What explains the paradox of the dollar’s sharp rise in
value against other currencies (except the Japanese yen) despite
disproportionate US exposure to the worst financial crisis since the Great
Depression? The answer does not lie in improved fundamentals for the US economy
or better prospects for the dollar to retain its reserve currency role.
The rise in the dollar’s exchange value is due to two factors.
One factor is the traditional flight to the reserve currency
that results from panic. People are simply doing what they have always done. Pam Martens
predicted correctly that panic demand for US Treasury bills would boost the US
dollar.
The other factor is the unwinding of the carry trade. The
carry trade originated in extremely low Japanese interest rates. Investors and
speculators borrowed Japanese yen at an interest rate of one-half of one
percent, converted the yen to other currencies, and purchased debt instruments
from other countries that pay much higher interest rates. In effect, they were
getting practically free funds from Japan to lend to others paying higher
interest.
The financial crisis has reversed this process. The toxic American derivatives
were marketed worldwide by Wall Street. They have endangered the balance sheets
and solvency of financial institutions throughout the world, including national
governments, such as Iceland and Hungary. Banks and governments that invested
in the troubled American financial instruments found their own debt instruments
in jeopardy.
Those who used yen loans to purchase, for example, debt
instruments from European banks or Icelandic bonds, faced potentially
catastrophic losses. Investors and speculators sold their higher-yielding
financial instruments in a scramble for dollars and yen in order to pay off
their Japanese loans. This drove up the values of the yen and the US dollar,
the reserve currency that can be used to repay debts, and drove down the values
of other currencies.
The dollar’s rise is temporary, and its prospects are bleak.
The US trade deficit will lessen due to less consumer spending during the recession,
but it will remain the largest in the world and one that the US cannot close by
exporting more. The way the US trade deficit is financed is by foreigners
acquiring more dollar assets, with which their portfolios are already heavily
weighted.
The US government’s budget deficit is large and growing,
adding hundreds of billions of dollars more to an already large national debt.
As investors flee equities into US government bills, the market for US
Treasuries will temporarily depend less on foreign governments. Nevertheless,
the burden on foreigners and on world savings of having to finance American
consumption, the US government’s wars and military budget, and the US financial
bailout is increasingly resented.
This resentment, combined with the harm done to America’s
reputation by the financial crisis, has led to numerous calls for a new
financial order in which the US plays a substantially lesser role. “Overcoming the financial crisis” are
code words for the rest of the world’s intent to overthrow US financial
hegemony.
Brazil, Russia, India and China have formed a new group (BRIC) to coordinate their
interests at the November financial summit in Washington, D.C.
On October 28, RIA Novosti reported that
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir
Putin suggested to China that the two countries use their own currencies in
their bilateral trade, thus avoiding the use of the dollar. China’s prime
Minister Wen Jiabao replied that strengthening bilateral relations is
strategic.
Europe has also served notice that it intends to exert a new
leadership role. Four members of the Group of Seven industrial nations, France,
Britain, Germany and Italy, used the financial crisis to call for sweeping
reforms of the world financial system. Jose Manual Barroso, president of the
European Commission, said that a new world financial system is possible only “if Europe has a leadership role.”
Russian president Dmitry Medvedev said that the “economic egoism” of America’s “unipolar vision of the world” is a “dead-end policy.”
China’s massive foreign exchange reserves and its strong
position in manufacturing have given China the leadership role in Asia. The
deputy prime minister of Thailand recently designated the Chinese yuan as “the rightful and anointed convertible
currency of the world.”
Normally, the Chinese are very circumspect in what they say,
but on October 24 Reuters reported
that the People’s Daily, the official government newspaper, in a
front-page commentary accused the US of plundering “global wealth by exploiting the dollar’s dominance.” To correct this
unacceptable situation, the commentary called for Asian and European countries
to “banish the US dollar from their
direct trade relations, relying only on their own currencies.” And this
step, said the commentary, is merely a starting step in overthrowing dollar
dominance.
The Chinese are expressing other thoughts that would get the
attention of a less deluded and arrogant American government. Zhou Jiangong,
editor of the online publication, ChinaStakes.com, recently asked: “Why should China help the US to issue debt
without end in the belief that the national credit of the US can expand without
limit?”
Zhou Jiangong’s solution to American excesses is for China
to take over Wall Street.
China has the money to do it, and the prudent Chinese would
do a better job than the crowd of thieves who have destroyed America’s
financial reputation while exploiting the world in pursuit of multi-million
dollar bonuses.
Paul
Craig Roberts [email
him] was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury during President
Reagan’s first term. He was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal.
He has held numerous academic appointments, including the William E. Simon
Chair, Center for Strategic and International Studies, Georgetown University,
and Senior Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He was
awarded the Legion of Honor by French President Francois Mitterrand. He is the
author of Supply-Side
Revolution : An Insider’s Account of Policymaking in Washington; Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown:
Inside the Soviet Economy, and is the co-author with Lawrence M.
Stratton of The Tyranny of Good Intentions : How
Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name of
Justice. Click here for
Peter Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent
epidemic of prosecutorial misconduct.