THE NEW WORLD DISORDER

Goodbye U.S. dollar, hello global currency
CFR chief: Monetary nationalism, sovereignty should be abandoned

Posted: May 9, 2007
1:00 a.m. Eastern

By Jerome R. Corsi
© 2007 WorldNetDaily.com


The director of international economics at the Council of Foreign 
Relations has launched a scathing attack on sovereignty and national 
currencies.

Benn Steil, writing in the current issue of CFR's influential Foreign 
Affairs magazine, says "the world needs to abandon unwanted currencies, 
replacing them with dollars, euros, and multinational currencies as yet 
unborn."

In the article, "The End of National Currency," Steil clearly asserts 
the dollar and the euro are temporary currencies, perhaps necessary 
today. He argues "economic development outside the process of 
globalization is no longer possible."

His inevitable conclusion is "countries should abandon monetary 
nationalism."


Steil tempers his embrace of one world currency, writing, "Governments 
should replace national currencies with the dollar or the euro or, in 
the case of Asia, collaborate to produce a new multinational currency 
over a comparably large and economically diversified area."

He concludes: "It is the market that made the dollar into global money – 
and what the market giveth, the market can taketh away. If the tailors 
balk and the dollar falls, the market may privatize money on its own."

The "tailors" Steil has in mind are the world's central bankers. He 
advises that the U.S. needs "to perpetuate the sound money policies of 
former Federal Reserve chairmen Paul Volker and Alan Greenspan and 
return to long-term fiscal discipline." In our current era of large and 
growing trade imbalances and over $35 trillion in GAAP (Generally 
Accepted Accounting Principles) accounted federal deficits, these 
targets appear unlikely.

Steil concludes "the foreign tailors, with their massive and growing 
holdings of dollar debt" no longer feel "wealthy and secure" in the 
economic environment of a resultant falling dollar. The inevitable 
conclusion is that the dollar, too, may be on the way out.

Steil's essay is antagonistic to the ideas of sovereignty and national 
currencies.

He writes, "The right course is not to return to a mythical past of 
monetary sovereignty, with governments controlling local interest and 
exchange rates in blissful ignorance of the rest of the world. 
Governments must let go of the fatal notion that nationhood requires 
them to make and control the money used in their territory."

Steil has ultimate confidence that economic globalism is irreversible, 
with national currencies doomed to the dustbin of history.

"In order to globalize safely," he advises, "countries should abandon 
monetary nationalism and abolish unwanted currencies, the source of much 
of today's instability."

Steil believes continued economic growth demands a global flow of 
capital unimpeded by the barriers inherent to "monetary nationalism." He 
asserts barriers created by monetary nationalism, such as national 
exchange rates or national monetary policy regimes, inevitably impede 
capital flow and cause currency crises as a consequence.

Steil fundamentally argues, "Monetary nationalism is simply incompatible 
with globalism."

Since Steil believes that only globalism offers the unrestrained flow of 
capital needed for worldwide economic development, he contends even 
re-establishing a gold standard would be counter-productive when the 
only real solution is to abandon the idea that nations have any reason 
to create currencies at all.

Throughout his analysis, Steil cautions that dependence upon the dollar 
or the euro as global currencies is not fundamental to his argument.

He stresses that "the dollar's privileged status as today's global money 
is not heaven-bestowed. The dollar is ultimately just another money 
supported only by faith that others will willingly accept it in the 
future in return for the same sort of valuable things it bought in the 
past."

In other words, if the institutions of the U.S. government fail to 
validate that faith, the dollar, too, merits being abandoned.

"Reckless U.S. fiscal policy is undermining the dollar's position even 
as the currency's role as a global money is expanding," he notes.

Steil imagines the ultimate solution is to privatize a global currency 
through a gold-based international monetary system.

"A new gold-based international monetary system surely sounds 
far-fetched," he concludes. "But so, in 1900 did a monetary system 
without gold. Modern technology makes a revival of gold money, through 
private gold banks, possible even without government support."

WND previously reported Steve Previs, a vice president at Jeffries 
International Ltd., in London, told CNBC Nov. 27, 2006, the amero "is 
the proposed new currency for the North American Community which is 
being developed right now between Canada, the U.S., and Mexico."

A video clip of the CNBC interview with Jeffries is now available for 
viewing at YouTube.com.

WND also has reported a continued slide in the value of the dollar on 
world currency markets could set up conditions in which the adoption of 
the amero as a North American currency gains momentum.

The amero was first proposed as a North American unitary currency by 
Canadian economist Herbert G. Grubel of the Fraser Institute in 
Vancouver, British Columbia.

In a publication entitled "The Case for the Amero," Grubel argued that a 
North American monetary union would eliminate the costs of currency 
trading and risk, furthering the development of a North American common 
market along the model of the European Common Market.

Robert Pastor, director of the Center for North American Studies at 
American University, supported Grubel's arguments for the amero.

In his 2001 book entitled Toward a North American Community, Pastor 
supported Grubel's suggestion that the creation of the amero would be 
accompanied by the creation of a Central Bank of North America, similar 
to the European Central Bank.

Grubel's argument on the amero has also been published as a book in 
Spanish, entitled El Amero: Una Moneda Comun para Améica del Norte, 
published by CIDAC (Centro de Investigación para el Desarrollo), the 
Center for Research for Development in Mexico.

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