Bush’s Dollar Drop Maps Loss of U.S. Clout at Final G-8 Summit

James G. Neuger
Bloomberg
June 3, 2008

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aH0_cYGS8Avc&refer=home

When President George W. Bush went to his first Group of Eight summit in 
2001, a dominant issue was the dollar — the strong dollar, that is. The 
U.S. currency was on a record-setting streak, and the free-marketeering 
president wasn’t going to stand in the way.

On the eve of Bush’s last G-8 appearance, the dollar’s gyrations are 
again in the crossfire. This time, it is a weak currency, upended by 
slumping growth, a housing recession and record gas prices, that is 
gnawing away at the world economy.

The dollar’s 41 percent drop against the euro during Bush’s term writes 
the economic epitaph of an administration that set out to restore 
American preeminence. Instead, Bush heads to Japan next week for his 
final international summit with diminished leverage as Russian and 
Chinese influence grows.

“Between the economic duress facing the United States and the global 
community at large and the fact that the clock is running out on the 
Bush administration, Bush does not hold a good hand,” said Charles 
Kupchan, an international-relations professor at Georgetown University 
in Washington. He called the summit a “damage-limitation” exercise to 
show the world that governments are trying to contain food and oil prices.
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