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Welcome to Call to Decision
Subject: DOES THE "AMERO" APPROACH, AS THE DOLLAR
CRASHES?
Date: Fri, 09 Nov 2007 02:18:32 -0600
During my weekly visit to the Foreign Affairs site to see the weekly
news updates, I noticed that all the leading articles this week have
to do with the problems of the economy, the dollar devaluation, high
oil prices, etc. It is important to note that the CFR
very rarely broaches the subject of the markets or finance, and
rarer still in any detail, at their site or even in their quarterly
journal, as they have this week. Openly, that is! No doubt
they discuss the economy in great detail in their various member
only meetings and hold crash simulations, and the such. You see,
they must maintain "the appearance" of non interference in
the economy. Afterall, as an ad in their journal reminds
the reader, The Council on Foreign Relations is "the most
influential think tank" with a membership of about 1000
scholars, trained in, and professors at, top universities, mid and
top cabinet level officials and intel, security, et al. The
CFR though has a much smaller inner core of scholar experts.
This inner core is a broadly ranging intelligentsia who work in the
shadows of, and guide major government institutions and offices.
This is important: I find it of no small coincidence,
given the noted grave stresses in the economy, that the CFR has
found just the right opening for this senior member and chief
international economist, to step to the fore and to once again (he
wrote his first main paper on block currencies last year) introduce
what is to them a very important NEW idea. I believe this NEW
idea will soon trickle down to the universities, the financial
centers, like Wall Street, government and all relevant centers.
And then the public will hear about it on TV, talk radio, in
newsprint, tabloids and so on.
Benn Steil is a senior member of the CFR. Since the
grand introduction last year of his paper explaining "optimum
currency areas," that is the use of a common currency for
groupings of nations, instead of individual sovereign currencies, he
has, it seems, been given the go-ahead to more actively champion the
notion that "countries should abandon monetary
nationalism." The article below was at the CFR site and
below you will see the same article published in a leading Canadian
financial paper. All nations should adopt the dollar or the
Euro or some other currency that blocks of nation would share, he
says.
Having read his introductory paper in Foreign Affairs last year, it
now seems quite logical to presume that this director of
international economics is preparing the ground for the Amero,
especially since the crashing dollar is conveniently laying the
politically expedient ground cover for it. He proposes
shrinking the number of national currencies and adopting a system
where blocks of nations will adopt one currency, like the dollar or
the Euro and though he does not bring up the Amero, I think you can
see it subtextually. It will follow soon in another article,
methinks.
"Are markets failing, and will restoring lost sovereignty to
governments put an end to financial instability? This is a dangerous
misdiagnosis. In fact, capital flows became destabilizing only after
countries began asserting "sovereignty" over money --
detaching it from gold or anything else considered real wealth.
Moreover, even if the march of globalization is not inevitable, the
world economy and the international financial system have evolved in
such a way that there is no longer a viable model for economic
development outside of them."
"The world can do better. Since economic development outside
the process of globalization is no longer possible, countries should
abandon monetary nationalism. Governments should replace national
currencies with the dollar or the euro or, in the case of Asia,
collaborate to produce a new multinational currency over a
comparably large and economically diversified area."
http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/financialpost/comment/story.html?id=2bc3c0c6-e3c9-42c4-8ffa-be94a91a6f4e&p=1
Comment: Globalization makes national currencies obsolete
Benn Steil, Special to the Financial Post
Benn Steil is director of international economics at the
Council of Foreign Relations. This is an excerpt from an extensive
article by Mr. Steil in Foreign Affairs last June. © 2007, Council
on Foreign Relations, publisher of Foreign Affairs. All rights
reserved. Distributed by Tribune Media Services.
Published: Thursday, November 08, 2007
Capital flows have become globalization's Achilles heel. Over the
past 25 years, devastating currency crises have hit countries across
Latin America and Asia, as well as countries just beyond the borders
of Western Europe -- most notably Russia and Turkey. The economics
profession has failed to offer anything resembling a coherent and
compelling response to currency crises.
International Monetary Fund (IMF) analysts have, over the past two
decades, endorsed a wide variety of national exchange-rate and
monetary-policy regimes that have subsequently collapsed in failure.
