U.S. Dollar in the Crosshairs Ahead of G-20 Summit
http://www.cnsnews.com/public/content/article.aspx?RsrcID=45591

Wednesday, March 25, 2009
By Patrick Goodenough, International Editor

[]

A bank employee prepares banknotes in southwest 
China's Sichuan province on March 21, 2009. China 
is calling for a new global currency to replace 
the dominant dollar. (AP Photo)
(CNSNews.com) – In the run-up to next week’s G-20 
summit in London, developing countries led by 
China and Russia are stepping up calls for the 
U.S. dollar to be pushed aside as the main global reserve currency.

China’s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, 
suggested this week that reforms to the 
international monetary system include the 
long-term goal of an international reserve 
currency not connected to an individual nation. 
China is the biggest holder of U.S. dollar assets 
and is concerned about the currency’s volatility.

A few days earlier, the Russian government put 
forward among its G-20 summit priorities a 
proposal for the International Monetary Fund 
(IMF) to explore the possibility of creating a 
“super reserve currency accepted by the whole of 
the international community.” Russia said the 
proposal had broad support among other emerging 
economic powers, including Brazil, India and South Korea.

The Kremlin said its proposal could be pursued 
either through the creation of a new global 
reserve currency or through the use of the IMF’s 
existing Special Drawing Rights (SDR), a reserve 
asset set up in the 1960s and used only by 
governments and some international institutions. 
The SDR is not itself a currency; its value is 
based on a basket of four currencies – the 
dollar, euro, pound sterling and yen.

In his recommendations, which were posted in the 
form of an essay on the bank’s Web site, Zhou 
also cited the SDR, saying it had the features 
and potential to act as a super-sovereign reserve 
currency.  But, he added, “the basket of 
currencies forming the basis for SDR valuation 
should be expanded to include currencies of all major economies.”

China has long been pushing for changes to the 
global financial system, to give a bigger say to 
China and other leading developing economies at 
the world’s financial institutions – a line it is 
expected to hold at the London summit.

According to Xinhua, China’s foreign exchange 
reserves hit a record 1.95 trillion U.S. dollars 
at the end of 2008, the largest in the world. As 
of January, it held U.S. Treasury bonds worth some $740 billion.

Earlier this month, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao 
voiced concern that Washington’s economic 
stimulus efforts could undercut the currency’s value.

Zhou’s proposal was quickly rejected by President 
Obama at Tuesday’s prime-time press conference, 
and by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and 
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke on Capitol Hill earlier in the day.

“I don’t believe that there’s a need for global 
currency,” Obama said, while Geithner and 
Bernanke both replied in the affirmative when 
asked during a congressional hearing whether they 
would “categorically renounce the United States 
moving away from the dollar and going to a global currency.”

The global economic crisis has prompted other 
calls around the world to consider alternatives to a dollar-based system.

A Japanese think tank with government links this 
month proposed the establishment of a common 
Asian currency, on a par with the dollar and euro.

At a summit of the Economic Cooperation 
Organization two weeks ago, Iranian President 
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, declaring the capitalist 
system to be “on the verge of collapse,” 
suggested the adoption of a common currency for 
trade among the 10 members of the Eurasian group, 
which include Turkey, Pakistan and Central Asian republics.

It was not the first time Ahmadinejad had taken a 
swipe at the U.S. currency. He and his Venezuelan 
ally, President Hugo Chavez, have pressed within 
the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 
(OPEC) for oil to be priced against a currency – 
or a basket of currencies – other than the dollar.

Their proposal has come up against opposition within OPEC, led by Saudi Arabia.

Some Gulf oil states, meanwhile, are grappling 
with calls to stop pegging their own currencies 
to the greenback. Kuwait in 2007 became the first to do so.

Leading member states of the Gulf Cooperation 
Council have long planned a common currency for 
the oil-exporting region, although officials this 
week pushed back a 2010 deadline for the launch.


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