1. If Europe falters, it would cripple China's economy
China's economic growth could be cut in half if the eurozone enters a recession, warns the International Monetary Fund. With annual trade valued at 560 billion euros ($730 billion), Europe is China's largest trading partner. In addition, Chinese business investments in Europe more than doubled from 2010 to 2011. Propping up Europe now could forestall a far-more-expensive economic collapse down the road.
SEE MORE: Will debt downgrades doom the eurozone recovery?
2. China could gain political leverage over the West
In "desperate need of financial support," Europe might be willing to make big political concessions to China, writes Thomas H. Naylor at CounterPunch. For instance, as a prerequisite for aid, China demand that the West quit threatening Iran over its nuclear program. Such a move would "effectively checkmate" the U.S. and Israel. "All of this makes Washington very nervous," and the U.S. "does not relish the thought of the EU becoming financially dependent on Beijing."
3. China could also bolster its clout at the IMF
China should "pony up," writes Wayne Arnold at Reuters, but buying European bonds directly is "too risky." Instead, China should funnel its aid through the IMF — and thereby earn a "bigger role at the world's currency watchdog." The U.S. dollar is still the world's reserve currency, which leaves China vulnerable to the whims of U.S. monetary policy. China views the IMF as the "best counterbalance to such tides," and winning more influence at the powerful organization ought to be a "no-brainer."
View this article on TheWeek.com Get 4 Free Issues of The Week
Other stories from this topic:
Like on Facebook - Follow on Twitter - Sign-up for Daily Newsletter