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An Impending 'Disorderly Movement' in the Dollar?
Lord William Rees-Mogg
February 13, 2004

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"…The world's exchange system should be regarded as completely out of control…At some point, the American economy will have to be brought back into balance. That point is probably closer than most of us think. Given this impending event, the risk of a 'disorderly movement' in the dollar - or even an all-out rout - is uncomfortably high…"

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The G7 meeting at Boca Raton was a failure. This is bad news for everyone. It is bad news for the United States, and has been followed by a further fall in the dollar. It is bad news for Japan, which has been buying vast numbers of dollars in order to stabilise the yen. It is bad news for China, under ever greater pressure to revalue or float the renminbi. It is bad news for Europe, with an overvalued euro and a depressed domestic market. It is bad news for Britain, with the pound at its highest rate against the dollar for eleven years.

The G7 communiqué did nothing but piously observe, "excess volatility and disorderly movements in exchange rates are undesirable for economic growth." In response, the markets have already given the G7 a massive snub. Some dealers had hoped that the G7 would at least take the pressure off the dollar for a few days. What it actually did was make the world's central banks look completely impotent. As their authority is essential to their effectiveness, they have lost their most powerful weapon. The world's exchange system should be regarded as completely out of control.

One view is that the dollar is a problem for everyone else except the United States. So long as the Asian countries lend billions of dollars to the United States, it is conceivable that the U.S. Government could continue to run its enormous fiscal and trade deficits, financing them through borrowing. It is also possible for American consumers to continue to buy on borrowed money.

But this is short-term logic. At some point, the American economy will have to be brought back into balance. That point is probably closer than most of us think. Given this impending event, the risk of a "disorderly movement" in the dollar - or even an all-out rout - is uncomfortably high. [Ed note: Your editors are hard at work finishing the long-awaited Special Reckoning Report on the dollar - Bonfire of the Currencies: 7 Ways to Sell the Dollar. Look out for it next week!]

The continued decline of the dollar does, in any case, threaten the re-election of President Bush. The Democrats seem to have found their most "Presidential" Presidential candidate in years. Senator Kerry is a war hero with the best senior statesman's profile in the political casting lot. He seems already to have a united party behind him. He will carry New York and California in November. He could win, and he will win if the American voters believe that the Bush administration has lost control of the economy. As the G7 has plainly lost control of the world's currency system, American voters could well decide that the U.S. economy is in trouble, even if employment remains high and growth is maintained.

Both economics and politics are ruled by expectation, as the Austrian school of economists pointed out. Prosperity is how the economy is doing today; expectation is how the economy is expected to do next year. When the dollar is at $1.27 to the euro, $1.87 to the pound, and only buys 105 yen, one does not need to ask what the expectation is. The markets are telling us that there is trouble on the way, and the trouble is not good news for the re-election campaign.

 

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