A quick synopsis on the critical aspects of the development and growth of the United States
Colonialism is the underscoring
condition for achieving superpower or world power status. In our contemporary times, this was the
case with the British empire which, as of the early 1930s, maintains its
influence over the Commonwealth which numbers 54 countries. Based on the generic theory of the Cycle of
Life empires ascend and descend. The 2nd World War catapulted the United States into the position of a world power. Its status as an economic world power was
affirmed by the Bretton Woods System of 1944 and the institutions it created then. This System set the U.S. Dollar as an
International Reserve Currency with every other currency to be pegged to the U.S. Dollar. The U.S. Dollar was pegged onto Gold at $35 per troy ounce. This was masterful as it defined and solidified
the indispensability of the U.S. Dollar as the one and only international
reserve currency. One of the
institutions created was the International Monetary Fund (IMF) whose mandate
was to safeguard the stability of exchange rates and help countries that were
running short-term trade deficits to restore their trade balance without having
to use policies such as Tariffs, Quotas or Competitive devaluation. To achieve this mandated goal the IMF offered
short-term Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) to those countries that ran a trade
deficit, thus discouraging them from engaging in a policy of Competitive
devaluation. This design was effective
for a regime of Fixed Exchange rates. In a regime of Floating Exchange rates, the supervision of the IMF is not relevant because in a "floating" environment exchange rates are determined by demand and
supply of currencies.
Incipient challenges to the U.S. Dollar - The era of the 70s and 80s
Question: Under the doctrine of economic fairness, what moral grounds allow the U.S. to print money without control; thereby, adversely affecting foreign economies’ export/import activity, their foreign exchange policy of competitive devaluation, their monetary policy, and broadly, the global economy?
Incipient challenges to the U.S. Dollar - The era of the 70s and 80s
The Bretton Woods System collapsed in 1973. This collapse was caused by the
1965 to 1968 macroeconomic policy decisions of the U.S. At that time the U.S. was financing extensive
welfare programs and the Vietnam War by increasing its money supply, causing high
inflation. Other economies, knowing that
as inflation increases the value of the currency decreases, speculated that the dollar would have to be devalued
relative to other currencies. They began to increase the value of their currencies by reducing their dollar
holdings. In essence, the Bretton Woods
System collapsed because of macroeconomic mismanagement such as, increasing the
money supply, running high trade deficits and persisting high inflation. In August 15, 1971, following President Nixon’s policy to discontinue trading gold for U.S. Dollars, the Smithsonian Agreement was signed through which fixed exchange rates were to be maintained but with no gold as a currency-backer. In 1976, the IMF’s Articles of Agreement
were revised to reflect the new reality of Floating Exchange rates. That was the Jamaica Accord of 1976. The U.S. Dollar, vis a vis the gold, was devalued from $35 to $38 per troy ounce. Following these initial setbacks, in
September 1985, the Plaza Accord was signed by France, Germany, Japan, UK and
the U.S. which aimed to drive down the price of the U.S. Dollar because the
U.S. was experiencing a large trade deficit. Two years later the goal of the Plaza Accord, having been realized, was abandoned through the signing of the Louvre Accord.
The U.S. Dollar - The Imperial Character and Future of the U.S.
As discussed earlier, the U.S. Dollar is the world’s international
reserve currency which is widely held by central banks and financial
institutions for guarding and securing international trade and other
transactions. So, the U.S. Dollar is in
demand and its value is determined by the demand for it and its available supply. Now, the U.S. economy supports the U.S. Dollar through its
economic infrastructure meaning its productivity, competitiveness,
international trade dominance, financial innovativeness, technology, level of
education, level of industrialization, and an optimum politico-economic environment. At this writing, the economic infrastructure of the U.S. is
challenged given that the sovereign debt of the U.S. has increased to $31.4 trillion, its GDP is about $24 trillion,
and its debt-to-GDP ratio is around 124%. These figures are
prohibitive for any economy. For instance, the EU’s debt-to-GDP ratio is around 95%, when the Maastricht Treaty
specked a ratio of no more than 60%. A plausible question would be, "What is going on?" The central banks of major foreign
countries, the military power, a supranational leadership behavior, and, an internationally popular socio-politico-economic image of the U.S., keep safeguarding and sustaining the continuing dominance of the U.S. Dollar. However, dark clouds are beginning to gather
in the horizon. I am talking about the current inflationary environment in the U.S. The issue is a bit complex. At this writing, inflation is around 8.5%. The Federal Reserve’s (U.S. Central Bank) continued increasing of the interest rates, in order
to curb inflation, threatening to put the economy into a recession.
