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The dollar could be replaced as the world’s reserve currency
The Spectator (UK) ^ | 10/16/2003 | Simon Nixon

Posted on 10/16/2003 11:11:54 AM PDT by Feldkurat_Katz

What’s that in euros?

If the euro replaces the dollar as the world’s reserve currency — and reports from Russia last week suggest it might — there is likely to be a high price to pay. Simon Nixon reports

It has always been hard to imagine what the problem must be to which the answer is the euro. For most of the past three years, the idea that the single currency might one day emerge as a genuine alternative to the dollar as a global reserve currency has been laughable. Instead, the euro has looked like the thing eurosceptics always maintained it was: a reckless monetary experiment that stands for the word of no government, that relies on the good faith of no country, that cannot even police its own stability pact, and that deservedly saw its value plummet in the foreign exchange markets.

‘P-p-p-people try to put us down...’

But if the idea that the euro could become a rival to the dollar was a joke, then the joke may be on us. In the past 18 months, the euro has risen more than 30 per cent against the dollar. The dollar was already buckling under the strain of America’s giant trade and budget deficits. Now, following the Iraq war, politics has entered the equation. Suddenly eurozone policymakers sense the opportunity to realise their ambitions to create a rival to the dollar. We should all be worried. Their efforts to promote the euro could trigger currency wars which will leave the whole world worse off.

The lengths to which the eurozone will go to supplant the dollar can be seen in reports, last week, that Russia is considering selling its oil in euros rather than dollars. On the face of it, this seems perfectly rational: Russia sells most of its oil to Europe, so such a move would save on currency conversion. But in reality, talk of pricing oil in euros is pure politics, says Yevgeny Gavrilenkov, a former adviser to President Putin and managing director of Troika Dialog, a Russian investment bank. ‘There is minimal economic benefit to either Russia or the eurozone to be gained from such a move.’

The idea came from France and Germany and its aim is to undermine the dollar. The fact that oil and other commodities are priced in dollars underpins America’s role as a global reserve currency and by extension its economic supremacy. Other countries are obliged to buy dollars to trade. This gives America the freedom to keep printing dollars without sparking inflation, enabling it to fund wars, giant trade deficits, government-spending programmes and tax cuts. If the EU could persuade oil producers to price oil in euros, it would be a hugely symbolic victory for the single currency.

The euro-plotters hope that if Russia, the world’s second largest oil producer, starts pricing its oil in euros, other countries will follow suit. Indeed, Iraq made the switch in November 2000, in a show of defiance that some conspiracy theorists say sealed the fate of the Saddam regime. Iran, another member of the ‘axis of evil’, has been openly considering making the switch since 1999. Venezuela is already selling part of its oil under a barter system, thus avoiding using any currency. And last year, a senior Opec official made a speech speculating that it could make economic sense for the oil producers’ cartel to price its oil in euros in the future.

Of course, Opec has considered such switches before. ‘Every time the dollar goes through a rough patch, you get this talk,’ says Roger Diwan of consultancy group PFC Energy. ‘It happens about once every three years.’ However, until now, Saudi Arabia has always blocked any such move. But now even the Saudis are wavering.

Last year, a former US ambassador to Saudi Arabia told a committee of the US Congress: ‘One of the major things the Saudis have historically done, in part out of friendship with the US, is to insist that oil continues to be priced in dollars. Therefore the US Treasury can print money and buy oil, which is an advantage no other country has. With the emergence of other currencies and with strains in the relationship, I wonder whether there will not be again, as there has been in the past, people in Saudi Arabia who raise the question of why they should be so kind to the United States.’

If the oil producers turn their backs on the US dollar, the ramifications for the global economy would be immense. At the very least, demand for euros would surge as oil importers would need to buy euros to buy oil. But this would be just the beginning. As things stand, oil exporters keep the billions of dollars they receive from the sale of their oil in their central bank reserves. Similarly, oil importers are obliged to keep large dollar reserves to pay for their oil. The fear is that if oil were priced in euros, both oil exporters and importers would switch a significant proportion of their reserves into euros, thus triggering a stampede out of the dollar into euros.

Many in the mid-1990s warned that if the euro ever did emerge as a rival reserve currency, it would lead to dangerous volatility in the currency markets. But what makes the current situation so serious is that the US currency is already under siege as never before. Since the end of the second world war, the US dollar has been the undisputed reserve currency of the world. It has been universally regarded as the safest and most reliable store of value available. Any country trying to maintain the value of its own currency has had no option but to hold billions of dollars in its central bank reserves. Two thirds of central bank reserves are dollar-denominated.

