US risks a downhill dollar disaster

GrGr

Diamond Member
Sep 25, 2003
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US risks a downhill dollar disaster

Larry Elliott
Monday November 22, 2004
The Guardian

George Bush's foreign policy is simple: don't mess with America. The same, it appears, applies to economic policy as well. On Friday, the dollar fell sharply against the euro. That was unsurprising, since the downward lurch followed comments from Alan Greenspan which - by his own cryptic standards - were unambiguous.

"It seems persuasive that, given the size of the US current account deficit, a diminished appetite for adding to dollar balances must occur at some point," Greenspan said. This was hardly a novel statement for the Federal Reserve chairman but the timing was interesting. It came on the eve of a meeting of the G20 - a conclave of developed and developing nations - in Berlin at which the recent fall in the dollar was a hot topic.

Moreover, it came three days after John Snow, US treasury secretary, poured cold water on the idea that the world's central banks might get together to arrest the dollar's fall. The history of "efforts to impose non-market valuations on currencies is at best unrewarding and chequered", he said in London.

Alarmed

Europe got the message. Eurozone policymakers are growing increasingly alarmed about the fall in the value of the dollar, since it threatens to choke off exports - the one area of growth in the 12-nation single currency zone. They would like nothing more than to wade into the foreign exchanges in concert with the Fed and the central banks of Asia to put a floor under the greenback, but they know that Washington has no interest in such a move.

Joaquin Almunia, Europe's monetary affairs commissioner, said last week: "The more the euro rises, the more voices will start asking for intervention. It has to be a coordinated effort but it seems that our friends across the Atlantic aren't interested."

That sums things up rather nicely. There are two reasons why the Bush administration is not willing to play ball with the Europeans. The first is that it sees a lower dollar as inevitable given that the US current account deficit is running at $50bn-plus a month. A lower dollar makes US exports cheaper and imports dearer.

According to this interpretation, the Americans are now simply bowing to the inevitable. Stephen Lewis, of Monument Securities, says the markets have finally lost patience with the laxity of Washington towards the twin trade and budget deficits, pumped up by cheap money and tax cuts. "The truth is that the US fiscal and monetary excesses, which have been essential to keeping the global economy afloat in recent years, are no longer tolerated in the foreign exchange markets," he said. "The status quo is not an option. The only question is how the pain of adjustment will be apportioned."

The second reason is that the Bush administration has neither forgotten nor forgiven France and Germany for the stance they adopted over Iraq. Jacques Chirac and Gerhard Schröder weren't interested in helping the US to topple Saddam, and now it's payback time. If the European economies are suffering as a result of the weak dollar, why should the US care? What's happening in the currency markets is simply American unilateralism in a different guise.


In the short term, therefore, the dollar looks like a one-way bet. City analysts are already talking about it hitting $1.35 against the euro, and given the tendency of financial markets to overshoot, nobody would be that surprised if it fell to $1.40 over the coming months. A smooth and steady decline - which is what Snow is trying to finesse - would do little damage to the US economy, but it would hit Europe hard.

This might seem perverse, given all the fuss there was when the euro was falling against the dollar immediately after its launch. Then, however, the problem was one of credibility for a fledgling currency because the impact of a weak euro was to boost demand for European goods. With a strong euro, there will be a direct impact on European exporters. Given that the latest figures show that Germany and France both grew by only 0.1% in the third quarter, a sharp drop in exports could quite easily push the eurozone's biggest economies back into recession.

Growth forecasts for the eurozone - already modest - are likely to be scaled down over the next few months, and budget deficits are likely to get bigger. A fresh downturn could prove the death knell of the stability and growth pact, which would be no bad thing, and higher unemployment would intensify resistance among workers to structural reform of the eurozone economies.

Washington may have another reason - apart from getting its own back - for allowing the Europeans to suffer. The US is desperate for the Chinese to revalue the yuan, but has so far utterly failed to get Beijing to agree to abandon its dollar peg. The Chinese, for political as well as economic reasons, are determined to resist American pressure.

Europe - the French, in particular - have influence in China. As one analyst noted last week, China has never been censured by the United Nations security council - even over the massacre in Tiananmen Square - because Paris has always vetoed any such moves. France, so the theory goes, might have more success in persuading the Chinese to revalue than the Americans have had.

It has to be acknowledged, however, that you would be hard pressed to find a financial analyst who believes Snow is capable of this level of sophistication. After his performance in London last week, one said: "I would sell the currency of any country of which he was the finance minister." The likelihood is that even if the Americans were to use the Europeans as a proxy, the Chinese would still resist. Certainly, all the evidence is that China's central bank is still intervening aggressively to keep its currency stable. Without that action, the dollar's fall in recent days would have been even more rapid.

Talking the dollar down is easy enough, but the strategy depends on a smooth descent that boosts US growth without scaring off the overseas investors who fund the twin deficits. Should it turn into a disorderly rout then there would inevitably be a spillover into other markets and into the real economy.

Washington, in other words, is relying on a soft landing for the dollar. History shows, however, that there is a better than even chance of this process ending in a full-scale crisis, as it did in the mid 1980s, when the weakness of the dollar culminated in the stock market crash of 1987. And that, of course, was at a time when the G7 was acting in concert. As Lewis said, the crisis could be triggered by a seemingly minor event, as when the Nigerians precipitated the run on the pound in 1976 by switching into dollars.

The US is happy to go it alone for now, since this is the forex equivalent of the quick push to Baghdad. Life is likely to get tougher later - and when it does, multilateralism will have its attractions.
 

