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Etaoin
06-03-2003, 10:10 AM
This is excerpted from The Daily Reckoning. I understand it belongs in the Financials, but politics affect the value of money and vice versa. Perhaps it should be moved after one day. The destruction of the value of the $$$ will affect each and every one of us as it systematically destroys the value of savings, which is essential for a sound economy. Some of us remember the inflationary recession of the late 70's.

The New Currency Paradigm
William Thomson

From the spring of 1995 until last year the mantra first orchestrated by Robert Rubin and faithfully chirped by his successors from the US Treasury in Washington was that "a strong dollar is in the US national interest". During that period the trade-weighted average of the dollar as traded in New York rose from $0.80 to $1.22.

The objective was a massive con to convince the foreign punters that the buck was a good investment that would appreciate thereby inducing long-term funds to the US to finance the large and growing US current account deficit. The policy worked for longer than one might have expected. Coupled with the myth of the productivity boom based on dishonest government accounting and outright fraud in the corporate sector, foreign direct investment funds were sucked in to the investment boom of the late 1990s.

But the appreciating dollar has come at a huge price. The current account deficit has expanded as imports grew and export growth was slashed. Since 1995 the deficit has grown from three to five percent GDP and this year is expected to be 6-7 percent GDP. The IMF and others have warned that no economy has avoided a violent adjustment with a current account deficit of more than 5 percent. The Asian economies with underlying growth rates of 6-8 percent crashed in 1998 with current account deficits of less than 5 percent. The US has a long-term sustainable growth rate of only about 2.5 percent.

The US has been trying to dump the strong dollar policy for about a year without saying they favoured a weak one, which could set off a panic in the currency. The financing flows have increasingly been from central banks, as the private sector has turned skittish in the face of the investment bust.

But since the end of the Iraqi war things have changed. There is a smell of fear and panic in the air. The Administration needs to stimulate the economy to help President Bush's re-election prospects and a weaker dollar will help exports after a lag and, more importantly, stave off the threat of Japanese style deflation that is the all-consuming fear of some of the Fed Board. That accounts for the curious non-central banker musings of Greenspan and Bernanke talking of the potential use of the "electronic printing press" as well as Government intervention in the long-term Treasury market along the policy lines of the 1930s and 1940s.

Just this weekend Treasury Secretary Snow officially restated the strong dollar policy, as one where the currency could not easily be counterfeited whilst stating its exchange rate against other currencies was not a primary concern. George Orwell would have been proud.

In the background, the Saudis and other Islamic oil producers, fearing the dollar will be used as a political weapon, have been musing about an adjustment in their reserves so that they would not be as exclusively dependent on the dollar. They are correct to be concerned, as should be the Europeans, who now are facing a payback time for their non-support in the Iraqi war. The US is probably not unhappy to see the higher Euro drive Germany into a renewed recession. That'll teach 'em!

Welcome to the post-globalisation beggar-thy-neighbour world!

The adjustment of the greenback is now accelerating and its value has been plummeting on the markets. Because of the lagged effects of a devaluation - the J curve effect - it will take time for the effects to feed through to the current account. In the meantime, despite intermittent rallies, the dollar can be expected to trend lower, perhaps very much lower. The potential for the situation to get out of hand is clearly present. If this happens, there will also be renewed consideration about the dollar's role as the world's sole reserve currency when it is also the world's largest debtor.

So serious is the situation that the Iraqi dinar with Saddam's face on the notes has been appreciating against the dollar since the end of the war. Why? Simple supply and demand. No more Saddam dinars being printed whilst Easy Al's printing presses are working overtime to defeat the bogey of deflation. Now it has also been announced that the Mugabe regime is so broke that it cannot pay for the ink and paper to print more Zimbabwean dollars. With no new supply of Zim dollars look for an appreciation in that currency too - and should Mugabe be removed look for a real adjustment in the currency.

In the meantime, hold those Euros, Australian and Canadian dollars. And, of course, that asset that is no-one's liability, gold, is in a renewed bull market in dollar terms.

[ Ed. note: For advice on protecting your wealth in the face of multi-year decline in the dollar, see: Profiting From The Decline Of The US Dollar.]

**DONOTDELETE**
06-03-2003, 11:08 AM
Great article, Etaoin.

I really liked this line:
Just this weekend Treasury Secretary Snow officially restated the strong dollar policy, as one where the currency could not easily be counterfeited whilst stating its exchange rate against other currencies was not a primary concern. George Orwell would have been proud.

BWAHAHAHAHAHAH.

