Well, where do we go from here?  In how many different directions?

Ed

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November 15, 2010
Sarkozy sets stage for open season on the dollar
By KEVIN CARMICHAEL
>From Monday's Globe and Mail
Those who said nothing happened at the G20 missed the French leader's press 
conference
Those who grumbled that nothing of significance happened at the Group of 20 
summit missed Nicolas Sarkozy's press conference. The French leader said he and 
Chinese President Hu Jintao have come up with a strategy that will ensure much 
of the next 12 months is spent questioning the U.S. dollar's role as the 
world's reserve currency.

Mr. Sarkozy, who took over the G20 presidency at the end of the Seoul meeting 
from Lee Myung-bak, didn't put it quite this way, of course. He started by 
repeating what he has been saying for a while: That his No. 1 agenda item will 
be an examination of the international monetary system. Then the new twist: Mr. 
Hu, who visited Mr. Sarkozy before the summit, had agreed to host a "seminar" 
on the subject under the G20 banner in the spring.

The symbolism of China hosting a major gathering to discuss currency policy is 
impossible to miss. In March, 2009, Zhou Xiaochuan, the governor of China's 
central bank, proposed replacing the dollar as the reserve currency with the 
Special Drawing Right, or SDR, a little-used unit of exchange run by the 
International Monetary Fund. (The IMF bases the SDR's value on a basket of the 
dollar, euro, pound and yen.) Mr. Zhou's suggestion created a stir as investors 
wondered if China was getting ready to abandon the dollar. Now, thanks to Mr. 
Sarkozy, Mr. Zhou will get to organize an entire conference on the subject with 
the world's currency traders watching in rapt attention. There will be 
fireworks.

In Seoul, G20 leaders agreed to "build a more stable and resilient 
international monetary system," which Mr. Sarkozy presented as evidence that 
he's not alone in looking for a better way to organize global currency policy.

"Two years ago, people looked at us like we were weird," Mr. Sarkozy said, 
referring to the French government's criticism since the financial crisis of 
excessive volatility in foreign exchange markets. "Now the G20 is agreed that 
we have to improve our world order."

Many will scoff and sneer at all of this. Back when the smaller group of seven 
advanced economies was running the show, former officials will snidely say they 
had to put up with talk of overhauling the monetary order once every seven 
years when France's turn came to set the agenda.

Mr. Sarkozy likely won't recreate the talks held in Bretton Woods, New 
Hampshire, in 1944 that established a system of fixed exchange rates to the 
dollar, which was in turn pegged to gold. But it would be wrong to assume talk 
of changing the international monetary system will go away when Mr. Sarkozy's 
presidency does.

The U.S. system of government is proving incapable of delivering the sound 
economic policy necessary to ensure that the dollar's value remains stable. The 
biggest reason the Federal Reserve is proceeding with its dollar-weakening 
strategy of creating money to buy financial assets is because Congress is 
incapable of doing anything to address the country's unacceptably high 
unemployment rate. A critical mass of fast-growing economies is rightly asking 
why policy makers and politicians in Washington should have such an outsized 
role in determining the well-being of sovereign countries.

What is unclear is where all this will lead. The U.S. isn't going to give up 
the advantages of controlling the world's most used currency without a fight.

There will be lots of talk of creating a new reserve currency. World Bank 
president Robert Zoellick already has launched the first salvo, proposing last 
a week a SDR-like unit that would include the yuan in the reference basket and 
have some link to the price of gold. This talk tends to forget that businesses 
and individuals will ultimately have to agree to accept the use of a new unit 
of exchange.

Ousmène Mandeng of London-based Ashmore Investment Management, who is a former 
IMF official, proposes a simpler solution: competition. The failure of "Bretton 
Woods II" is that too few countries are willing to play by the rules. Mr. 
Mandeng proposes changing the incentive to follow good economic policies by 
forcing governments to compete for the role of reserve currency. The G20 could 
encourage greater use of as many as a dozen currencies for global exchange, 
perhaps by instructing central banks to diversify their reserves. Mr. Mandeng 
reckons this would force U.S. politicians to take their deficit and debt more 
seriously because they could no longer rely on heavy demand for Treasuries to 
keep borrowing costs low.

Other ideas will emerge, including from the emerging-market governments that 
are so eager to change the system. The short-term winners will be currency 
traders, who thrive on volatility.

The price of gold jumped after Mr. Zoellick's proposal appeared in the 
Financial Times on Monday as some investors bet the metal is on track to return 
as a base for international exchange rates. Gold fell later in the week when 
Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney dismissed that idea.

Millions made and lost as the result of a simple op-ed in a newspaper. And Mr. 
Sarkozy has barely got started. It's going to be a wild year.


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