If a "one world currency" was guaranteed to end our economic problems

NoStateofMind

Diamond Member
Oct 14, 2005
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In a hypothetical event that the U.S. Government asked us if we would accept a Global Currency if it guaranteed that it would end our economic problems for good, would you want it? Do you think it would make our Constitution ultimately useless?


Personally, if this is ever asked to me my answer would be a resounding "NO!". IMO allowing a foreign bank to control our money supply is akin to having a foreign ruler. It would only be a matter of time before our laws/Constitution would be subject to all other countries opinions.

Whats your take?
 

Craig234

Lifer
May 1, 2006
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The problem is, by the time the public was given this choice, and being told the wonderful benefits, it'd probably mean there was some very powerful backing for it that was *not* in the public interest. That's how a lot of things get passed - some sort of compelling 'you have to or else' campaign. Occassionally, they're accurate; often, they're manipulative.

The real issue is the public having political power so that whatever plans are put into place are in their interest. We haven't got that working all that well yet, though we're doing a lot better at it now that we have in a very long time - I'd say since the 60's at least. But be cautious about any plan like this. That's where 'neutral experts' like Krugman are great.
 

2Xtreme21

Diamond Member
Jun 13, 2004
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I would not want it as there's no way it would solve all of our economic problems forever. It's a hypothetical situation that would never happen. As far as your comment about it threatening the sovereignty of our country-- no I don't think it'd do anything to that. Look at the EU: 16 of its member states all use the Euro, including 4 of the top 5 economies in the EU itself. France, Germany, Spain, and Italy all remain top 10 countries economically, and one can argue they were even strengthened by adopting a common currency. The only reason why the UK didn't was because the pound has always been a highly valued currency and it'd lose money switching to the Euro.

By unifying the world's money, it would eliminate the currency trading market, as well as a country's ability to purchase another country's currency and hold it as foreign debt. Though, even now, ~50 years after the essential linking of the powerful states' economies in Europe, the countries still retain almost complete independence, and have no real intentions of giving up their own sovereignty.

 

JMapleton

Diamond Member
Nov 19, 2008
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I would prefer we each have all our own currencies, but with the option of a single note that represented a "basket of currencies" with a personal option to choose either my home currency or the basket currency.
 

rchiu

Diamond Member
Jun 8, 2002
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Heh, we all know American is all about me first, what's in it for me, no one give a f about greater good so no need for any polls, we all know the result already.

People needs to know one currency is not about helping those established economy, well not directly. Take EU for example, it was never intended to help the likes of Germany/France directly, those less develop economy will always benefit first. So what's in it for Germany and France you ask? Well once those around them are developed, they gain great benefit from more trade, and in case there is economic crisis, there will be more matured economies to work together to solve the problem instead one or two big economies have to rescue the other.

So unless American go outside a little and get some international perspective instead of always thinking about America, you can stop putting up any polls like that.
 

sandorski

No Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
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A Global Currency wouldn't be about fixing Economic Probblems, but about making an Even Playing Field for Trade. It prevents one Nation from jerry rigging their Currency for competitive advantage.
 

First

Lifer
Jun 3, 2002
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I think it's a false choice from the start only because currency changes are never a "guarantee", there's really nothing in economics that's a "guarantee" other than the obvious outcome of, say, something awful like a terrorist attack on he NYSE or Fed creating financial havoc. Even quantum mechanics has its uncertainty principal, i.e. you don't know with 100% certainty where an electron is located and going to be in the future simultaneously.

If we could somehow keep our sovereignty I'd do it, which I imagine could only happen by standardizing on the American dollar (keeping our national symbols and pride and such) in addition to making certain the U.S. would have last say on monetary policy changes (but of course, getting the rest of the world to agree would be difficult). I don't think people quite understand yet that the U.S. does not control 100% of their own economic destiny with regards to the U.S. dollar, and that this has been the case for many many decades. There are trillions in U.S. T-bills out there held by giant countries, so in effect the dollar is already a "world" currency, for some time now.
 

cubby1223

Lifer
May 24, 2004
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Originally posted by: PC Surgeon
In a hypothetical event that the U.S. Government asked us if we would accept a Global Currency if it guaranteed that it would end our economic problems for good, would you want it? Do you think it would make our Constitution ultimately useless?