It is widely accepted that the COVID virus has been the pivotal
reason for this inflation, but not only. First, the Virus affected the supply chains, causing an imbalance
between Supply and Demand. This has been
exacerbated by an erroneous policy decision of the Biden Administration to
distribute “free” money to Americans, and, a liberal monetary policy to increase the money supply, a decision implemented by the
Federal Reserve. But,
inflation always comes back to “bite” the people through sustained price
increases. Inflation is an orderly
economy’s social enemy because it changes the character of institutions and
poses a direct threat to the society.
In the current global polyarchic environment the U.S. Dollar will likely face a greater challenge to maintaining the international reserve currency status. As a result, it must be more disciplined with the growth of its money supply. Certainly, the current global environment being inflationary, supports and even enhances the dominance of the U.S. Dollar because foreign investment pours into the U.S. given that foreign investors view the U.S. Dollar as the safest currency in the world. Nevertheless, the U.S. should keep in mind that inflation must be curbed and that such action may bring about recession. Furthermore, such exchange may produce stagflation, which is defined by lower employment hiring, persistent inflation and therefore low economic growth because of low demand. The downing of past powerful countries has been the result of mismanaging inflation. For instance, the Roman Empire lost its economic rigor and international trade because it failed to control inflation. In addition, the global economy may be threatened due to an uncontrolled global-wide inflation.
In the current global polyarchic environment the U.S. Dollar will likely face a greater challenge to maintaining the international reserve currency status. As a result, it must be more disciplined with the growth of its money supply. Certainly, the current global environment being inflationary, supports and even enhances the dominance of the U.S. Dollar because foreign investment pours into the U.S. given that foreign investors view the U.S. Dollar as the safest currency in the world. Nevertheless, the U.S. should keep in mind that inflation must be curbed and that such action may bring about recession. Furthermore, such exchange may produce stagflation, which is defined by lower employment hiring, persistent inflation and therefore low economic growth because of low demand. The downing of past powerful countries has been the result of mismanaging inflation. For instance, the Roman Empire lost its economic rigor and international trade because it failed to control inflation. In addition, the global economy may be threatened due to an uncontrolled global-wide inflation.
In summary, the
weakest link of the U.S. is its currency and its international reserve currency
status.
Losing such status will be
catastrophic for the U.S. economy, the internal socioeconomic functioning of
the U.S. and it will deprive the U.S. of its global economic
power. How likely is that? There must be seismic events in the world such
as, long-term persistent high inflation, drastic loss of economic
competitiveness, withdrawal of support for the U.S. Dollar by the major Central Banks and/or refusal to use the U.S. Dollar in international trade transactions resulting from global
polyarchic conflict. Such conflict has given rise to an attempt by other countries to refuse the reserve status of the U.S. Dollar and replace it with their own currencies. The dominant move is being attempted by the countries of BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa). If and when the U.S. Dollar loses its international reserve status the U.S. will be at a “free fall.” Moreover, the advantage that the global reserve currency status gives
to the dollar creates the responsibility to safeguard such reserve currency and
protect the integrity of the global economy.
Question: Under the doctrine of economic fairness, what moral grounds allow the U.S. to print money without control; thereby, adversely affecting foreign economies’ export/import activity, their foreign exchange policy of competitive devaluation, their monetary policy, and broadly, the global economy?
Author: CGP .+.
