China hit
out at the United States on Saturday after its unprecedented ratings downgrade,
with state media saying that the world's largest economy needed to cure its
"addiction" to debt.
Other Asian nations, such as Japan and South Korea, reacted
cautiously and along with Australia warned against over-reaction after Standard
& Poor's cut the US rating from the top notch triple-A to AA+ on Friday.
But Beijing, the largest foreign holder of US Treasuries,
said in a stinging English-language commentary carried by the official Xinhua
news agency that it had "every right" to demand Washington address
its structural debt problems and safeguard Chinese dollar assets.
Washington needed 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," Xinhua said.
"To cure its addiction to debts, the United States has
to re-establish the common sense principle that one should live within its
means," the commentary added.
Officials in Japan, which has the second-largest US debt
holdings, gave a more measured response, saying their trust in US Treasuries
remained unchanged.
S&P said politicians in Washington were becoming less
able to get to grips with the country's huge fiscal deficit and debt load.
The ratings agency gave a negative outlook for the US, saying
there was a chance its rating could be cut again within two years if progress
is not made cutting the government budget gap.
Friday's downgrade followed days of heavy losses on stock
markets around the world, as investor confidence was hammered by fears for the
US economy and a warning that the eurozone debt crisis had likely spread.
But Japanese officials said S&P's move would not affect
Tokyo's approach to investing in US debt.
"The trust we have in US Treasuries and their
attractiveness as an investment will not change because of this action,"
an unnamed senior Japanese government official told Dow Jones Newswires.
Another official also said that Japan's investment policy
regarding its foreign reserves remains unchanged, the newswire said.
Japan is unlikely to sell any of its dollar-denominated
assets as it is fighting to stem the yen's rise to near a record-high against
the greenback.
The deputy governor of the central bank in Taiwan, the sixth
biggest holder of US securities, said the downgrade was expected to have
"no impact" on the island.
Hong Kong, also one of largest holders of US Treasuries, said
the downgrade was "well within market expectations" after S&P
gave the US a negative outlook in April but added it was possible other
agencies would follow suit.
Francis Lun, managing director of Hong Kong financial
services firm Lyncean Holdings, said S&P's judgment was right.
"Basically in the mind of the Chinese government and
investors in Asia, the US does not merit the triple-A rating, it's not 24-carat
gold anymore," he said.
"(Washington) has been spending like there's no
tomorrow... they have been irresponsible fiscally so they deserved it (the
downgrade)," he added.
South Korea held an emergency finance ministry meeting to
discuss possible fallout from the downgrade.
"There is possibility that South Korea's economy might
be affected in the short term," Vice Finance Minister Yim Jong-Yong said
after the meeting.
"However, there is no need to be concerned excessively
about our economy and financial markets."
Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard also urged a measured
response to the downgrade, pointing out that it was not unexpected and the two
other key agencies, Moody's and Fitch, still rated US debt at top grade.
Xinhua, which on Wednesday criticised the deal to raise the
US debt ceiling as failing to defuse the country's "debt bomb", said
on Saturday international supervision "over the issue of US dollars"
should be introduced.
It questioned the dollar's status as the world's dominant
reserve currency, saying "a new, stable and secured global reserve
currency may also be an option to avert a catastrophe called by any single
country".
The Philippines' finance secretary Cesar Purisima echoed the
call, saying the downgrade "highlights the need for alternative global
reserve currencies and benchmarks that are more stable and as liquid and
convertible."
In Kuala Lumpur, Yeah Kim Leng, a senior economist with
financial research firm RAM Holdings, said he expected Asian market reaction to
S&P's move to be "muted" as the downgrade had already been priced
in.
Source : AFP
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