But global investors are beginning to lose faith in the greenback. Previous reserve currencies were usually backed by a scarce commodity, usually gold. Countries that ran up trade deficits were obliged to settle their debts in gold. This put a limit on how far into debt a country could sink. But that system came to an end in 1971, when the Nixon administration, faced with the spiralling costs of the Vietnam war, left the Gold Standard. Since the 1970s, Americans have been free to spend as much as the world will lend it. And since the rest of the world needs dollars for its reserves, US debts have spiralled to previously unimaginable levels.

The US current account deficit now stands at some $600 billion a year and America now needs to attract more than $1.5 billion every day from foreign investors to fund its debts. Not surprisingly, foreign investors are beginning to doubt the wisdom of lending America any more of their savings. Over the last year, foreign investors have turned away from America in droves. Instead, the US current account deficit is being financed largely by the intervention of Asian central banks determined to shore up the dollar to maintain the competitive advantage of their own manufacturing industries. In the second quarter of this year, Asian central banks financed more than half the current account deficit. Yet despite this unprecedented intervention, the dollar is still sinking.

‘The position of the dollar today is similar to that of sterling in the 1920s and 1930s, when sterling ceased to be the automatic global reserve currency and started to face competition from other currencies, notably the dollar,’ says Paul Donovan, an economist at the investment bank UBS. Before the first world war, Britain’s balance of payments had been unassailable, but the cost of war and the subsequent disruption to trade cast doubt on its ability to meet its obligations. The Bank of England had to increase its holdings of gold to shore up sterling, and in 1931 was forced to devalue.

Even after 1931, Britons continued to live beyond their means, consuming far more than they produced. As a result, the current account deteriorated further, much as America’s current account is deteriorating today. Worse, these deficits became harder to finance. British investors preferred to invest their money abroad, in countries where productivity growth and returns were higher, rather than in the UK, where prospects were dampened by protectionism and the trade unions. During the second world war, the deficits grew so large that it became impossible to defend sterling. The pound was devalued and the US dollar, backed by gold, became the new global reserve currency.

The Americans recognise that they now face a challenge to their economic hegemony, but are at a loss as to how to respond. The US is caught in a bind. On the one hand, the US treasury secretary, John Snow, wants Asian countries to stop intervening to prop up the dollar because he says it is costing American jobs. On the other hand, the government desperately needs the Asians to keep buying its Treasury securities in order to finance the cost of the war and George Bush’s tax cuts.

Instead, the Bush administration is opting for ever more unorthodox measures to preserve US economic leadership. There has been a sharp rise in protectionism, in the form of giant subsidies for farmers, the steel industry and the collapsed World Trade Organisation talks in Cancun, Mexico. The protection of US jobs has now replaced access to global markets at the top of the political agenda. And America is increasingly forced to use its military strength to shore up its strategic interests around the world.

None of these measures is likely to boost confidence in the long-term value of the dollar. But can the world’s central banks switch their reserves from dollars into euros without causing mayhem in the global economy? Last month’s G7 Dubai communiqué was a clear attempt to engineer an orderly realignment of currencies. But the danger is that if Asian central banks do stop buying dollars, the result will be a devastating collapse in the US currency. At worst, this could lead to rising US inflation and interest rates, a deep recession, and a stock-market and property-market crash. The rest of the world would suffer a disastrous collapse in trade.

The plotters do not believe this will happen, says one well-placed City economist. Faced with the prospect of a collapse in the dollar, they believe the US will come to the negotiating table, just as they did with the Louvre Accord in 1986, the last time there was a collapse in the dollar. The result will be a new, pegged exchange rate system that will prevent the dollar-euro exchange rate from falling too far. Instead, the US will be forced to unwind its imbalances by raising interest rates and cutting spending. According to this European dream, America will have to scale back its overseas adventures and to share global leadership with the EU.

There is no doubt that those who are pushing for Russia and other oil-producing countries to price their oil in euros are playing for high stakes. In the post-Iraq world, it is by no means clear that an elegant, negotiated solution to a future currency crisis will be achievable. The ambitions of Europe and America are diverging across a range of issues. Europe believes America’s vast trade deficit is its Achilles’ heel, which it thinks it can use to hobble American power. But in choosing to fight America on the issue of currency, the very instrument of US economic hegemony, Europe risks driving a wedge between the two continents. Perhaps that is what the architects of the euro wanted all along.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: currency; dollar; euro; oil; reserve
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To: Alberta's Child; A. Pole
I've got news for you: there's no such thing as a "current account deficit" . . . that money is simply our trade deficit coming back home.

Yep, it's used to purchase the T-bills issued by the Treasury to finance our Budget Deficit.
Last I looked, something like 18% of annual federal revenue was spent just to service interest on the National Debt.
I don't particularly care for my taxes going to foreign governments, but I can certainly understand why a Canadian sees nothing wrong with it.

"Think what you do when you run into debt;
you give another power over your liberty."

-- Benjamin Franklin (1706 - 1790)


41 posted on 10/16/2003 5:56:04 PM PDT by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: RobFromGa
European economies are in the toliet mainly and not improving as fast as the US.

