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US dollar slide increases global tensions
By Nick Beams
18 November 2004
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The recent sharp fall in the value of the US dollar and its
implications for the stability of the world economy will be the
chief topic of discussion at a meeting of the finance ministers
of the Group of 20 at the weekend. The dollar is now down to $1.30
to the euro, a decline of 30 percent since Bush took office, with
predictions that it could even hit $1.50. But no agreement is
expected to emerge from the meeting, comprising finance ministers
from the G7 as well as other countries, including China, Russia,
Korea and Turkey.
The main division is between the United States and so-called
old Europe, principally France and Germany. Last week
the president of the European Central Bank Jean-Claude Trichet
described the recent currency movements as brutal,
hinting at the need for coordinated intervention by major central
banks. But the US does not regard the recent currency market movements
as excessive, with one Treasury official telling the Financial
Times that markets were operating very well and
displaying a great deal of orderliness.
This is not the view in the major eurozone countries where
the decline of the dollar is seen as a major threat to export
markets and consequently to European growth prospects. European
governments maintain that the record deficits run up by the Bush
administration have played a major role in the dollars fall.
In an interview with the weekly magazine Der Spiegel,
Germanys deputy finance minister Caoi Koch-Weser warned
that US trade and budget deficits were unsettling markets
and called for action to ensure sustained, medium-term budget
consolidation. He criticised the Bush administrations
tax cuts saying they were too heavily weighted to the rich, did
little to boost the economy and worsened the budget deficit.
The French finance minister Nicolas Sarkozy has made similar
comments, warning that markets would only regain confidence in
the dollar if the US cut its deficits. This is the unanimous
message from the Europeans and the International Monetary Fund
that we send to the United States, he said.
These criticisms will get short shrift from the Bush administration.
According to Treasury Secretary John Snow, now visiting several
European capitals prior to the weekend meeting, the problem is
not the US deficits but the lack of growth in the European economy.
Briefing reporters ahead of Snows departure, a Treasury
official said one of the reasons for the pressure on the dollar
was subpar growth in a number of US trading partners.
If the US is growing more rapidly than other countries,
then exports from the US are growing less rapidly than they otherwise
would. So if you get more rapid growth in Germany or in other
countries not growing as rapidly as they should, that will be
beneficial to our exports and help with the reduction in the trade
deficit.
The official went on to urge greater efforts to press China
to adopt more flexible currency policies, leading to an upward
movement of the yuan and easing pressure on the dollar.
However, these policy prescriptions, rather than offering solutions,
only serve to highlight some of the contradictory features of
the global economy. While economic growth is held out as the solution,
the chief source of European growth is the expansion of export
markets, which depend in turn on the value of the euro remaining
competitive against the US dollar. In other words, there is a
vicious circle at work. Growth in the European economy requires
the maintenance of the value of the dollar, but a high dollar
leads to a widening US trade deficit, thereby worsening the financial
imbalances in the global economy.
Similarly, greater flexibility in the yuan and the Asian currencies
more generally is also fraught with dangers. This is because the
Asian central banks have spent hundreds of billions of dollars
purchasing US financial assets in order to keep the value of their
currencies low relative to the US dollar, thereby ensuring that
their exports remain competitive in the American market.
Asian banks at the end of last year held an estimated $1.89
trillion of foreign reserves, most of it in US dollars. If the
Asian currencies were revalued, significant losses would be incurred
on these holdings. According to calculations by the New York Federal
Reserve if the yuan were to appreciate 10 percent against the
dollar, China would suffer a capital loss equivalent to almost
3 percent of its gross domestic product (GDP). If the won rose
by 10 percent, South Korea would experience a similar loss. For
other economies the blow would be even more severe. Singapore
would experience a loss equivalent to 10 percent of GDP and Taiwan
8 percent.
Commenting on these calculations, the Economist noted:
To avert such an appreciation, Asian central banks would
have to amass ever greater holdings of dollars. But this would
only expose them to greater capital losses down the road. Alternatively,
they might seek to avoid the consequences of a dollar fall, by
diversifying into other reserve currencies, such as the euro.
But that would only bring the dollar crashing down all the more
quickly. In other words, Asian central banks are caught in an
awkward dilemma: either they try to break the dollars fall,
or they try to escape from underneath its collapse.
The growing concern over the dangers to the world financial
system posed by too great a dependence on the US dollar was reflected
in a major speech by the Governor of the Bank of Japan, Toshihiko
Fukui, last week.
Addressing a symposium in Tokyo on the theme The euro:
five years onimplications for Asia, he said the emergence
of a clear rival to the US dollar as a key global currency would
have a stabilising effect on the global financial system.
Fukui told the seminar that since its launch the importance
of the euro had already increased considerably. More than 50 countries
now linked their currencies to the euro, it comprised 20 percent
of foreign currency reserves and nearly a third of cross-border
bonds were denominated in euros. In a thinly veiled reference
to the US, he pointed to the dangers associated with allowing
any single currency to dominate global commerce.
In such a situation, the government of the key currency country
was easily tempted to focus its economic policy on domestic
considerations, he said.
In todays globalised economy, this could lead to
undesirable ripple effects on the rest of the world, through the
fluctuations of the external value of the key currency.
If there were two competing currencies, competition between
them could lead to more attention to the external value of key
currencies and this could have a positive effect on
the stability of the global financial system.
Such remarks will not be welcomed in the Bush administration
for, together with the unease of the Europeans, they point to
the fact that the other major capitalist powers are growing increasingly
resentful of the enormous advantages which the dollars role
as the major world currency gives to the US and may start to promote
alternatives.
That search could well be stimulated by conflicts over foreign
policies. Within two weeks of the election, it is clear that the
second Bush administration is going to intensify the unilateralist
foreign policy approach which created such conflict with Europe.
This means that economic measures may be used where diplomatic
and other means have failed.
In his first press conference after the election, Bush insisted
that he earned political capital in the campaign and
that he intended to spend it. But with the US needing an inflow
of around $2.6 billion a day to finance its trade and budget deficits,
and with 92 percent of the $1 trillion increase in debt over the
past four years financed by foreign lenders, whether he has the
economic capital may prove to be another question.
See Also:
US debt ceiling to be lifted
[8 November 2004]
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