Hmmm, if I didn't know any better I'd think you were describing Obama's "stimulus" plan :p
 

Vic

Elite Member
Jun 12, 2001
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What would happen to the currency markets if there were a single global currency?
 

tfcmasta97

Platinum Member
Feb 7, 2004
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Anyone who said yes for the first question needs to know that it would collapse within a year, unless it had a global management system that establishes enforced policy worldwide... it doesn't take a terrorist attack to create imbalanced monetary policy
 

bamacre

Lifer
Jul 1, 2004
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Originally posted by: Craig234
The problem is, by the time the public was given this choice, and being told the wonderful benefits, it'd probably mean there was some very powerful backing for it that was *not* in the public interest. That's how a lot of things get passed - some sort of compelling 'you have to or else' campaign. Occassionally, they're accurate; often, they're manipulative.

Now you know how our three central banks have come into existence.
 

Vic

Elite Member
Jun 12, 2001
50,422
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Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: Craig234
The problem is, by the time the public was given this choice, and being told the wonderful benefits, it'd probably mean there was some very powerful backing for it that was *not* in the public interest. That's how a lot of things get passed - some sort of compelling 'you have to or else' campaign. Occassionally, they're accurate; often, they're manipulative.

Now you know how our three central banks have come into existence.

I find it amusing that Craig has only just recently become aware of this kind of govt manipulation.
 

bamacre

Lifer
Jul 1, 2004
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Originally posted by: Vic
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: Craig234
The problem is, by the time the public was given this choice, and being told the wonderful benefits, it'd probably mean there was some very powerful backing for it that was *not* in the public interest. That's how a lot of things get passed - some sort of compelling 'you have to or else' campaign. Occassionally, they're accurate; often, they're manipulative.

Now you know how our three central banks have come into existence.

I find it amusing that Craig has only just recently become aware of this kind of govt manipulation.

Hehe, well in his defense, that may not be the case.

But I imagine throughout the history of civilization, the wealthy have always wanted first to control the money. The rest then comes easy.
 

Moonbeam

Elite Member
Nov 24, 1999
74,676
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Originally posted by: PC Surgeon
In a hypothetical event that the U.S. Government asked us if we would accept a Global Currency if it guaranteed that it would end our economic problems for good, would you want it? Do you think it would make our Constitution ultimately useless?


Personally, if this is ever asked to me my answer would be a resounding "NO!". IMO allowing a foreign bank to control our money supply is akin to having a foreign ruler. It would only be a matter of time before our laws/Constitution would be subject to all other countries opinions.

Whats your take?

NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO

I don't want anything that would, how did you put it, guaranteed that it would end our economic problems for good. I hate myself way way too much to live without economic fear and terrors. Some horrible memories might surface if I ever got really really calm.
 

Fern

Elite Member
Sep 30, 2003
26,907
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A 'one world currency' doesn't make any sense to me unless, and until, you have a 'one world government'.

Apartments have special materials to create a firewall between units. Ships have waterproof bulkheads between compartments in case of a leak.

What would be the firewall between countries if there a one world currency?

If countries had no control over monetary supply, would they also lose control over their spending and budgets?

I don't see how it could work.

We should be watching the EU (those with the Euro) over time to see how it works out. it strikes me a mini-experiment in this sort of thing. And I hear where some countries are in trouble and may be kicked out because their deficits exceed a predetermined percentage of GDP.

If there is a one world currency, how do you get kicked-out?

If somebody gets kicked-out, is it still a one world currency (answer is 'no').

Fern
 

PaperclipGod

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Apr 7, 2003
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Thread Merge

Fern
AnandTech P&N Moderator


First of all, how would a single global currency actually be worth anything? Don't current national currencies have value only in relation to other currencies, since no one uses any sort of metal-standard anymore? If we have a single global currency, what is it's inherent value? How do you deal with governments which print up tons of it? In our current system, such a country would only be damaging it's own economy via rampant inflation. But with a global currency, it would allow the country which prints money non-stop to reap the rewards with few negatives, as the inflation would be spread out amongst all the countries of the world. So, North Korea printing up craploads of BarackBucks would literally be devaluing the very money in your wallet.

Further, AFAIK the "global currency" proposal is nothing like the situation I described above, because it's not the equivalent of a "euro for everyone". Instead, it appears to be like a mutual fund for currencies -- i.e., each unit of "Global Currency" (GC) is actually a composite of several different national currencies (e.g., 1 GC = 20% USD, 20% Yen, 20% Ruble, 20% Euro, 20% yuan). Thus, as with mutual funds, you create a much stabler and safer place to put your money -- a boom in China and a bust in the US would affect the GC about as much as the exact opposite (a boom in the US and a bust in China). You won't be able to buy gas with GC's, but governments (and potentially institutional investors) would have a very safe, stable place to put their assets.

