I
doubt if the Americans can bomb China into the stone age as the've
done to others who have challenged dollar hegemony
China
To Challenge US Dollar Reserve Currency Status
4
October, 2012
At
the Clinton Global Initiative last week Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd
Blankfein said that the US could risk its status as the world’s
reserve currency…
Today’s
AM fix was USD 1,786.50, EUR 1,380.92, and GBP 1,109.01 per ounce.
Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,777.25, EUR 1,374.73and GBP 1,102.38 per ounce.
Silver
is trading at $35.08/oz, €27.13/oz and £21.84/oz. Platinum is
trading at $1,707.00/oz, palladium at $664.50/oz and rhodium at
$1,180/oz.
Gold
edged up $3.40 or 0.19% in New York yesterday which saw gold close at
$1,778.50. Silver initially climbed to $34.848 then it fell off in
afternoon trading and finished with a loss of 0.06%.
Gold
inched up on Thursday, continuing its 4th day of gains as investors
await more clues from central banks on further stimulus plans.
Today,
The ECB has a rate decision at 1145 GMT and Bank of England at noon
local time.
Investors
will watch the key the nonfarm payrolls figure on Friday to determine
if QE3 is beginning to stimulate the US economy.
Alan
Wheatley, Global Economics Correspondent for Reuters has written a
very interesting article, ‘Analysis: China’s currency foray
augurs geopolitical strains’ where he emphasizes China’s desire
to wean out the US dollar’s currency reserve status.
China
is actively taking steps to phase out the US dollar which will
decrease volatility in oil and commodity prices and deride the
‘exorbitant privilege’ the USA commands as the issuer of the
reserve currency at the centre of a post-war international financial
architecture which is now failing.
In
1971, U.S. Treasury Secretary John Connally said, “It’s our
currency and your problem”.
China
is frustrated with what it sees as the US government’s
mismanagement of the dollar, and is now actively promoting the
cross-border use of its own currency, the yuan, or also called the
renminbi, in trade and investment.
China’s
goal is to decrease transactions costs for Chinese importers and
exporters.
Zha
Xiaogang, a researcher at the Shanghai Institutes for International
Studies, said Beijing wants to see a better-balanced international
monetary system consisting of at least the dollar, euro and yuan and
perhaps other currencies such as the yen and the Indian rupee.
“The
shortcomings of the current international monetary system pose a big
threat to China’s economy,” he said. “With more alternatives,
the margin for the U.S. would be greatly narrowed, which will
certainly weaken the power basis of the U.S.”
Zha’s
comments were highlighted at a seminar in Bahrain this week on the
geopolitics of currencies organized by the International Institute
for Strategic Studies, a London think tank.
GoldCore
brought up these issues back in 2005. Rising economies of China,
India and the Middle East are looking at trading options that do not
include the greenback.
Not
only the East but their financial ministry colleagues in the West are
also questioning the current monetary order. Change is
certainly around the corner.
At
the Clinton Global Initiative last week Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd
Blankfein said that the US could risk its status as the world’s
reserve currency if congress fails to act and the “fiscal cliff”
program of tax increases and spending cuts is enacted January 1st.
If
the US continues its trillion dollar deficits and does lose its
reserve currency status what will a world without a reserve currency
look like? That is what economists, think tanks and finance
ministers are grappling over today.
John
Williamson, one of the foremost academics on exchange rates, and a
senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics
in Washington examined the benefits of the US dollar’s reserve
status.
He
recognized two ways that US power is enhanced in the world economy by
the greenback’s dominant role, which he doesn’t see challenged in
the next 25 years.
First,
the $3.2 trillion in official reserves that China has accumulated in
maintaining the yuan’s semi-fixed peg to the dollar tie Beijing’s
policy hands. That is because any hostile gesture, such as a threat
to shift out of dollars, would destroy Chinese wealth.
Second,
because of the extensive private use of the dollar globally, the
United States is better able to enforce a financial embargo such as
the one now directed against Iran.
China
also faces risks including foreigners reinvesting their yuan back
into China’s security markets. Such inflows may alter
exchange rates and interest rates and would weaken the Communist
Party’s grasp on their economy which would create an
unpredictability that is against the iron rule it enjoys.
Currency
wars are not new and often rising economies show their resentment of
incumbents, notably the USA, who they view as printing money first
and worrying about the effect on the global economy later.
Surjit
Bhalla, Indian economist and author of “Devaluing to Prosperity”
feels the massive undervaluation of the yuan was a major reason for
China’s meteoric rise and the deep economic imbalances that led to
the 1997/98 Asian financial crisis and the 2008 global crash.
He
sees little merit in greater international use of the yuan but
expects Beijing to push up its real exchange rate by 3-5% a year in
order to help lift private consumption to at least 50 percent of
national output over time from around just 35 percent now.
“This
will be one of the most remarkable win-win situations of recent
times,” said Bhalla, chairman of Oxus Investments, a New Delhi
hedge fund.
“Currency
peace is breaking out. There have been currency wars, but now is time
to enjoy the peace.”

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