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  • Breaking free from Dollar Hegemony

    This is an older article (July 2008); not sure if posted previously. Long article.

    Breaking free from dollar hegemony
    By Henry C K Liu

    The vast expansion of US-led globalized trade since the Cold War ended in 1991 had been fueled by unsustainable serial debt bubbles built on dollar hegemony, which came into existence on a global scale with the emergence of deregulated global financial markets that made cross-border flow of funds routine since the 1990s.

    Dollar hegemony is a geopolitically constructed peculiarity through which critical commodities, the most notable being oil, are denominated in fiat dollars, not backed by gold or other species since then president Richard Nixon took the US dollar off gold in 1971. The recycling of petro-dollars into other dollar assets is the price the US has extracted from oil-producing countries for US tolerance of the oil-exporting cartel since 1973. After that, everyone accepts dollars because dollars can buy oil, and everyeconomy needs oil. Dollar hegemony separates the trade value of every currency from direct connection to the productivity of the issuing economy to link it directly to the size of dollar reserves held by the issuing central bank. Dollar hegemony enables the US to own indirectly but essentially the entire global economy by requiring its wealth to be denominated in fiat dollars that the US can print at will with little in the way of monetary penalties.

    World trade is now a game in which the US produces fiat dollars of uncertain exchange value and zero intrinsic value, and the rest of the world produces goods and services that fiat dollars can buy at "market prices" quoted in dollars. Such market prices are no longer based on mark-ups over production costs set by socio-economic conditions in the producing countries. They are kept artificially low to compensate for the effect of overcapacity in the global economy created by a combination of overinvestment and weak demand due to low wages in every economy.

    Such low market prices in turn push further down already low wages to further cut cost in an unending race to the bottom. The higher the production volume above market demand, the lower the unit market price of a product must go in order to increase sales volume to keep revenue from falling. Lower market prices require lower production costs which in turn push wages lower. Lower wages in turn further reduce demand.

    To prevent loss of revenue from falling prices, producers must produce at still higher volume, thus further lowering market prices and wages in a downward spiral. Export economies are forced to compete for market share in the global market by lowering both domestic wages and the exchange rate of their currencies. Lower exchange rates push up the market price of commodities which must be compensated for by even lower wages. The adverse effects of dollar hegemony on wages apply not only to the emerging export economies but also to the importing US economy. Workers all over the world are oppressed victims of dollar hegemony, which turns the labor theory of value up-side-down.

    In a global market operating under dollar hegemony, the world's interlinked economies no longer trade to capture Ricardian comparative advantage. The theory of comparative advantage as espoused by British economist David Ricardo (1772-1823) asserts that trade can benefit all participating nations, even those that command no absolute advantage, because such nations can still benefit from specializing in producing products with the lowest opportunity cost, which is measured by how much production of another good needs to be reduced to increase production by one additional unit of that good.


    Echoing the Holy Roman Empire, the global economy has been operating as a global Holy Dollar Empire with the Federal Reserve as the Holy Dollar Emperor. Similar to the Holy Roman Empire, which disintegrated from the rise of Lutheran nationalism, this Holy Dollar Empire will eventually disintegrate from progressive centrifugal forces of a new populist economic nationalism. This new nationalism is not to be confused with regressive trade protectionism. The formation of the new Group of Five (G5 - China, Brazil, India, Mexico and South Africa) in the 2008 Group of Eight Summit in Tokyo (G8 - the US, UK, Germany, France, Italy, Japan, Russia and the European Union) is a sign of this new trend of progressive economic nationalism. The 2008 US presidential election may herald in a new populism in US history to reform the structure of US debt capitalism.

    In his speech to the G5 leaders, China's President Hu Jintao said: "It is necessary to take into full account the issue of food security in tackling the challenges in energy, climate change and other fields." Apart from calling for the setting up of an UN-led international co-operation mechanism and a global food-security safeguard system, Hu said all countries should strengthen cooperation in grain reserves, a process of proven success in China but not recommended by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, which views such scheme as a distortion of trade.

    Liberation from this Holy Dollar Empire of dollar hegemony can only come from sovereign nations withdrawing from the global central banking regime to return to a national banking regime within a world order of sovereign nation states to put monetary policy back in its proper role of supporting national development goals, rather than sacrificing national development to support global dollar hegemony through wage-suppressing export-led growth.

    Full article here.

    http://atimes.com/atimes/China_Business/JG30Cb01.html
    Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read. -Groucho

  • #2
    Re: Breaking free from Dollar Hegemony

    Originally posted by Master Shake View Post
    This is an older article (July 2008); not sure if posted previously. Long article.
    This guy writes quite a lot: http://www.henryckliu.com/

    Anyone knows the author background?

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Breaking free from Dollar Hegemony

      Originally posted by Master Shake View Post
      This is an older article (July 2008); not sure if posted previously. Long article.