It is all relative to the FED and the Treasury Dept. printing presses. The Euro will be forced up because the dollar will be force down by massive FED and Treasury market flooding liquidity interventions.

Richard W.

42 posted on 10/16/2003 6:01:02 PM PDT by arete (Greenspan is a ruling class elitist and closet socialist who is destroying the economy)
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To: arete
Well, at least you seem to understand the answer to the question at the beginning of the article: It has always been hard to imagine what the problem must be to which the answer is the euro

As you point out, it takes no imagination at all. Greenspan is merely trying to print his way out of a problem, and the rest of the world has caught on to the fact that Alan is counterfitting his own currency.

43 posted on 10/16/2003 6:05:54 PM PDT by AndyJackson
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To: Poohbah
The cause of these problems is not demographic--it's socialistic.

Both Germany and Japen are now involved in major fiscal reform movements. Germany is cutting and reducing welfare state policies and Japan is going to privatize their Postal system. The US is still promising its citizens a free lunch.

Richard W.

44 posted on 10/16/2003 6:06:07 PM PDT by arete (Greenspan is a ruling class elitist and closet socialist who is destroying the economy)
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To: ladtx
Go anyplace in the world and offer someone a handful of Euros or a handful of American dollars, which one do you suppose they would take?

You need to get out more. Increasingly it is Euros. My suppliers who used to quote in dollars now quote in Euros, leaving it to me to factor in the contingency for exchange rate "fluctuations."

45 posted on 10/16/2003 6:07:47 PM PDT by AndyJackson
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To: Poohbah
"Hell, look at Japan. Rememeber when they were going to take over America"

I eremember they were buying up property here like crazy - paying wild prices - then their economy tanked and we bought everything back at bargain prices.
46 posted on 10/16/2003 7:25:30 PM PDT by RS (nc)
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To: Feldkurat_Katz
THE BILLIONAIRE WAGING WAR ON GWB: Soros sends dollar to brink of euro parity (background)
Independent UK ^ | 6.29.02 | Philip Thornton
Posted on 10/01/2003 12:22 PM EDT by Liz
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/993039/posts
47 posted on 10/17/2003 9:07:25 AM PDT by Matchett-PI (Why do America's enemies desperately want DemocRATS back in power?)
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To: A. Pole
I don't have a problem with some free trade and am no isolationist. I doubt you are either. But things have gotten too far out of control (outsourcing for example), and our trade practices have to be revamped.
48 posted on 10/17/2003 9:10:43 AM PDT by huck von finn
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To: Feldkurat_Katz; clamper1797; sarcasm; BrooklynGOP; A. Pole; Zorrito; GiovannaNicoletta; ...
Ping

On or off let me know
49 posted on 10/17/2003 11:16:09 AM PDT by harpseal (stay well - Stay safe - Stay armed - Yorktown)
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To: Alberta's Child; belmont_mark; Travis McGee; Jeff Head; Alamo-Girl; Cacophonous; chimera
Actually, they can do highly destructive things to our economy with that hypothetical dollar. Things which in fact the Chinese are doing not just hypothetically, but concretely. They buy our factories, and relocate them to their country. So the trade is a one-time 'fix' and is not sustainable by us.

Plus, They send their PLA-trained 'students' to our country, get almost a free ride on Uncle Sam's grants-in-aid, and squeeze out all the legitimate U.S. citizen 'consumers' of education in the fields of high technology, and help accelerate the inflation which no one talks about...Education is ripping along at 11% per year. Meanwhile their grad students here kype every imaginable new technology that could give Mother China a trade or Military advantage...using every trick in the book, from feigning innocence, and harmlessness, to sophisticated computer hacking to get into security-compartmentalized information.

Further, they can buy our companies outright, and have, with Magnequench being a prime example...then they tried to buy Global Crossing until finally sanity prevailed at the White House. They can also buy our securities...and essentially start calling the shots at our own Treasury Dept. and the White House. (Look how insulated the Saudi Arabians have been because of their US Bond portfolio for instance). These are not healthy exchanges, and lead to the ruination of our country's future...and thereby the very future of the world.

50 posted on 10/17/2003 11:22:23 AM PDT by Paul Ross (Don't get mad. Get madder!)
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To: Paul Ross
Buying U.S. securities (especially government bonds) does not necessarily give a foreign nation any leverage over the U.S. In fact, I would contend that the exact opposite is the case -- owning U.S. government bonds makes a foreign nation utterly beholden to the U.S. and gives them a vested interest in seeing to it that the U.S. economy remains solvent.

If you don't believe me, try to imagine yourself in the position of a bank that has extended a $200,000 mortgage for a nice home and is watching the owner slowly turn it into a pile of crap. The bank may think they have all the leverage in the world, since they do officially own the home -- but owning the home won't mean anything if the guy walks away from this mortgage and leaves the bank with an Arkansas mobile home worth $20,000.

