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Former Fed Officials: Dollar To Remain World Reserve Currency This Decade

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  • Former Fed Officials: Dollar To Remain World Reserve Currency This Decade

    http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-...31-716661.html
    By Luca Di Leo

    DOW JONES NEWSWIRES WASHINGTON (Dow Jones)--The U.S. dollar will still be the world's dominant currency for at least the next decade, said three former top officials at the Federal Reserve, including former Fed Vice Chairman Donald Kohn. In separate interviews, Kohn and former Fed Governors Laurence Meyer and Randall Kroszner stressed that forecasting currency rates is often akin to reading entrails. But they still offered some well-educated guesses of what could happen in foreign exchange markets in 2011.

    1. The euro-dollar exchange rate will end up around the current $1.35 level at the end of the year.

    2. The Chinese yuan could appreciate at a stronger pace against the dollar in 2011 compared to previous years amid government efforts to keep inflation under control, but investors must be aware that this is a risky bet.

    3. There will be no U.S. sovereign debt rating cut this year, even though the country's fiscal woes could weigh on the dollar slightly.

    4. The U.S. dollar is likely to continue getting a boost from the protests in Egypt as investors flock to its perceived safety, but the longer-run consequences from unrest in the Middle East are harder to predict -- and could be dire.

    "The dollar will continue to be a reserve currency for decades to come," said Kohn, who retired in September 2010 after 40 years at the U.S. central bank. Meyer, 66 and a member of the Fed's Board of Governors from 1996 to 2002, is certain the dollar will still be the dominant currency in his "lifetime" because there are no valid alternatives.

    Kroszner, a University of Chicago professor who was a member of the Fed board from 2006 to 2009, was the only one of the three to underline the potential challenge to the U.S. from China within the next 10 years, but noted it will be hard for China to win investors' confidence by liberalizing capital markets and improving the rule of law.

    Given the large and rapidly growing size of the Chinese economy and the country's enhanced role in world trade, the yuan is seen by some observers as a plausible candidate for reserve-currency status like the dollar and the euro -- albeit in the distant future. The U.S. dollar's share of global foreign-exchange reserves stood at 62.2% in 2009, according to the International Monetary Fund. The euro was second with 27.3%.

    Kohn, now at the Brookings Institution think tank in Washington, said if he were a reserve manager, he'd be "cautious with the euro right now" given the ongoing sovereign debt woes in the continent. But he believes Europe's single currency will still be around in a couple of decades because the political will to make it survive is very strong.

    Asked where he sees euro-dollar at the end of 2011, Kohn said "around current levels." The euro moved higher Monday, just below $1.37, as investors speculated that rising euro-zone inflation will soon lead to higher interest rates in the 17-nation currency bloc. Given currencies are so hard to predict, the best guess is to take the current rate, Kohn said.

    Meyer, now a private forecaster and consultant at Macroeconomic Advisers, reached the same conclusion, but offered an explanation: The dollar should benefit against the euro because the U.S. economy will grow twice as fast as Europe's this year. But that will be offset by the inflatio-wary European Central Bank raising rates before the Fed does, making euro zone assets more attractive. Kroszner subscribed to this view, predicting the euro will end the year in the "$1.30-$1.40 range."

    "I'd favor currencies that are being held down artificially" such as the yuan, Kohn said. "But you'd have to find a way around capital controls," he added. To prevent inflation from spiking higher, China will likely tighten monetary policy this year and let its currency move higher, he said. Kroszner also saw this as a likely outcome, but cautioned it's a "risky bet" because the currency appreciation in China could turn out to be "disorderly."

    The U.S. dollar may come under pressure later this year if no steps are taken to reduce the country's high public debt, but rating agencies likely won't cut the U.S. sovereign debt rating -- and no fiscal crisis is anticipated this year by the three former central bank officials.

    Kohn said is cautiously optimistic that some "baby steps" will be taken in 2011 to address the U.S. fiscal woes, such as raising the retirement age. Meyer was more pessimistic and warned: "If the problems get solved in Europe, then attention will turn to the U.S."

    Once the flight-to-quality boost to the dollar from the Egypt protests end, it's anyone's guess what will happen to currencies next from Middle East developments. Kohn offered one dire prediction: If the revolts spread and bring about Islamic rule similar to Iran's in several Arab countries, that would lead to a sharp rise in oil prices -- which would hurt the U.S. economy and the dollar.