      Breaking free from dollar hegemony
      By Henry C K Liu

      The vast expansion of US-led globalized trade since the Cold War ended in 1991 had been fueled by unsustainable serial debt bubbles built on dollar hegemony, which came into existence on a global scale with the emergence of deregulated global financial markets that made cross-border flow of funds routine since the 1990s.

      Dollar hegemony is a geopolitically constructed peculiarity through which critical commodities, the most notable being oil, are denominated in fiat dollars, not backed by gold or other species since then president Richard Nixon took the US dollar off gold in 1971. The recycling of petro-dollars into other dollar assets is the price the US has extracted from oil-producing countries for US tolerance of the oil-exporting cartel since 1973. After that, everyone accepts dollars because dollars can buy oil, and everyeconomy needs oil. Dollar hegemony separates the trade value of every currency from direct connection to the productivity of the issuing economy to link it directly to the size of dollar reserves held by the issuing central bank. Dollar hegemony enables the US to own indirectly but essentially the entire global economy by requiring its wealth to be denominated in fiat dollars that the US can print at will with little in the way of monetary penalties.

      World trade is now a game in which the US produces fiat dollars of uncertain exchange value and zero intrinsic value, and the rest of the world produces goods and services that fiat dollars can buy at "market prices" quoted in dollars. Such market prices are no longer based on mark-ups over production costs set by socio-economic conditions in the producing countries. They are kept artificially low to compensate for the effect of overcapacity in the global economy created by a combination of overinvestment and weak demand due to low wages in every economy.

      Such low market prices in turn push further down already low wages to further cut cost in an unending race to the bottom. The higher the production volume above market demand, the lower the unit market price of a product must go in order to increase sales volume to keep revenue from falling. Lower market prices require lower production costs which in turn push wages lower. Lower wages in turn further reduce demand.

      To prevent loss of revenue from falling prices, producers must produce at still higher volume, thus further lowering market prices and wages in a downward spiral. Export economies are forced to compete for market share in the global market by lowering both domestic wages and the exchange rate of their currencies. Lower exchange rates push up the market price of commodities which must be compensated for by even lower wages. The adverse effects of dollar hegemony on wages apply not only to the emerging export economies but also to the importing US economy. Workers all over the world are oppressed victims of dollar hegemony, which turns the labor theory of value up-side-down.

      In a global market operating under dollar hegemony, the world's interlinked economies no longer trade to capture Ricardian comparative advantage. The theory of comparative advantage as espoused by British economist David Ricardo (1772-1823) asserts that trade can benefit all participating nations, even those that command no absolute advantage, because such nations can still benefit from specializing in producing products with the lowest opportunity cost, which is measured by how much production of another good needs to be reduced to increase production by one additional unit of that good.


      Echoing the Holy Roman Empire, the global economy has been operating as a global Holy Dollar Empire with the Federal Reserve as the Holy Dollar Emperor. Similar to the Holy Roman Empire, which disintegrated from the rise of Lutheran nationalism, this Holy Dollar Empire will eventually disintegrate from progressive centrifugal forces of a new populist economic nationalism. This new nationalism is not to be confused with regressive trade protectionism. The formation of the new Group of Five (G5 - China, Brazil, India, Mexico and South Africa) in the 2008 Group of Eight Summit in Tokyo (G8 - the US, UK, Germany, France, Italy, Japan, Russia and the European Union) is a sign of this new trend of progressive economic nationalism. The 2008 US presidential election may herald in a new populism in US history to reform the structure of US debt capitalism.

      In his speech to the G5 leaders, China's President Hu Jintao said: "It is necessary to take into full account the issue of food security in tackling the challenges in energy, climate change and other fields." Apart from calling for the setting up of an UN-led international co-operation mechanism and a global food-security safeguard system, Hu said all countries should strengthen cooperation in grain reserves, a process of proven success in China but not recommended by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization, which views such scheme as a distortion of trade.

      Liberation from this Holy Dollar Empire of dollar hegemony can only come from sovereign nations withdrawing from the global central banking regime to return to a national banking regime within a world order of sovereign nation states to put monetary policy back in its proper role of supporting national development goals, rather than sacrificing national development to support global dollar hegemony through wage-suppressing export-led growth.

      Full article here.

      http://atimes.com/atimes/China_Business/JG30Cb01.html
      H.K.C. Liu's opinion is underpinned by a consistent anti-American tone that [imo] colours him as an objective observer [not that it makes him unique in that regard, mind you].

      For example, from the article posted:
      "...The formation of the new Group of Five (G5 - China, Brazil, India, Mexico and South Africa) in the 2008 Group of Eight Summit in Tokyo (G8 - the US, UK, Germany, France, Italy, Japan, Russia and the European Union) is a sign of this new trend of progressive economic nationalism..."
      "Progressive economic nationalism"? Although I have no doubt each of these new "G5" nations is sincere in pursuing individual economic nationalism, one has to treat one's imagination to impossible contortions to believe that setting up a new talk shop amongst this group is going to accomplish anything "progressive" [other than enrich a few 5-star hotel owners and catering services during the inevitable shrimpfests]

      Is any one of these nations going to pursuade South Africa, the region's undisputed heavyweight, to join with conviction, instead of impeding, diplomatic efforts to deal with Zimbabwe; a situation that is now undermining both the economy and political stability of much of sub-Saharan Africa? Is it even in China's interest to see a constructive resolution of the situation in Zimbabwe?