51 posted on 10/17/2003 11:51:05 AM PDT by Alberta's Child ("To freedom, Alberta, horses . . . and women!")
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To: Alberta's Child
if the guy walks away from this mortgage and leaves the bank with an Arkansas mobile home worth $20,000.

This illustration crashes and burns because the U.S., if it defaults on its securities, will see a complete collapse of the entire economy, its foreign trade agreements, its ability to defend the country, etc. as the streets swell with rioting unemployed people demanding to know who to blame in D.C.

We have to live in that trashed house. So thanks for the input, but take it elsewhere. It is nonapplicable.

52 posted on 10/17/2003 12:55:36 PM PDT by Paul Ross (Don't get mad. Get madder!)
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To: Feldkurat_Katz
If the euro replaces the dollar as the world’s reserve currency — and reports from Russia last week suggest it might — there is likely to be a high price to pay.

Just to be on the safe side, send all of your dollars to me before it's too late.

53 posted on 10/17/2003 1:02:52 PM PDT by GreenHornet
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To: Paul Ross
I have a better application for that illustration. The owner of the house does not trash it -- in fact, he makes a lot of improvements to it. He builds an addition, upgrades the wiring and plumbing, etc. So much so that the bank assesses the home at $500,000 and lends the owner an additional $200,000 on top of the $200,000 he already owes.

But a few years later it turns out that the addition was built with popsicles, the new electrical work was done with exposed wiring, the new plumbing is nothing more than plastic straws, etc.

Oh, and there can be no riots in D.C. over this, either. It wasn't the fault of the "contractor" that the improvements were built like sh!t . . . We Americans are the owners of this house -- and the contractor built it exactly the way we told him to build it.

54 posted on 10/17/2003 1:20:54 PM PDT by Alberta's Child ("To freedom, Alberta, horses . . . and women!")
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To: Paul Ross
Stupidity, treason, or both?
55 posted on 10/17/2003 5:11:43 PM PDT by Travis McGee (----- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com -----)
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To: JesseHousman
but we need congresscritters with backbone and those are very few and far between.

So, you think the government is responsible for the U.S. economy?

56 posted on 10/17/2003 6:00:34 PM PDT by TopQuark
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To: Paul Ross
Thanks for the heads up!
57 posted on 10/17/2003 7:34:32 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: TopQuark
So, you think the government is responsible for the U.S. economy?

Now who would think a foolish thing like that?

Coould it possibly be because the Federal Reserve is a governmental agency that plays God with interest rates and the supply of Monopoly money? Could it be because congress enacts the severely flawed NAFTA and WTO and spends this nation into an abyss of debt?

Don't you honestly believe our bloated goobermint is complicit in the severe economic problems we now face? They experiment with the tax system, redistribute wealth and fritter away billions upon billions of dollars on worthless, egotistical follies without any concern about anyones's future.

Yes damnit I believe the government is responsible because I know full well that I'm not!

58 posted on 10/18/2003 4:17:32 AM PDT by JesseHousman (Execute Mumia Abu-Jamal)
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To: Alberta's Child
This illustration crashes and burns because the U.S., if it defaults on its securities, will see a complete collapse of the entire economy, its foreign trade agreements, its ability to defend the country, etc. as the streets swell with rioting unemployed people demanding to know who to blame in D.C.

This is an interesting fiction. If the US defaults on its securities, or simply flushes the whole portfolio, remarkably little will happen.

No one is going to repossess our assests, the people are not going to rise up in panic; most of them wouldn't even notice the difference except perhaps for the immediate reduction in tax burden - they are already unemployed or underemployed. We wouldn't take the step unless global trade had become impossible, so there wouldn't be much to lose there. Good-by worthless global trade agreements and our dubious allies that helped to trash our economy in the first place; who needs them.
59 posted on 10/18/2003 10:06:28 AM PDT by ARCADIA (Abuse of power comes as no surprise)
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To: ladtx
Everything being equal I think most would still take the American dollars

Yes, but if they had taken the Euro a couple of years ago, they would have made a whole lot more money than if they took the dollar. Do you think anyone noticed?

Actually, this whole confabulation has been advanced as the primary motivation for the US invasion of Iraq, as Saddam had already converted his oil business in Euro's. Not surprisingly, Iraq does oil business now in dollars.

The nation that sets the leading key market interest rate in the world has a distinct edge to play, and it's foolish to think the EU doesn't know this, and that it wouldn't want to have that edge. The question for the US is 'is it really worthwhile pumping up huge deficits to hold onto this edge by the use of military force, or should we be looking to deal with the matter in more productive and competitive economic approach?'

60 posted on 10/18/2003 10:16:13 AM PDT by Held_to_Ransom
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