They have fingered numerous culprits, from loose fiscal policy and
poor bank regulation to bad industrial policy and official
corruption. The financial-crisis literature has yielded policy
recommendations so exquisitely hedged and widely contradicted as to
be practically useless. Anti-globalization economists have turned
the problem on its head by absolving governments (except the one in
Washington) and instead blaming crises on markets and their
institutional supporters, such as the IMF -- "dictatorships of
international finance," in the words of the Nobel laureate
Joseph Stiglitz.
Are markets failing, and will restoring lost sovereignty to
governments put an end to financial instability? This is a dangerous
misdiagnosis. In fact, capital flows became destabilizing only after
countries began asserting "sovereignty" over money --
detaching it from gold or anything else considered real wealth.
Moreover, even if the march of globalization is not inevitable, the
world economy and the international financial system have evolved in
such a way that there is no longer a viable model for economic
development outside of them.
The political mythology associating the creation and control of
money with national sovereignty finds its economic counterpart in
the metamorphosis of the famous theory of "optimum currency
areas" (OCA). Fathered in 1961 by Robert Mundell, a Nobel
Prize-winning economist who has long been a prolific advocate of
shrinking the number of national currencies, it became over the
subsequent decades a quasi-scientific foundation for monetary
nationalism. Dr. Mundell, like most macroeconomists of the early
1960s, had a now largely discredited postwar Keynesian mindset that
put great faith in the ability of policymakers to fine-tune national
demand in the face of what economists call "shocks" to
supply and demand. His seminal article, A Theory of Optimum Currency
Areas, asks the question, "What is the appropriate domain of
the currency area?" Dr. Mundell goes on to argue for flexible
exchange rates between regions of the world, each with its own
multinational currency, rather than between nations.
The economics profession, however, latched on to Dr. Mundell's
analysis of the merits of flexible exchange rates in dealing with
economic shocks affecting different "regions or countries"
differently; they saw it as a rationale for treating existing
nations as natural currency areas. Monetary nationalism thereby
acquired a rational scientific mooring. And from then on, much of
the mainstream economics profession came to see deviations from
"one nation, one currency" as misguided, at least in the
absence of prior political integration.
Why has the problem of serial currency crises become so severe in
recent decades? It is only since 1971, when U.S. president Richard
Nixon formally untethered the U.S. dollar from gold, that monies
flowing around the globe have ceased to be claims on anything real.
All the world's currencies are now pure manifestations of
sovereignty conjured by governments. And the vast majority of such
monies are unwanted: People are unwilling to hold them as wealth,
something that will buy in the future at least what it did in the
past. Governments can force their citizens to hold national money by
requiring its use in transactions with the state, but foreigners,
who are not thus compelled, will choose not to do so. And in a world
in which people will only willingly hold U.S. dollars (and a handful
of other currencies) in lieu of gold money, the mythology tying
money to sovereignty is a costly and sometimes dangerous one.
Monetary nationalism is simply incompatible with globalization.
For a large, diversified economy like that of the United States,
fluctuating exchange rates are the economic equivalent of a minor
toothache. They require fillings from time to time -- in the form of
corporate financial hedging and active global supply management --
but never any major surgery. There are two reasons for this. First,
much of what Americans buy from abroad can, when import prices rise,
quickly and cheaply be replaced by domestic production, and much of
what they sell abroad can, when export prices fall, be diverted to
the domestic market. Second, foreigners are happy to hold U.S.
dollars as wealth.
But the U.S. dollar's privileged status as today's global money is
not heaven-bestowed. The dollar is ultimately just another money
supported only by faith that others will willingly accept it in the
future in return for the same sort of valuable things it bought in
the past. This puts a great burden on the institutions of the U.S.
government to validate that faith. And those institutions,
unfortunately, are failing to shoulder that burden. Reckless U.S.
fiscal policy is undermining the dollar's position, even as the
currency's role as a global money is expanding.
The U.S. current account deficit is running at an enormous 6.6% of
GDP -- about US$2-billion a day must be imported to sustain it. The
current account deficit is partially fuelled by the budget deficit,
which will soar in the next decade in the absence of reforms to
curtail federal "entitlement" spending on medical care and
retirement benefits for a longer-living population. In the absence
of long-term fiscal prudence, the United States risks undermining
the faith foreigners have placed in its management of the dollar --
that is, their belief that the U.S. government can continue to
sustain low inflation without having to resort to growth-crushing
interest-rate hikes as a means of ensuring continued high capital
inflows.
