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…Declaration of War?
Is the puny dollar a sign of America’s
decline?
Anatole Kaletsky
Yesterday, the pound and the euro hit their highest levels in a
generation against the US dollar. The dollar, meanwhile, collapsed to a
record low against an average of all the world’s major currencies. It is
tempting to interpret the flight from the dollar in financial markets as
the clearest, most objective, indicator of America’s relative decline.
Europe has long been derided as an ageing, sclerotic continent, doomed
to irrelevance in a world dominated by America and Asia. But could it
actually be America, not Europe, that is failing to compete in the
globalized world economy and is now threatened with long-term decline?
Much that is happening in the world today certainly seems to belie the
hubristic assumptions about American hegemony that were so prevalent a
few years ago. It is not just the military debacle in Iraq and the
geopolitical setbacks suffered by American diplomacy from the Middle
East to Venezuela to North Korea. Less prominent in the media headlines,
but in some ways more troubling, are the indicators of economic
underperformance: the reliance on foreign borrowing (now equivalent to
$2,000 annually for every American man, woman and child); the loss of
Wall Street’s global dominance in financial services to the City of
London; and now to cap it all, the dollar collapsing to record lows.
Surely this is the ultimate vote of no confidence in the US economy by
people who are best placed to know?
Sadly, for those of us who live in Britain and Europe and would like to
believe that the strength of our currencies reflects our superlative
economic prospects, the answer is an emphatic “no”. There was a time in
the 19th century when the strength of sterling reflected Britain’s
unparalleled prosperity and imperial power. But since the deregulation
of currencies and financial markets in the 1980s and 1990s, currency
strength has conveyed almost no information about the health of a
national economy – and none at all about a country’s competitive
position in global trade. For example, anyone who believes that the
falling dollar reflects America’s huge trade deficit and foreign
borrowing should consider that the one leading currency even weaker in
the past three years than the dollar has been the yen; yet Japan has the
world’s biggest trade surplus and is the greatest creditor nation the
world has ever seen.
To the extent that any relationship has existed between currencies and
economic performance, it has usually been the “wrong” way round – rising
currencies usually preceded periods of economic decline, while weakening
currencies have presaged economic strength. Think, for example, of the
collapse of sterling in 1992, which ushered in the strongest and longest
period of economic expansion in British history.
Or consider the strength of the US economy in the late 1990s, just after
the dollar fell to its previous nadir in 1995. Even more spectacular has
been the decade of growth in China since its currency collapsed to a
record low in the Asian crisis of 1997. On the other side of the ledger,
there has been Japan’s stagnation after 1995, when the yen hit a record
high, and Germany’s lost decade after the surge in the mark that
followed German reunification and the eurozone’s dismal economic
performance from 2003 to 2005, as the newly created euro appreciated by
60 per cent against the dollar.
There are many explanations for the apparently perverse relationship
between currencies and economic performance, though none of them is
watertight. For example, currencies tend to strengthen in response to
rising interest rates and fears of inflation – which are obviously bad
for economic performance – but also in response to strong economic
growth.
On the other hand, a currency may weaken because inflation prospects are
improving, as they are in the US at present, or because investors fear a
financial collapse, which some believe to be a looming in the US
mortgage market. But if the causes of currency strength are ambiguous
and contradictory, the consequences are clear. A currency that keeps
rising, as the euro and sterling are at present, will eventually do
serious damage to almost any economy, hurting export competitiveness and
stunting growth.
This is what happened to Britain and America after the pound and the
dollar appreciated excessively in the early 1980s and again in the early
1990s. It happened to Germany and Japan in the mid1990s and again in the
middle of this decade to the eurozone. Europe and Britain enjoyed some
relief in 2005, when the euro and the pound temporarily weakened.
But now they will have to bear the full brunt of excessive currency
strength. In Britain’s case, the strength of the pound may not do too
much harm, since it will forestall or at least delay any further rate
rises from the Bank of England. On the Continent, however, the European
Central Bank seems determined to keep raising interest rates, thereby
exacerbating the damage done by the euro’s excessive strength.
Americans, meanwhile, will enjoy the benefits of a super-cheap currency,
which will more than offset falling property prices and problems with a
small minority of mortgage loans. American politicians, for all their
faults, instinctively understand this, which is why they have generally
welcomed a falling dollar and have been pressuring China and Japan to
let the dollar weaken against the yen and the renmimbi – not just, as at
present, against the euro and the pound.
European policymakers, by contrast, seem to have no idea of how currency
markets operate. In contrast with Americans and Asians, German
politicians in particular still see a “hard currency” as a virility
symbol – not as a threat to economic performance or an indicator that
interest rates are probably too high.
There is only one leading European politician who seems to understand
the dangers of an overstrong euro. This is Nicolas Sarkozy, who traveled
to Brussels this week to plead for a more expansionary economic policy
in Europe. But his pleas were met with ridicule from the other
governments and the ECB. Within two months of promising to spark an
economic revival, the new French President has already been paralyzed by
the rules of the eurozone.
That is the reality of life in today’s Europe – and one of the main
reasons why America, despite all its problems, will continue to dominate
the world economy in the decades ahead.
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