      Has Brazil, the newly emerged economic heavyweight in Latin America, gained any confidence from it's association in this new international G5? Apparently not, given the beating that Lula just took from the likes of Correa, Chavez and even pipsqueak Nicanor Duarte at their recent summit. Does Mexico, a nation with its own internal political and security issues that are heating up, really want to see it's long dominant and influential Latin American role compromised?

      Then we have:
      "...Liberation from this Holy Dollar Empire of dollar hegemony can only come from sovereign nations withdrawing from the global central banking regime to return to a national banking regime within a world order of sovereign nation states to put monetary policy back in its proper role of supporting national development goals, rather than sacrificing national development to support global dollar hegemony through wage-suppressing export-led growth..."
      to which I would only point out that at the first sign of trouble, China, and damn near every other nation on earth, thundered off down the well-worn trail of currency depreciation against...wait for it...the US Dollar, in order to... "...support global dollar hegemony through wage-suppressing export-led growth..."

      It would appear that, hopes and wishes of the H.K.C. Liu's of the world aside, US Dollar hegemony will be with us for quite some years to come. First, it is clearly more convenient, politically and economically, for other countries to support that long-standing regime, and second, there is no apparent substitute that other nations can collectively agree on. And I am quite certain that the "new G5" will make absolutely zero contribution to correct the latter.
      Last edited by GRG55; December 21, 2008, 01:03 PM.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Breaking free from Dollar Hegemony

        Originally posted by LargoWinch View Post
        This guy writes quite a lot: http://www.henryckliu.com/

        Anyone knows the author background?
        "Henry C K Liu was born in Hong Kong and educated at Harvard University, US, in architecture and urban design. His interest in economics and international relations started when he participated in interdisciplinary work on urban and regional development as a professor at the University of California Los Angeles, Harvard and Columbia. He is currently chairman of a New York-based private investment group..."

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Breaking free from Dollar Hegemony

          He reminds me a bit of Hudson, who blames all the other countries for still supporting this system.

          Predatory Dollar Hegemony

          The exporting economies have been lured into shipping real wealth to the US in exchange for US debt denominated in fiat dollars which cannot be spent in their own domestic economy without monetary penalty and which then must be returned to the US as capital to finance US sovereign debt. The adverse effects of this predatory monetary regime, known as dollar hegemony, differ on economies at different stages of development. But one common effect can be observed clearly: the helpless working poor in all trading economies around the world, who had no voice in economic, trade and monetary policymaking, did not benefit throughout the phantom boom phase from trade globalization and are now suffering the most in these days of reckoning when the boom bust.

          http://henryckliu.com/page175.html

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Breaking free from Dollar Hegemony

            Originally posted by D-Mack View Post
            He reminds me a bit of Hudson, who blames all the other countries for still supporting this system.
            Joe Stiglitz appears to have a similar viewpoint

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Breaking free from Dollar Hegemony

              Originally posted by D-Mack View Post
              He reminds me a bit of Hudson, who blames all the other countries for still supporting this system.
              hudson claims china is the only other nation on earth besides the usa that looks out for its own interest.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Breaking free from Dollar Hegemony

                Originally posted by Rajiv View Post
                Joe Stiglitz appears to have a similar viewpoint
                Interesting, but I still haven't read his book. Does he really believe it could work?
                While there was recognition of the importance of a coordinated global fiscal and monetary response, he said the required reforms went deeper, and included creating a new global reserve system and a new global financial regulatory authority. And he underlined that globalisation had to ensure the maximum good for the maximum numbers and not just the privileged few who got richer under the existing regime.
                http://www.thehindu.com/2008/12/21/s...2160801000.htm

                Originally posted by metalman View Post
                hudson claims china is the only other nation on earth besides the usa that looks out for its own interest.
                I started to read his book, but I didn't come across it yet.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Breaking free from Dollar Hegemony

                  Any opinions on the odds that China turns inward with their $? Implications for U.S.?

                  "To keep the 10 million migrant workers current being laid off by the export sector employed at an annual wage level of the equivalent of US$10,000 (CNY 68,490), a work creation certificate program of US$100 billion (CNY 684,9 billion) is needed. To keep the 10 million college graduates from unemployment, another work creation certificate program will be needed US$100 billion. This is well within the financial capability of the Chinese economy as it amount to only 20% of the over US$2 trillion in foreign exchange currently held by China. It is important to understand that this amount is not fiscal spending, but sovereign credit that will be repaid as the economy develops."

                  http://henryckliu.com/page177.html

                  Comment

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