It seems that Mr Snow is trying to live up to his surname.

**DONOTDELETE**
06-03-2003, 07:29 PM
[ QUOTE ]
In the meantime, hold those Euros, Australian and Canadian dollars. And, of course, that asset that is no-one's liability, gold, is in a renewed bull market in dollar terms.

[/ QUOTE ]
Yes yes! Buy high, sell low!

Trust me, people, don't get into Forex unless the tax cut is giving you a lot of cash to burn.

DesertFox
06-03-2003, 07:32 PM
I trust Warlady. Nobody else. http://freeconservatives.com/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/biggrin.gif

Estragon
06-03-2003, 09:35 PM
The gold bugs never go away. Have you ever seen anyone touting gold in the last 20 years who wasn't either selling it, holding a substantial position themselves, or just parroting some nutcase website? I haven't.

The simplest explanation of inflation is "too many dollars chasing too few goods." In the modern era, this occurs when the economy slows down and the central banks, either by ignoring it or because of political pressure, fail to reduce the amount of new cash coming into the system.

This is not what is happening here. The bear market took out trillions in capital. There isn't too much money out there by any rational calculation. Inflation is not a real threat under current conditions. We only just weathered a genuine threat of deflation {granted it was more by luck than by prudent management of the economy}.

Allowing the dollar to weaken slightly has multiple effects, to be sure. All of them presently favor the United States and our economy. Our exports become a little cheaper in foreign currencies, stimulating the segment of our economy which has led every recovery and provided the greatest source of domestic growth for the last 25 years. That hurts the "old Europe" social democracies, which have been slow to enact market reforms and rein in their government liabilities. It also pressures them to act, even in the face of domestic political opposition.

Similarly, it challenges the Japanese at a time when they may be shying away once more from addressing their banking crisis. In order to have any hope of growth in the near term, they will have to follow through. These things are good for the long term health of the world economy, and for both the long and short term health of ours.

If the Arabs back off of their 30-year commitment to the dollar and start hedging with the Euro, they will get stung for billions when the relative strength of the dollar rebounds. Taking a bundle from those guys is always a good idea, and now moreso than ever.

We function on a productivity standard now, instead of a hard-asset standard like gold {which could not possibly back our currency needs without catastrophic deflation first}; the dollar is backed by our economy and the Euro is backed by Europe's. Betting on the Euro is like betting on the second place horse after the race is over. There is no practical chance of that horse winning because it already has lost.

Etaoin
06-03-2003, 11:30 PM
When Greenspan and Bernanke, speaking for the Federal Reserve, both address the deflationary problem with the promise to turn up the printing press they sound like we are to be another Weimar Republic. They are leading us down the same path the Japanese took. The Japanese will survive better than we as they were and are a nation of savers while we are a nation of profligacy and debt.

The world is awash with paper dollars. If you have a savings account, they have promised to destroy its value. Their actions will not stop deflation. When the money has no discipline or value, then the only thing to invest in is commodities as they have intrinsic value. The people buying into this alleged recovery will just be sheared again.

I fail to see where any sector of the economy looks rosy.

EagleTed
06-04-2003, 04:29 PM
Productivity, Etaoin, productivity.

Estragon
06-04-2003, 05:21 PM
What a Gloomy Gus!

Look at the long term trend in any commodity you choose: they are all down. Even things we thought were extremely limited in supply at one time, like copper and tin, are responding to improved searching, mining, and refining methods {in other words, productivity!} and keep falling over time.

Oil is the only thing that sometimes bucks the trend, due more to speculation, or allocation errors when a winter is colder or milder than expected, than to any limit to the supply. The OPEC cartel also influences oil negatively, but that influence is on the wane as new reserves keep becoming available from non-cartel nations like Norway and Russia and the Central Asian republics.

It's one thing to predict the worst, but quite another to throw all your money into gold. That's a recipe for disaster.

EagleTed
06-05-2003, 08:28 AM
Historically, it has always been a bad idea to keep a bunch of money tied up in gold, as it's value hasn't kept up with inflation. But, I think it's probably a good idea to have some gold just in case the rumors are true.

It reminds me of a story I read, in an investing book believe it or not. A stranger sits down in a barber shop chair to get his hair cut and he notices a lot of traffic is all headed out of town. So he asked the barber, what's going on? The barber replies, oh don't worry, I started a rumor that the dam above town had a crack in it, just to see how far it would go. The stranger notices after a while, as more and more people leave town, that the barber is getting nervous, and finally puts down his clippers and starts out the door. The stranger asks, where you going?

Well, it may be true!