-Caveat Lector-

THE TIMES
November 22, 2004

The avalanche is coming
William Rees-Mogg

It happened before; it might happen again. The dollar could pitch the world
into financial catastrophe

ARE WE going to be drowned in an avalanche of cheap dollars? On Friday the
dollar closed at €1.303, almost exactly the lowest level in the lifetime of
the euro. Gold closed at $4.47 an ounce, the highest level in 16 years. How
worried ought we to be about this exceptional weakness of the dollar? The
reason for the weakness has been the continuing rise in the external deficit
of the United States, now nearly 6 per cent of the US gross domestic
product.
In Washington, the Administration does not seem to be much concerned. The
President’s response was to raise the US Government’s debt limit to $8,180
billion. In his first term he has raised expenditure and cut taxes to an
extreme degree. Real expenditure during his presidency has risen by an
annual average of 5.1 per cent, compared with 1.5 per cent under President
Clinton.
The Federal Reserve is becoming extremely anxious. Alan Greenspan, the
chairman, is an outstanding central banker, whom we ought to take very
seriously. He gives a warning that the US current account deficit is
unsustainable. The deficit has now risen to the point where the US has to
borrow almost £2 billion a day. Mr Greenspan thinks that foreign investors
may go on strike because they have too many dollars already. He would like
to see a reduction in the US budget deficit in order to reduce the external
deficit. That, however, would mean deflationary policies, and President Bush
does not like deflation.
The problem is not a new one. It is based on the structural weakness of the
world’s leading currency, whichever that might be. In the 1920s the key
currency was sterling, but the pound had been weakened by Britain’s
financial losses in the First World War. London was still the centre of the
world exchange system, and Britain still had great, though declining, power
to borrow. Eventually, Britain could not take the strain and had to abandon
the gold standard in 1931. The slump of the 1930s followed.
As early as the 1960s the French were complaining that the dollar was
following the same track. In 1965 Jacques Rueff, President de Gaulle’s
economic adviser, gave an interview to the American financial writer Fred
Hirsch. Rueff pointed out that “when a country with a key currency has a
deficit in its balance of payment — that is to say, the United States, for
example — it pays the creditor country dollars, which end up with its
central bank. But the dollars are of no use in Bonn, or in Tokyo, or in
Paris. The very same day, they are all re-lent to the New York money market,
so that they return to their place of origin . . . if I had an agreement
with my tailor that whatever money I pay him he returns to me the very same
day as a loan, I would have no objection at all to ordering more suits from
him.”
Of course, the main centre that now sells and lends back is Beijing. Six
years after the Rueff interview, the Bretton Woods system of dollar-gold
convertibility did break down. President Nixon ended the US commitment to
exchange dollars for gold.
There followed the great world inflation of the 1970s and early 1980s. Rueff
was right to warn that by 1965 the Bretton Woods system had reached “such a
degree of absurdity that no human brain having the power to reason can
defend it”.
Since 1971 the dollar has been in an unusual and vulnerable position. It is
a dominant, but inconvertible, currency. Such a currency is always at a
disadvantage. All the other currencies face the full discipline of the
market. If their governments run big budget deficits, the price of the
currency will fall. Their exporters must be successful; their imports cannot
be excessive. There is still some market discipline on the dominant
currency, but that discipline has weakened and needs to be reinforced with
self-discipline. The process by which suppliers sell to the dominant
country — and then immediately re-lend the proceeds — buffers the impact of
normal competition. The politicians of the dominant country can behave with
relative irresponsibility, and they usually do. For this reason, a dominant
currency tends to become cumulatively less competitive. A dominant currency
is likely to become a weak currency as there will be too much of it — the
position of the dollar today.
The dominant nation is also likely to accumulate debt, on an horrific scale.
This is like the situation that precedes an avalanche. More and more loose
snow gathers, until there is a huge overhang. At some point, which cannot be
predicted exactly, the appetite for the dominant currency is sated, and
people want to sell. Then fear sets in; the avalanche is upon us.
The gold price is a good index of currency fears; if people believe that the
dollar is an overvalued currency but lack confidence in other currencies,
gold is a natural reinsurance. The gold price has risen in the past three
years by about two thirds. The warning signal is quite clear, even though
world trade in general is still flourishing.
In the 20th century this decline of a dominant currency happened twice.
Sterling declined between 1914 and 1931 and the gold exchange system
collapsed. The dollar declined between 1960 and 1970, and Bretton Woods
collapsed. The dollar was restored by aggressive deflation in the period
around 1980, but it is again in serious decline. It is not clear how the
present exchange system of floating non-convertible currencies can be
restructured.
The present system depends on the dollar, the keystone of the arch. Without
confidence in the dollar, the world has no valid reserve currency. The euro
lacks political strength, if nothing else, and itself seems overvalued; the
Chinese renminbi is tied to the dollar.
If confidence is not restored, there will be pressure for the familiar false
remedies, for competitive devaluation or protectionism. Already the exports
of the eurozone are being undermined by dollar competition. Yet the world
exchange crisis is being treated as everybody’s problem and therefore nobody’s.













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