I only glanced at a couple articles on it, though, which is why I framed the subject as a question... if I'm wrong, please say so!
 

wwswimming

Banned
Jan 21, 2006
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Originally posted by: PC Surgeon
In a hypothetical event that the U.S. Government asked us if we would accept a Global Currency if it guaranteed that it would end our economic problems for good, would you want it?

who makes this guarantee ? the same people that overturned the laws that were put in place during the Depression to keep it from happening again.

the same people that are fixing a debt bubble by taking on more debt.

it's not like God is guaranteeing the hypothetical global currency. it's guaranteed by governments such as the US - which is currently borrowing money to pay the interest on its own debt, which is normally the definition of bankruptcy.

elected reps. who favor regulation get slapped down - e.g. Eliot Spitzer.
 

Craig234

Lifer
May 1, 2006
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Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: Vic
Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: Craig234
The problem is, by the time the public was given this choice, and being told the wonderful benefits, it'd probably mean there was some very powerful backing for it that was *not* in the public interest. That's how a lot of things get passed - some sort of compelling 'you have to or else' campaign. Occassionally, they're accurate; often, they're manipulative.

Now you know how our three central banks have come into existence.

I find it amusing that Craig has only just recently become aware of this kind of govt manipulation.

Hehe, well in his defense, that may not be the case.

I could wear out my v, i, c, t, s, d, a, n and o keys typing 'vic is an idiot'. I stopped bothering, and asked him to not read or respond to my posts - the first person I did that with here - but predictably he did not stop butting in where unwanted. Thanks for the correct response to him.

But I imagine throughout the history of civilization, the wealthy have always wanted first to control the money. The rest then comes easy.

Actually, it's simply an issue of power, and currency follows from that.

One of the notable things in the middle ages, though, was how the tail began to wag the dog when the powerful followed an ideology that was quite idealistic, and placed money low on the scale as something basically dirty and unworthy of the elites to deal with, and the merchant class went from one the lowest, to one that increasingly gained power as the rulers had to finance wars and such. It was a remarkable imbalance in the distribution of power for quite a while, now of course abandoned.

Though we still have some remnants of the inconsistencies in our attitudes about money, where it's often seen as 'dirty' to give it excessive weight. Look how our public policy discussions break down whenever the topic of 'putting a price on life' arises over an issue - our answer is always 'you can't', and we have to sort of find mealy mouthed ways to talk about policies which do just that. When it comes up that that does happen - take the Ford calculations on the 'cost optimization' on safety design where it was cheaper to have s small number of people killed than to improve the design - the public reacted with outrage, so the moral is, 'don't talk about it'.

This somewhat confused attitude about money to this day leads to some bizarre or unhelpful approaches to issues. Look at our political system - for obvious reasons, we don't view 'pursuit of money' as a legitimate motive for elected officials as we do in the private sector, but look how easily the corrupt can put on sheep's clothes and hide among the actual 'public servants', and how our system has fallen victim to terrible corruption of donations to campaigns (under the propaganda defense of 'free speech').

A correlated oddity in our culture is how the masses are so repulsed by issues that benefit their interests, while they fight hard for the rights of the wealthy.

(This of course makes them vulnerable to scams such as 'we'll cut your taxes - but not tell you you get $20 while others get a larger share and millions - not to mention that we'll increase the debt for everyone's children mostly to benefit the rich now. We really should send them a thank you card for the trillions.)

I think it's largely a combination of ignorance about how wealth functions, and the effectiveness of propaganda to use people's good intetions against them.

In much the same way an abusive spouse can get their partner to blame themself and feel guilty, wealthy interests' propaganda can get the masses to feel shame about pursuing policies good for them. Yet another analogy to illustrate this - one of the evil, brilliant periods in the tobacco history was when, as the public was finally beginning to protect itself, the companies used PR firms to propagandize that it was about 'freedom' - freedom of choice to use the products, freedom of speech to advertise them. Many good people who like freedom were fooled and forgot why they should opposed tobacco, using their 'love of freedom' to turn them into defenders of a deadly industry.

I should probably try to say something coherent following all the meandering, so I'll rieterate that the bottom line is simply whether any plan is designed with the motive of serving the public interest, or the interests of some small powerful group, mainly 'the wealthy'. Typically, it's a combination, where under the cover of some legitimate benefit, the system is stacked for the benefit of that group - and some compelling need to agree to it is created (or used).

