rate is a problem, the U.S. current account deficit and high levels of foreign capital flows
to the United States are also reflections of the strength of the U.S. economy and its attractiveness
as a destination for foreign investment, and therefore discount the likelihood that foreign
investors will suddenly shift their capital elsewhere.58
Some economists view China’s purchases of U.S. securities as a type of subsidy that is transferred
from Chinese savers to U.S. consumers in the form of lower-cost Chinese products and lower
U.S. interest rates. That subsidy helps to boost U.S. consumption of Chinese products, which
supports China’s export industries. However, the subsidy is at the expense of Chinese consumers
and non-export industries, largely because China’s undervalued RMB makes imports more
expensive than they would be if the RMB was a floating currency. The lack of a social safety net
forces Chinese workers to save a significant part of their income. That savings is used to finance
the Chinese government’s purchases of U.S. securities.
Chinese purchases and holdings of U.S. securities have reportedly been controversial in China
according to some media reports, many of which cite complaints among some Chinese Internet
bloggers over low return on Chinese investment of its FX reserves. Many analysts (including
some in China) have questioned the wisdom of China’s policy of investing a large level of FX
reserves in U.S. government securities, which offer a relatively low rate of return, when China
has such huge development needs at home. One Chinese blogger reportedly wrote: “Chinese
people are working so hard, day in and day out, the economic environment is so good, but
people’s livelihoods are not so great — turns out it is because the government is tightening
people’s waist belts to lend money to the United States.”59 Some Chinese analysts have argued
that the debt problems in Europe and the United States will decrease their demand for Chinese
products, and that a depreciating dollar will lower the value of Chinese dollar assets. Thus, they
argue, China will need to accelerate its economic reforms in order to boost domestic consumption
(including increased imports), lower its dependency on exporting for economic growth, and slow
or reduce China’s FX reserves and holdings of U.S. securities. If China consumed more and saved

56 The U.S. current account deficit as a percent of GDP fell from a peak of 6.0% in 2006 to 2.7% in 2009; it rose to
3.0% in 2010 and to 3.1% in 2011. The IMF projects that his figure will be 3.1% in 2012 and will rise to 3.5% by 2017.
(Source: IMF, World Economic Database, October 2012 edition.)
57 See CRS Report RL33186, Is the U.S. Current Account Deficit Sustainable?, by Marc Labonte.
58 See Council of Economic Advisors, Economic Report of the President, The U.S. Capital Surplus, February 2006, p.
144.
59 NYTimes, Chinese Fault Beijing Over Foreign Reserves, August,9, 2011, available at
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/09/business/global/chinese-fault-beijings-moves-on-foreign-reserves.html
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China’s Holdings of U.S. Securities: Implications for the U.S. Economy

less, it would have less capital to invest overseas, including in the United States. Thus, if the
United States did not reduce its dependence on foreign savings for its investment needs, and
China reduced its U.S. investments, the United States would need to obtain investment from other
countries, and the overall U.S. current account balance would likely remain relatively unchanged
but U.S. interest rates would be expected to rise.

Author Contact Information

Wayne M. Morrison
Marc Labonte
Specialist in Asian Trade and Finance
Specialist in Macroeconomic Policy
wmorrison@crs.loc.gov, 7-7767
mlabonte@crs.loc.gov, 7-0640

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