Forward  fom mart.
 
Capitalism in Crises!
1) "U.S. Dollar Dangles In The Dust"
2) "Japan Threatens Huge Dollar Sell Off!"


A joke currently making the rounds in Canadian 
financial circles:

"Someone mentioned the other day that they wanted to convert their American 
dollars back into Canadian funds, before they were 'worth less'. I merely asked 
if 'worth less' was one word or two.  Instead of an answer, I just got a very 
scared 'deer in the headlights' look and then he took off running for the 
bank!!!" <grin>

mart


===================================================

----- Original Message ----- 
From: dionisio camacho 
Sent: Saturday, December 04, 2004 10:35 PM
Subject: [VSCampaign] u.s. economy going to shit.

1) U.S. Dollar Dangles In The Dust

2) Japan Threatens Huge U.S. Dollar Sell Off

============================================
1)
http://feeds.bignewsnetwork.com/?sid=191c7b9599f51f92

Big News Network
Sunday 5th December, 2004

U.S. dollar dangles in the dust    


By Paul Heise     Saturday 4th December, 2004  

The talk on the street -- Wall Street -- is all about the falling U.S. dollar. 


It now takes $1.34 to buy one euro when, four years ago, you could buy one euro 
for 82 cents. Why is this happening, and do we have a problem? 


The dollar is falling because America is spending too much and saving too 
little. The rest of the world is lending America almost their entire savings so 
that it can cut taxes, have wars of choice and continue it's binge consumption 
on their goods. 


The U.S. is living off the world's savings, and the falling dollar shows it is 
tiring of it all. 


While it is costing more, a lot more, for Americans to travel abroad, that is 
trivial. Long run, we could see a a fall-of-Rome type meltdown of the dollar 
and the whole financial system. That is not trivial. 


We have been here before. As in 1972, America is bogged down in an uncertain 
war in Asia, the national debt is soaring and America is buying internationally 
far more than it can pay for. The U.S. now owes the rest of the world a net 
$2.6 trillion, an increase of $1 trillion in the last four years. 


In 1972, the outflow of dollars led to the collapse of the international 
financial system, with exploding interest rates and runaway inflation. We had 
stagflation for the rest of the decade. 


It is all happening again, only this time it will be much worse because America 
and the dollar are far more important than they were then. This time, the 
dollar could also collapse. 


The dollar has become the world's currency. Foreign governments hold $2 
trillion in dollar assets as reserves. The dollar is also the medium of 
exchange for all world sales in oil and most commodities. A large portion of 
world exports are denominated in dollars. No one has any idea how many dollars 
are actually out there sloshing around the world. 


We do know that the total is increasing at the rate of $600 billion a year. 
America is undermining the world's currency like it was the peso of some banana 
republic. 


Alan Greenspan, chairman of the Federal Reserve, has acknowledged that at some 
point this outflow has to end. He has even said that if you don't hedge a 
long-term falling dollar, you want to lose money. 


But it isn't just Greenspan and Wall Street. Russian President Vladimir Putin 
announced that Russia is likely to switch some of its reserves from dollars to 
euros. The Japanese and Chinese central bank authorities talk about 
'flexibility,' and the dollar drops another notch because they mean they may 
stop supporting the dollar. Individual Chinese investors are lining up to dump 
dollars. 


Up until 2001, foreigners saw America as a good place to lend money because 
they thought they would get a good return. Since then, private investors began 
to have doubts. They cut their lending, and Asian governments, for political 
and not profitability reasons, took up the slack. The Chinese and other Asian 
exporters did this because they did not want to see a weak dollar. 


Put yourself in the place of the Chinese. They want to sell their clothing, 
trinkets and TVs as exports to the United States because that creates jobs in 
their economy. A weakening dollar means Chinese goods become more expensive in 
America. Exports from China to America could drop sharply, and China would go 
into a recession. 


The Chinese are avoiding a recession and perhaps a worldwide depression by 
buying up excess dollars and thereby supporting the value of the dollar. The 
fate of the United States, and the fate of the world, is in the hands of the 
Chinese. 

The Chinese central bank and the U.S. Federal Reserve are in what has been 
called a dance of death, in that sometime there has to be a reckoning. The 
dollar has to fall; the question is how far and how fast. The longer we wait, 
the worse it will be. 


The world waited on the presidential election. Now the president has specified 
his priorities for his second term, and he made no strong statement about 
getting the U.S.'s financial house in order. Rather, he proposed a Social 
Security plan that will require an extra trillion dollars of borrowing, a tax 
reform that is revenue neutral and tax cuts made permanent. The world is not 
reassured. 


The real difference is that in 1972, there was no alternative to the dollar. 
Now there is the euro. People who do not want to lose money are hedging -- 
selling dollars and buying euros. When everyone agrees that there is one side 
of the boat to be on, everyone has a problem. 

----------------------------------------------

The writer , Paul Heise, a resident of Mt. Gretna, holds a Ph.D. in economics 
and is professor emeritus of economics at Lebanon Valley College. He can be 
reached at: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 


=========================================
2)
http://www.guardian.co.uk/usa/story/0,12271,1366585,00.html

The Guardian (UK)
Sunday, December 5, 2004

Japan threatens huge dollar 
sell-off 

Heather Stewart in Tokyo
Sunday December 5, 2004
The Observer 

Japan is warning the White House that there will be 'enormous capital flight' 
from the dollar if the Bush administration maintains its laissez-faire approach 
to the mounting currency crisis. 
Tokyo fears that Japan's strongest economic recovery in a decade could be 
derailed by the sudden appreciation in the yen against the greenback. 


The criticism of President Bush's inaction, by a senior member of the ruling 
Liberal Democratic Party, will be taken as a veiled threat that Japan could 
start to sell off its multi-billion-dollar holdings of US Treasuries. 'The 
Japanese government is going to ask for a strong dollar policy; if it continues 
to fall, there would be enormous capital flight from the dollar,' said Kaoru 
Yosano, chairman of the LDP's policy council, adding that Japan would be 
calling on its fellow G7 governments to demand the US deal with the massive 
fiscal deficit that has helped to prompt the dollar's decline. 


Yosano's remarks echoed a warning from a senior Japanese Ministry of Finance 
official that if the US does not push up interest rates to make the dollar more 
attractive, 'the one-way sentiment on the dollar will have a negative impact on 
the flow of capital into the US.' He added that Japan is urging its European 
counterparts to join a campaign of coordinated currency-market intervention, 
saying: 'If the dollar is depreciating, we should have coordinated action: that 
has already been communicated to my European counterparts.' 


Like Japan, the eurozone fears that its tentative recovery could be choked off 
by the fall in the dollar, which European Central Bank president Jean-Claude 
Trichet has called 'brutal'. However, the ECB has so far dismissed the idea of 
intervening. 


 Japan is taking a double hit from the decline in the dollar because the 
Chinese renminbi is pegged to the US currency, so Japanese exports are 
simultaneously becoming sharply dearer in both their major markets. Takeo 
Fukui, the chairman of Honda, admits, for example, that an appreciation of 1 
yen against the dollar, if it lasts for more than three months, knocks 10 
billion yen off the carmaker's profits. 

===========================================


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