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What Nobody's Saying:
The Bailout Will Kill the Dollar

By Dave Lindorff
Created Sep 22 2008 - 3:56pm

What nobody in the corporate media is mentioning amid all the 
blather about the $700-billion Paulson bailout proposal is the 
impact it will have on the US dollar.

We are told that this huge gift to the financial sector--the 
assumption, at top dollar, of all the bad debt they've piled 
up--will be at taxpayer expense, but that's only the half of it. 
(Really only the quarter of it because since the US government is 
technically bankrupt already, spending more than it takes in each 
year, all that money will be borrowed, and will be added to the 
national debt, meaning that just as the real cost of the 
$500-billion Iraq War is closer to $2 trillion, the real cost of the 
$700 billion bailout will be more like $1.5-2.5 trillion.)

But besides the direct bill handed to taxpayers for this gigantic 
con, there is the fact that adding that much to the national debt is 
also going to drive the dollar down precipitously against foreign 
currencies. We're already seeing that happen, even while they're 
just talking about the bailout. The dollar is falling against all 
major currencies--the Euro, the Yen, the Renminbi and the British 
pound. And it will continue to fall as the details of the bailout 
come out.

This will add to already powerful pressures in countries like Saudi 
Arabia and China, which hold huge quantities of US dollars and US 
dollar-denominated debt, to shift out of dollars and into other 
currencies--particularly the Euro and the Yen. Last week, an article 
in China's /People's Daily/, which like /Pravda/ in the old Soviet 
Union, is the official voice of the leadership in China, called for 
just such a move. Russia is also calling for an end to the dollar as 
the underpinning of the global economy.

For some years now, many economists have been predicting an end to 
the dollar as the world's reserve currency, but this latest plan by 
the US Treasury will push such a shift forward from "some day" to 
"now."

As long as the dollar has been the reserve currency--the currency in 
which key commodities like gold or oil were priced, and the currency 
that exporting nations stocked in their treasuries as a store of 
value - it was protected against collapse. But once it loses that 
status, there will be nothing to prop it up any longer, and it will 
quickly slide to a value that it deserves. We got an inkling of what 
is going to happen today, as crude oil prices leapt in the short 
time it took me to research and write this essay (less than an 
hour!) by 25%, the biggest jump in the history of the oil market. 
This timely vindication of my point was purely a move caused by loss 
of confidence in the dollar. There was no oil supply disruption. In 
fact, demand for oil has been sinking as the economic crisis grows. 
Oil producers and traders simply realized that the dollar is going 
poof, so they radically jacked up the cost of oil in dollars.

If you want to see what where the dollar is headed, look to the 
currencies of the debtor nations--countries like Mexico or perhaps 
Mozambique. A nation that makes almost nothing, and that imports 
most of its needs, cannot have a strong currency.

This might not matter much if we had a functioning domestic economy, 
where people could find the goods and services they needed without 
turning to sources from abroad. A big country like the US could 
simply turn inward and function on by its own domestic economic 
standards.

I remember back when the former Soviet Union was in a state of 
economic and political free fall in the early and mid 1990s, the 
currencies of the constituent countries, like Russia, Ukraine and 
Belarus had collapsed to virtual worthlessness on the international 
market. A Byelorussian friend, an engineering professor from Minsk, 
living and working near me in China at the time, explained that 
although when he traveled the world, he felt like a pauper, things 
weren't so bad back home in Belarus, where he and his family would 
go in the summer. "My apartment only costs a few dollars a month to 
rent," he explained, "and our food is bought on the local market 
using rubles, so it is very affordable." The same was true for other 
needs, like clothing and books for school, he explained. The only 
problem was buying gas for his Russian Volga. "Gas," he explained, 
"is priced as an international commodity, so it takes me one month's 
wages in Belarus to buy the gas to drive once to and from our 
country dacha."

You can start to see the problem. Since agriculture has been killed 
off in most of the US, in favor of giant agribusiness enterprises 
situated in the western part of the country and some parts of the 
Midwest, most people elsewhere will not have local produce 
available, and the cost of transporting food from California to 
places like New York or Pennsylvania will be prohibitive once the 
dollar collapses, since oil is priced internationally. Meanwhile, 
goods like TV sets, computers, phones, cars (or at least the key 
components of cars), clothing, etc., are no longer even made in the 
US, and will thus be completely unaffordable. As for the service 
jobs that are supposed to have replaced our old manufacturing 
sector, no one will be interested in buying what they're offering, 
because they'll be scrimping just to buy the key staples they need 
to survive, so of course joblessness will soar.

Eventually, of course, entrepreneurially minded people will begin 
establishing local farms again where they once flourished 
generations ago, and small factories will be built to provide key 
essentials, but all this will take time, and will have to cater to a 
market of people operating at a much lower standard of living.

The banking sector, meanwhile, which is the proximate cause of this 
monumental disaster, won't mind any of this, for it will continue 
operating on the international stage, shifting its focus to lending 
money (no longer dollars, though), to growing economies in Asia and 
Latin America and eastern Europe. And this is what, in truth, the 
"rescue" of Wall Street is all about.

It's not about saving Main Street, as Paulson claims. Main Street, 
under the bailout, is toast. It's about helping the banks and 
investment banks and insurance companies that brought on this crisis 
to ride it out in style, their astronomical losses bankrolled or 
absorbed by the American public, so that they can shift their 
operations overseas and continue with their rape and pillage of the 
global economy.

The US will be left behind, a smoking ruin, with Americans, like 
Weimar Germans before them, going shopping with wheelbarrows full of 
worthless green paper to exchange for a few days' groceries.
_______

About author

Dave Lindorff is the author of . His new book of columns titled " 
<<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1567512283/thesmirkingchimp>http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1567512283/thesmirkingchimp";
 
is published by Common Courage Press. Lindorff's new book is " 
<<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1567512984/thesmirkingchimp>http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1567512984/thesmirkingchimp,";
 
co-authored by Barbara Olshansky. 
<<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0312360169/thesmirkingchimp>http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0312360169/thesmirkingchimp=

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