THE DOLLAR IS
THE WORST INTERNATIONAL CURRENCY EXCEPT FOR ALL THE
OTHERS.
www.Apodimos.com –
www.Europeanbusiness.gr
We inform all
our Greek and Emigrant brothers
as presented in the following
article which states that the international currency of choice,
the dollar is under control of a single country, an
uncomfortable setting.
Even worse, this country has shown the huge external deficits
for more than a decade and is now the world's single largest
debtor
as to look carefully.

The dollar is the worst international currency, except for all
the others
By: McKinsey
Quarterly

The dollar is the worst international currency, except for all
the others
The last time
we bumped into this problem, in the late 1960s, inaction
resulted in the collapse of the Bretton
Woods system.
Luckily the
world has already taken steps to avoid a similar fate this time
around. Conventional wisdom tells us that the replacement of the
G-7 with the G-20 is an unmistakable signal that the United
States and the other developed countries have come to grip with
the new realities. It is not surprising that one of China’s
recent moves as a member of the G-20 was to call for a new
arrangement that will bring the dollar’s supremacy to its
long-anticipated end.
That sounds
like a rational and orderly transition to a more appropriate
system, right? Sorry, but the conclusion that the dollar should
be replaced with an international reserve currency is at best
inaccurate, mostly plain wrong. The dollar is nowhere close to
losing its international status for a simple reason: there is no
replacement.
Gold?
Some central banks have been accumulating gold, and at this
stage they may find that it has been a good investment. But as a
currency, gold has long ceased to exist for a good reason: it is
utterly inconvenient. When money is increasingly going
electronic, a return to gold coins and bullion would be
perfectly anachronistic.
The euro is
often seen as the challenger. It is a well-managed currency with
a better inflation record than the dollar. Its large
denomination banknotes have been instantly adopted around the
world for all sorts of unspeakable reasons. In effect, euro
banknotes are likely to soon replace the greenbacks as the
international banknotes of choice for large, frequently
criminal, cash transactions. The Federal Reserve reckons that
half of the dollar bills ever printed circulate outside the
United States, representing an amount of $400 billion while, the
European Central Bank reports having shipped in just one decade
about €100 billion worth of banknotes outside the euro area.
These are impressive numbers but they refer to just one aspect
of what makes a currency international.
A second
aspect is the use of a currency for international trade
invoicing and payments. The dollar dominates in this role, but
it matters little for anything but bookkeeping. True, US
businesses have the advantage of being able to carry out
transactions in their own currency. What is not true is that it
shields the United States from fluctuations in commodity prices.
More, if not all, dollar-set commodity prices are formally or
informally indexed to the dollar so, in this respect, those who
suffer most from dollar fluctuations are the US citizens.
The third
aspect is what is attracting most attention, and rightly so: the
foreign exchange reserves of central banks around the world.
These reserves are not held in cash but mostly in treasury
bills. The total amount, $4.4 trillion, is about ten times the
value of greenbacks held outside the United States. The dollar’s
share of foreign exchange reserves is currently about 60 percent
and slowly declining. The trend, if continued, would indeed
imply that the dollar could be a minor reserve currency by 2025.
The People’s Bank of China, which holds about half of the world
reserves and has made it known that it wants to reduce the share
of dollars in its stockpile, could speed up the process.
You should not
assume, however, that trends will continue forever. It is
perfectly possible for the Chinese authorities and others to now
acquire new reserves in other currencies than the dollar but
that does not mean that they can go on forever—assuming that
they will accumulate reserves forever—nor that they can turn
around their current stock. The key reason is that there is
simply no alternative, at least for the foreseeable future.
Once again, it
is essential to remember that reserves are held in
interest-yielding public debt instruments, not cash. Obviously,
these must be safe instruments, which would presumably exclude a
large number of euro area governments. The safest
euro-denominated instruments are issued by the German
government, with very few other candidates. Central banks want
these instruments to be not just safe, but quickly sellable in
case of emergency. Unless the market is deep enough, emergency
sales may resemble fire sales that entail capital losses. The
market for US Treasuries is the world’s deepest. The total value
of existing US public debt instruments is nearing $9 trillion,
of which $500 billion is traded on an average day. German debt
instruments amount to about €1 trillion, with an average daily
turnover of less than €30 billion. The situation is similar for
French debt instruments. The United States simply plays in a
different league. Of course, things can change over time.
Turnover can increase but German government debt will remain
small, unless it is multiplied several times over, in which case
it would achieve junk status!
There has been
much interest in the IMF’s Special Drawing Rights (SDRs).
This is not a separate currency, it an instrument that gives
central banks the right to obtain a combination of dollars,
euros, or other currencies of wide international use. As such it
can be held in foreign exchange reserve but the total
outstanding stock is currently worth just $320 billion, a
trivial amount. Its value is more stable than that of its
composite currencies, and this may be why some developing
countries and development advocates have been calling for a
massive increase in SDRs to create
an alternative to the dollar. Politically it makes little sense
for the United States to support such a move, but there is a
deeper economic reason why the SDR will never fulfill the
ambitions of its supporters. As a composite of other currencies,
the SDR must be underwritten by the central banks that issue
these currencies. New SDRs are
effectively new dollars, euros, yens, etc. But no one knows
which currencies will be “drawn”—i.e. effectively used—and when.
No central bank will ever want to create large amounts of money
over which it has no control. The appeal of
SDRs, that they are not controlled by any national
central bank, is also their fundamental weakness.
Over the
years, some currencies are likely to achieve international
status. A key requirement is that they be issued by a large
country. The Chinese yuan and the
Indian rupee naturally come to mind. These are very long term
propositions. Not only must these economies grow considerably
bigger, which they are likely to do, but they must also develop
large financial markets, fully integrated in world exchanges,
and their governments must issue top-rated public debt
instruments. At this stage, neither the
yuan nor the rupee are fully
convertible, the Chinese and Indian financial markets are not
integrated and, for various reasons, the financial credibility
of local authorities is limited.
For better or
for worse, the dollar will remain for a long while the leading
reserve currency. On the other hand, we are not in a
unipolar world anymore. The euro is
already taking a slice of the business, in fact, modestly
expanding the role of its constituent currencies. Its share
could grow, especially if inflation rises in the United States
and if the federal government fails to curb the growth of its
debt. Other currencies will gradually play some role.
There are
fears that a multipolar system will
be unstable. The idea seems to be that asset holders might be
tempted to zap between reserve currencies. Just as depositors
can create a run on banks, individual central banks could
trigger a run on a particular reserve currency if any concerns
arose about safety, or just returns, possibly even for political
reasons. The experience so far, with two reserve currencies,
does not bear out these fears. Central banks, at least the large
ones, behave prudently because they stand to suffer capital
losses first from a rapid shift in the currency denomination of
their reserves.
There is a
strong case to be made for the global village to have a global
currency issued by a world central bank. But whom will this
central bank report to? Until this question is answered, our
monetary world will not look very different from the current
one.
by
Charles Wyplosz- Professor of
economics at the Graduate Institute of Geneva and the director
of the International Center for Monetary and Banking Studies.
http://www.europeanbusiness.gr/page.asp?pid=689