Posted on 06/28/2009 9:18:55 AM PDT by FromLori
As the fallout from the global financial crisis continues, the burning question in international financial circles is whether the U. S. dollar, the worlds reserve currency since the Second World War, can retain its status. Chinese and Russian leaders have already signaled their distaste for continued dollar hegemony, and the latter have even taken the extraordinary step of publicly seeking assurances that their dollar-denominated assets U.S. government debt will be protected.
The concern is that, with the Federal Reserves recent expansionary policies pumping trillions of new dollars into the worlds money supply the dollar will begin losing value as the long-term effects of inflation kick in. Put otherwise, the United States might choose to print money to cover its debts, discharging them in depreciated dollars.
At this weeks Federal Reserve meeting, interest rates were left unchanged but a commitment was made to scale back for the first time the activities of the Term Auction Facility (TAF) and other novel Fed instruments for pumping credit and money into the economy. The view from Ben Bernankes seat, in other words, suggests that the madcap spree of money creation that the Fed embarked upon last year is beginning to slow, because the Great Recession is bottoming out. This in turn may portend new life, at least in the short run, for the beleaguered dollar, whose trade-weighted strength has fallen by more than 25 percent since 2002.
The critical feature of modern currencies, the dollar included, is that they are backed by nothing but public confidence, or lack thereof. That wasn't always true, of course. In the pre-First World War international financial arena, currencies were backed by gold or silver, and relative valuations thereof amounted to sober-minded appraisals of the amount of money in circulation as against the specie actually available to back it up. These days, central bankers rely upon nothing more than sentiment as they engage in a perilous game of international brinksmanship to sustain the mostly illusory value of the currencies they manufacture at whim out of thin air (or, more accurately, out of debt). That the dollar has endured so long past the termination of all promises to redeem in gold is testament to the power of state propagandists in the Disinformation Age.
Now the dollar is teetering on a very narrow razors edge as its apologists try to exploit the Feds inflationary powers to defang the recession at home, all the while keeping international holders of U.S. government debt mollified.
So far this confidence game has served the United States at least, the powerful and well-connected among us reasonably well, enabling an unprecedented three-decade long asset bubble that has allowed Americans to party almost without respite. But cracks in the confidence façade are showing as it begins to dawn on the rest of the world that the dollar need not remain the worlds reserve currency forever.
After World War I the Bank of England, trying to hold onto its status as the worlds reserve currency, resorted to inflation during the Roaring Twenties, all the while reassuring holders abroad of pounds, like the French and Dutch governments, that their holdings were safe, and that the British government would honor its commitment to redeem pounds in gold. The French in particular were leery of such assurances, but were unable to dump their pound holdings lest such an action ignite an international currency run. The fiction of the pounds stability was maintained until the beginning of the 1930s, when Britain finally went off gold, repudiating its obligations to redeem the once-sterling currency.
Although the bar has been lowered since the pound debacle investors no longer expect to redeem dollars in gold, but only that the dollars value will be kept approximately stable many of the same economic factors are at play. Governments like China, who hold vast sums in U.S. treasuries, are quietly looking ways to unload the debt without triggering a stampede out of the dollar that could erase the value of their holdings overnight.
Then there is the hue being raised over a new global currency, a not-so-new idea that is regaining currency, so to speak. The British delegation at the Bretton Woods financial conference in 1944, led by economist John Maynard Keynes, wanted an international reserve currency, issued by and international banking authority. The Americans wanted one, too, but in the end, Bretton Woods designated the U.S. dollar as the worlds fallback currency instead. Now internationalists and political leaders are clamoring for turning the Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) used to reckon sums held at the International Monetary fund into a bona fide global currency. Such a move would amount to a true monetary world order, with the inflationary confidence game being conducted by the UN system rather than powerful central bankers like Bernanke.
The real question is not whether the fiat dollar will collapse and be utterly discredited, but how long it will take and what will replace it. At the moment, extra-financial factors like the perceived reliability of U.S. property rights laws (as compared with those of, say, Russia or China) may extend the dollars lifespan. But the best that the Fed can do is engineer a slow collapse over a span of years or perhaps decades, while national debt continues to mount to infinity and beyond and confidence in the dollar and in the sustainability of the dollar-centric international financial system continues to ebb. When the dollars demise does come, America will be left with only two choices, namely, whether to submit to a foreign fiat currency, like the yuan or the Euro or even the SDR, thereby losing national monetary autonomy, or to return to currency backed by gold, which would restore not only sound money but a large measure of U.S. financial independence.
the way to solve the problem of the dollar is to kill US dependency on foreign oil
In other words, the Russians & Chinese want assurances from the US govt that they will take the US citizens & corporations at whatever rate is necessary to pay the interest on US govt bonds & T-bills. The shoe is indeed now on the other foot.
Just seeing the start of a cashless society one day. Simultaneous inflation of the world’s currencies is next, on a bigger scale though.
Why, yes...yes it is.
On the vine, so to speak.
My own crazy theory is that the value of the dollar is determined by the minimum wage.
If only that were true we could easily fix the problem. But it's not.
Inflation is inherent in our banking system which is based on the principle of "Fractional Reserve Banking". In a nutshell that means that U.S. banks can loan out multiples of their total deposits. For example, if a bank has total deposits of, for example, $1.0 billion they might loan out $5.0 billion. Where does that money come from? The answer is it comes right out of thin air. So the bank pays out interest to the depositors for $1.0 billion while collecting interest on $5.0 billion. That's better than a Ponzi scheme because it can go on forever and it's not against the law. In fact it is in strict compliance with the law. It just happens to have this interesting side effect that sometime in the future a roll of toilet paper will cost more in dollars that it cost to build the Empire Estate building. This system guarantees that will happen.
Fractional Reserve Banking has been in place for nearly 100 years in this country and it has continuously diluted the value of your and my savings. It is, as a wise man once said, the reason there is no more penny candy, just dollar candy. Your grandchildren will one day ask: Whatever happened to dollar candy?
So a communist/socialist foreign fiat currency is going to command more confidence than a capitalist fiat currency?
What we need to do to fix this is give the communist from Kenya the boot along with the commie freak show in D.C.
Then
lower taxes on individuals AND corporations,
enforce existing lobbying laws,
massively deport criminal illegal aliens and
regain control of our southern border,
correct the issues of naked short selling and insider trading in our stock exchange and
start re-exploring, drilling and producing energy from the Outer Continental Shelf,
build new technology nuclear power plants and
develop the clean coal-fired power plant as well as
mine the clean coal we have right here (sorry Indonesia)
provide mortgage assurance services only to real citizens that can actually pay
etc, etc.
The U.S. economy will zoom to the stratosphere and the world currency/world bank commies will have to crawl back into their slimy little holes.
F the mongoloid Russians.
Have you seen this video?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QnmsmLsJg14&eurl=http://maxkeiser.com/&feature=player_embedded
My understanding is that the fed has flooded the market with dollars because the velocity of money (meaning less leverage/borrowing) has slowed considerably. that is there is some kind of equivalence between velocity and volume. Further that the point of doing so is precisely to spark inflation to put a floor under falling real estate prices. They may have another 20-30% to go on the downside.
What the fed is currently worried about is deflation. Their strategy might work but a falling dollar jacks up the price oil because it hurts the value of the dollar. Rising oil prices skim off any capital formation.
So the USA becomes poorer relative to the rest of the world without the the rest of the world being harmed by bad US policy.
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