It is widely assumed that the natural alternative to the dollar as a
global currency is the euro. Faith in the euro's endurance, however,
is still fragile-- undermined by the same fiscal concerns that
afflict the dollar, but with the added angst stemming from concerns
about the temptations faced by Italy and others to return to
monetary nationalism. But there is another alternative, the world's
most enduring form of money: gold.
It must be stressed that a well-managed fiat money system has
considerable advantages over a commodity-based one, not least of
which that it does not waste valuable resources. There is little to
commend in digging up gold in South Africa just to bury it again in
Fort Knox. The question is how long such a well-managed fiat system
can endure in the United States. The historical record of national
monies, going back over 2,500 years, is by and large awful.
At the turn of the 20th century -- the height of the gold standard
-- German philosopher Georg Simmel commented: "Although money
with no intrinsic value would be the best means of exchange in an
ideal social order, until that point is reached the most
satisfactory form of money may be that which is bound to a material
substance." Today, with money no longer bound to any material
substance, it is worth asking whether the world even approximates
the "ideal social order" that could sustain a fiat dollar
as the foundation of the global financial system. There is no way
effectively to insure against the unwinding of global imbalances
should China, with more than a trillion dollars of reserves, and
other countries with dollar-rich central banks come to fear the
unbearable lightness of their holdings.
So what about gold? A revived gold standard is out of the question.
In the 19th century, governments spent less than 10% of national
income in a given year. Today, they routinely spend half or more,
and so they would never subordinate spending to the stringent
requirements of sustaining a commodity-based monetary system. But
private gold banks already exist, allowing account holders to make
international payments in the form of shares in actual gold bars.
Although clearly a niche business at present, gold banking has grown
dramatically in recent years, in tandem with the U.S. dollar's
decline. A new gold-based international monetary system surely
sounds far-fetched. But so, in 1900, did a monetary system without
gold. Modern technology makes a revival of gold money, through
private gold banks, possible even without government support.
Virtually every major argument recently levelled against
globalization has been levelled against markets generally (and, in
turn, debunked) for hundreds of years. But the argument against
capital flows in a world with 150 fluctuating national fiat monies
is fundamentally different. It is highly compelling -- so much so
that even globalization's staunchest supporters treat capital flows
as an exception, a matter to be intellectually quarantined until
effective crisis inoculations can be developed. But the notion that
capital flows are inherently destabilizing is logically and
historically false. The lessons of gold-based globalization in the
19th century simply must be relearned. Just as the prodigious daily
capital flows between New York and California, two of the world's 12
largest economies, are so uneventful that no one even notices them,
capital flows between countries sharing a single currency, such as
the dollar or the euro, attract not the slightest attention from
even the most passionate anti-globalization activists.
The world can do better. Since economic development outside the
process of globalization is no longer possible, countries should
abandon monetary nationalism. Governments should replace national
currencies with the dollar or the euro or, in the case of Asia,
collaborate to produce a new multinational currency over a
comparably large and economically diversified area.
Europeans used to say that being a country required having a
national airline, a stock exchange and a currency. Today, no
European country is any worse off without them. A future pan-Asian
currency, managed according to the same principle of targeting low
and stable inflation, would represent the most promising way for
China to fully liberalize its financial and capital markets without
fear of damaging yuan speculation. Most of the world's smaller and
poorer countries would clearly be best off unilaterally adopting the
dollar or the euro, which would enable their safe and rapid
integration into global financial markets.
As for the United States, it needs to perpetuate the sound money
policies of former Federal Reserve chairmen Paul Volcker and Alan
Greenspan and return to long-term fiscal discipline. This is the
only sure way to keep the United States' foreign creditors, with
their massive and growing holdings of dollar debt, feeling wealthy
and secure. It is the market that made the dollar into global money
--and what the market giveth, the market can taketh away. If the
tailors balk and the dollar fails, the market may privatize money on
its own.
--- - Benn Steil is director of international economics at the
Council of Foreign Relations. This is an excerpt from an extensive
article by Mr. Steil in Foreign Affairs last June. © 2007, Council
on Foreign Relations, publisher of Foreign Affairs. All rights
reserved. Distributed by Tribune Media Services.
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