    -By Luca Di Leo, Dow Jones Newswires; 202-862-6682; luca.dileo@dowjones.com

  • #2
    Re: Former Fed Officials: Dollar To Remain World Reserve Currency This Decade



    As long as the US can afford to do this, the bonar is "safe"

    Can it afford not to ....

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Former Fed Officials: Dollar To Remain World Reserve Currency This Decade

      Meyer, 66 and a member of the Fed's Board of Governors from 1996 to 2002, is certain the dollar will still be the dominant currency in his "lifetime" because there are no valid alternatives.
      fwiw, a 66yo american male has a life expectancy of 15.96 years.

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      • #4
        Re: Former Fed Officials: Dollar To Remain World Reserve Currency This Decade

        Amusing anecdote, but pointless.

        Kohn and Meyer making these statements is exactly identical to banksters saying FIRE is what drives the economy.

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        • #5
          Re: Former Fed Officials: Dollar To Remain World Reserve Currency This Decade

          The US government has long corrupted Arab governments by paying rulers installed by the US to represent US/Israeli interests rather than the interest of Arab peoples. Arabs put up with American-financed oppression for many years, but now are showing signs of rebellion.

          The murderous American-installed dictator in Tunis was overthrown by people taking to the streets. Rebellion has spread to Egypt and there are also street protests against the US-supported rulers in Yemen and Jordan.

          These uprisings might succeed in ousting puppet rulers, but will the result be anything more than the exchange of a new American puppet ruler for the old? Mubarak might go, but whoever takes his place is likely to find himself wearing the same American harness.

          What dictators do is to eliminate alternative leadership. Potential leaders are either assassinated, exiled, or imprisoned. Moreover, anything short of a full-fledge revolution, such as the Iranian one, leaves in place a bureaucracy accustomed to business as usual. In addition, Egypt and the country's military have grown accustomed to American support and will want the money to keep flowing. It is the flow of this money that ensures the purchase of the replacement government.

          Because the US dollar is the world reserve currency, the US government has financial dominance and the ability to financially isolate other countries, such as Iran. To break free of America's grip, one of two things would have to happen. Revolution would have to sweep the Arab world and result in an economic unity that could foster indigenous economic development, or the US dollar has to fail as world currency.

          Arab disunity has long been the means by which the Western countries have dominated the Middle East. Without this disunity, Israel and the US could not abuse the Palestinians in the manner in which they have for decades, and without this disunity the US could not have invaded Iraq. It is unlikely that the Arabs will suddenly unite themselves.

          The collapse of the dollar is more likely. Indeed, the policy of the US government to maximize both budget and trade deficits, and the policy of the Federal Reserve to monetize the budget deficit and the fraudulent paper assets of the large banks, have the dollar heading for demise.

          As the supply of dollars grows, the value diminishes. Perhaps the time is not far off when rulers cease to sell out their peoples for American money.

          Paul Craig Roberts was an editor of the Wall Street Journal and an Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Treasury.

          http://www.counterpunch.org/roberts02012011.html

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          • #6
            Re: Former Fed Officials: Dollar To Remain World Reserve Currency This Decade

            Perhaps the process is already happening ... Fed money printing leads to commodity inflation leads to food price pressure leads to revolution in Egypt?

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            • #7
              Re: Former Fed Officials: Dollar To Remain World Reserve Currency This Decade

              It would seem so, at least a major contributor. I think that they have sealed all of our fates with the quotes above. How do you ensure something won't happen? Announce it publicly.

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              • #8
                Re: Former Fed Officials: Dollar To Remain World Reserve Currency This Decade

                Originally posted by unlucky View Post
                Perhaps the process is already happening ... Fed money printing leads to commodity inflation leads to food price pressure leads to revolution in Egypt?
                i posted a piece by comrade kuppy on this very point in the egypt thread.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Former Fed Officials: Dollar To Remain World Reserve Currency This Decade

                  Originally posted by don View Post
                  ...Arab disunity has long been the means by which the Western countries have dominated the Middle East. Without this disunity, Israel and the US could not abuse the Palestinians in the manner in which they have for decades, and without this disunity the US could not have invaded Iraq. It is unlikely that the Arabs will suddenly unite themselves.

                  ...
                  He forgot to mention that "Arab disunity" is also the means by which the Ruling Families have dominated their individual Kingdoms and Emirates in this region. As folks in the West just re-discovered, even the Arab "democracies", such as Egypt, have their Ruling Families. Pan-Arabism is a much over-rated commodity...

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