So whenever I see crisis that leads the public and government to rush through new things, I have concern whether it's some interest getting in changes that would normally be clearly a bad idea (e.g., 'The Patriot Act'). In the current situation, my concern that the big banks might find ways to use the crisis to get their interests met even more in the changes made was supported by a guest last Friday night on Bill Moyers' Journal, who said that he saw the trend now towards 'creating changes that align government with the biggest financial institutions and force the system to support them, creating a big threat to democracy.'

He makes the usual ineffective call for 'people to rise up and oppose these changes'. His comments are worth hearing - if you want to, you can here:

Link to interview with author William Greider.

(After all, you partly paid for the interview and broadcast on PBS, which here does continue to serve the public. You don't see this info on many channels.)

The bottom line is, are changes being driven by people who are representing the public interest, or other interests.

The concentration of wealth is a sort of vicious cycle where the more it's concentrated, the better the beneficiaries can concentrate it more.

People take for granted the gains of the middle class, rather than seeing them as the aberration brought about by specific policies that they are.

Just as forgetting why we had new deal regulations and repealing them helped allow the current crisis, the same applies to other pro-middle class reforms that the wealthy interests have wanted to repeal ever since they were passed, but unable to. Charismatic 'change agents' who serve them, such as Reagan and W, get people to go along with the repeals - and the predictable results.

At a time when the financial industry is so politically powerful, caution is in order to ensure any big systemic changes are good changes.

The linked video above should create some concern.
 

bamacre

Lifer
Jul 1, 2004
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Originally posted by: Craig234
I could wear out my v, i, c, t, s, d, a, n and o keys typing 'vic is an idiot'.

Calling Vic an idiot doesn't say much about him, but it says a lot about you.

Link to interview with author William Greider.

Interesting interview, thanks for posting.
 

Craig234

Lifer
May 1, 2006
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Originally posted by: bamacre
Originally posted by: Craig234
I could wear out my v, i, c, t, s, d, a, n and o keys typing 'vic is an idiot'.

Calling Vic an idiot doesn't say much about him, but it says a lot about you.

We'll disagree about him, if that's your view. You may not know his history in many posts.

But let's end it at that, I only violated my normal silence not to give him attention to say thanks for the rebuttal to him.

Link to interview with author William Greider.

Interesting interview, thanks for posting.

You're very welcome, I'm glad you liked it. Too bad how hard it is to get such views heard.
 

gingermeggs

Golden Member
Dec 22, 2008
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It's a real pity people like Bill Greider aren't in the White house.
Calling someone an Idiot isn't necessarily an offensive comment; a true friend tells you how it is not just what you want to hear.
 

vhx

Golden Member
Jul 19, 2006
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I already posted this like SAME question a week or two ago.

My answer is still no. Last thing we need is one bank having control over everyone countries economy (It'd have to be independent and private, ROFL just what we'd need, right?). Things are bad enough, our own banks have gotten to the point where they can do whatever they want and extort money aka "Give us money or the economy dies!". (Too big to fail?) That's the result of banks being too intertwined with our economy and our government doing everything they can to make sure they remain that way. Who would honestly want to encourage this further? This would bring up tons of questions: Who controls the output of the money? Would we then pay taxes to this world bank? What if they then demanded higher taxes? This would effectively strip every countries sovereignty as they would have little to no control over their economy.

TLDR: It's a nice pipedream, but there is too much corruption and greed for this to ever work.

I am sure most reasonable people would be against this until the economy tanks and scare the shit out of everyone to push their agenda.... oh wait.
 

BoberFett

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
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Craig, you're a joke and everybody around here knows it. You're a sock puppet whose opinion is formed by whichever Democrat has their hand jammed up your rear end at the moment.
 

JD50

Lifer
Sep 4, 2005
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Originally posted by: BoberFett
Craig, you're a joke and everybody around here knows it. You're a sock puppet whose opinion is formed by whichever Democrat has their hand jammed up your rear end at the moment.

lulz
 

3chordcharlie

Diamond Member
Mar 30, 2004
9,859
1
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Originally posted by: Vic
What would happen to the currency markets if there were a single global currency?

Ending currency speculation is the only benefit a world currency would have...

The notion that it would solve economic problems however is preposterous.

The OP might as well ask if we would all wear plaid collared shirts with ties, if that would solve all economic problems.