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Whither the US dollar?
By Nick Beams
25 November 2003
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Will the fall in the value of the US dollar proceed gradually
or will there be a financial crisis sparked by a rapid exit of
funds from American financial markets? This is a question that
is being asked more frequently in world financial centres as US
indebtedness reaches new highs.
Last week the US dollar hit a record low of almost $1.20 against
the euro in the wake of news that investment inflows into the
US in September had fallen to their lowest level in almost five
years.
The reason for the nervousness can be seen from the figures
on the US current account deficit and its external debt. This
year the current account deficit rose to more than 5 percent of
gross domestic product (GDP), the level the Federal Reserve Board
has identified as signifying potential problems for US economy.
Running at more than $500 billion a year, the US requires a capital
inflow of more than $2 billion every business day to finance its
payments gap, with predictions that this figure will rise to $3
billion some time next year.
This is why the news that net inflows of foreign funds had
plunged from $50 billion in August to just $4 billion in Septemberthe
lowest level since the crisis caused by the collapse of the hedge
fund Long-Term Capital Management in October 1998sent a
tremor through financial markets. Stock markets experienced a
fall, and the price of gold, which tends to rise in times of financial
uncertainty, hit a seven-year high of $400 per ounce.
On Monday, a column by the Financial Times Asia news
editor, Daniel Bogler, nominated the decline in the financial
inflow as the scariest statistic of the month. Bogler
warned that the downturn could be the start of moves by Asian
central banks to shift their funds out of the US. For the
past few years, Asian nations have been buying dollars to keep
their currencies down and then investing those greenbacks in US
assets, largely Treasury bonds. If Asia were to switch its money
elsewhere, that would have a serious impact on the dollar, US
bond yields, and the real economy.
There is a lot of money to switch. According to the latest
figures, the foreign exchange reserves of Asian central banks
were $1.8 trillion last month, much of it held in the US. If this
money starts to move elsewhere then US financial markets will
be severely affected. It is estimated that foreign investors now
own 40 percent of the US governments tradeable debt, 26
percent of US corporate bonds and 13 percent of US equities.
Besides the decline in investment inflows, another reason for
the financial market nervousness appears to have been the decision
by the Bush administration to impose quotas on textile and garment
imports from China.
This decision brought some stinging criticism from the Financial
Times in an editorial published last Saturday. It began by
pointing out that while the fall in the dollar from the stratospheric
heights it achieved in recent years, especially against
the euro, was welcome, the question is whether the slide
will be gradual and manageable, helping to rebalance global demand,
or rapid and precipitate, spreading fear among investors. And
while movements have so far been largely benign, the Bush administration
seems bent on stress-testing the markets resilience to destruction.
Quotas against a small proportion of Chinese textile imports
would have little impact on international trade, it continued,
but the markets would be alarmed by yet more evidence of
ham-fisted politics from the US administration which appears
to be conducting international economic policy on the principle
that bashing south-east Asia will play well in the Midwest next
November.
The protectionist measures of the Bush administration were
also the subject of some unusually critical comments by the Federal
Reserve Board chairman Alan Greenspan. In an address on the US
current account deficit to a Cato Institute monetary conference
last week, Greenspan pointed out that while the external US deficit
receded during the 2001 recession it had rebounded to a record
5 percent of GDP this year. This was a matter of growing
concern because it added to the stock of outstanding debt
that could be increasingly difficult to finance.
However, Greenspan, who, as Morgan Stanley chief economist
Stephen Roach recently noted, has a special knack of being
creative in rationalizing financial imbalances, concluded
that if the processes of globalisation were allowed to proceed
and create a more flexible international financial system, then
history suggests that current imbalances will be defused
with little disruption.
However, Greenspan concluded his remarks with one major
caveat. Without referring directly to the Bush administrations
measures, he noted that, some clouds of emerging protectionism
have become increasingly visible on todays horizon.
The costs of any new such protectionist initiatives,
he continued, in the context of wide current imbalances,
could significantly erode the flexibility of the global economy.
Consequently, it is imperative that creeping protectionism be
thwarted and reversed.
Greenspan is clearly concerned that under conditions where
US financial stability has never been more dependent on what could
well be called the kindness of strangers, the Bush
administrations imposition of protectionist measures, first
on steel and now on Chinese textiles, could spark some form of
retaliation from both Europe and Asia, thereby destabilising financial
markets and provoking a serious crisis.
See Also:
UN agency warns of anxious
time for world economy
[13 October 2003]
Dollar fall adds to global
turbulence
[30 September 2003]
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