SuperTool

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
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Seems to me like Europe risks a downhill dollar disaster, not the US. I guess a dollar crash would be a bad thing, but a slow decline would be quite nice for the US indeed.
If you aren't out of the US dollar by now, you have only yourself to blame.
I posted a link on this subject in some other threads, maybe you should look it up. It discusses the fall of the dollar and the 1987 crash.
 

rahvin

Elite Member
Oct 10, 1999
8,475
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Originally posted by: SuperTool
Seems to me like Europe risks a downhill dollar disaster, not the US. I guess a dollar crash would be a bad thing, but a slow decline would be quite nice for the US indeed.
If you aren't out of the US dollar by now, you have only yourself to blame.
I posted a link on this subject in some other threads, maybe you should look it up. It discusses the fall of the dollar and the 1987 crash.

Europes view can be summarised by the following quote from the article:

Eurozone policymakers are growing increasingly alarmed about the fall in the value of the dollar, since it threatens to choke off exports - the one area of growth in the 12-nation single currency zone.

In otherwords the decline in the value of the dollar threatens european exports. As our dollar delines not only do their exports get more expensive, ours get cheaper and europe bleeds cash to the US in the form of a trade deficiet in favor of the US.

Before clinton the Euro to dollar ratio would have been around 1.00/1.35. Under Clinton the dollar strengthend and the europeans were able to export more to the US. To balance our inability to control our spending the dollar needs to fall to around 1.45/euro by my estimate. This will boost our economy, ironically at the expense of the euro's, and in time hopefully we can convince china to unpin the yuan from the dollar and allow it to increase thus decreasing the trade deficiet with china.

As a side note I wish people would stop bashing greenspan, he's been very clear over the last 15 years that a balanced budget is essential to stability of the US economy.
 

SuperTool

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
14,000
2
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USD will be par with Canadian dollar, so stop throwing away those canadian coins :) Other countries have been propping up USD to promote their exporters at our industries' expense. That's one of the reasons manufacturing has been punished since dollar started strengthening. Now it's payback time. I wanna see what China is gonna do to keep the yuan tied to the dollar. They are gonna have to send a lot of money our way :D The plan is simple: keep money in Euros and gold until the dollar is done falling. Then buy US companies, cus we are back in business. :)
 

GrGr

Diamond Member
Sep 25, 2003
3,204
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Originally posted by: SuperTool
USD will be par with Canadian dollar, so stop throwing away those canadian coins :) Other countries have been propping up USD to promote their exporters at our industries' expense. That's one of the reasons manufacturing has been punished since dollar started strengthening. Now it's payback time. I wanna see what China is gonna do to keep the yuan tied to the dollar. They are gonna have to send a lot of money our way :D The plan is simple: keep money in Euros and gold until the dollar is done falling. Then buy US companies, cus we are back in business. :)


China's is poised to loosen the peg tying the Yuan to the dollar. But they will only widen the band somewhat to allow the Yuan to strengthen in order to cool the overheating Chinese economy. China is already sending their export profits the US way. China's profits from exports are eaten up by the purchase of US bonds, i.e lending money to the Bush administration so it can pay for tax cuts and war.

A Euroland in recession is not going to find it easy to divert huge sums into the US. On the other hand a cheap dollar makes it cheaper to buy up US assets so foreigners could in fact end up owning even more of the US after the dollar crash. Nor is China economically strong enough to be able to fix the US deficits (China's economy is only 3 percent of world GDP after all). Nor will a weaker dollar stop US outsourcing. No US manufacturing company can compete with 30 cent wages, not even with legalized illegal Mexican aliens undercutting the US work force. The US will continue to export jobs for cheap Wal Mart goods.

Gold is up 75 percent since 2001. Now the market is waiting to see if the Asian central banks will start buying gold.
 

SuperTool

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
14,000
2
0
Originally posted by: GrGr
Originally posted by: SuperTool
USD will be par with Canadian dollar, so stop throwing away those canadian coins :) Other countries have been propping up USD to promote their exporters at our industries' expense. That's one of the reasons manufacturing has been punished since dollar started strengthening. Now it's payback time. I wanna see what China is gonna do to keep the yuan tied to the dollar. They are gonna have to send a lot of money our way :D The plan is simple: keep money in Euros and gold until the dollar is done falling. Then buy US companies, cus we are back in business. :)


China's is poised to loosen the peg tying the Yuan to the dollar. But they will only widen the band somewhat to allow the Yuan to strengthen in order to cool the overheating Chinese economy. China is already sending their export profits the US way. China's profits from exports are eaten up by the purchase of US bonds, i.e lending money to the Bush administration so it can pay for tax cuts and war.

A Euroland in recession is not going to find it easy to divert huge sums into the US. On the other hand a cheap dollar makes it cheaper to buy up US assets so foreigners could in fact end up owning even more of the US after the dollar crash. Nor is China economically strong enough to be able to fix the US deficits (China's economy is only 3 percent of world GDP after all). Nor will a weaker dollar stop US outsourcing. No US manufacturing company can compete with 30 cent wages, not even with legalized illegal Mexican aliens undercutting the US work force. The US will continue to export jobs for cheap Wal Mart goods.

Gold is up 75 percent since 2001. Now the market is waiting to see if the Asian central banks will start buying gold.

Actually weak dollar may stop US outsourcing or slow it down so that it's offset by insourcing from Europe and Japan. If it wasn't the case, China would not be propping up the dollar at the expense of the yuan. The cost differential to produce something in China is not as big as the labor cost differential, and is getting smaller as natural resource prices rise. Also, qualified worker wages in China are rising rapidly, and companies cannot find workers to fill their plants. I know it sounds ridiculous, but it's a growing problem in China, because they aren't efficient in labor allocation.