December 07, 2004

Keep Some Euros In Your Mattress

Sorry to be such a one-note blogger lately, but the incredible dropping dollar has me more and more concerned about this country's financial future. Here is an interesting section from a piece in the Economist:

"The dollar is not what it used to be. Over the past three years it has fallen by 35% against the euro and by 24% against the yen. But its latest slide is merely a symptom of a worse malaise: the global financial system is under great strain. America has habits that are inappropriate, to say the least, for the guardian of the world's main reserve currency: rampant government borrowing, furious consumer spending and a current-account deficit big enough to have bankrupted any other country some time ago. This makes a dollar devaluation inevitable, not least because it becomes a seemingly attractive option for the leaders of a heavily indebted America. Policymakers now seem to be talking the dollar down. Yet this is a dangerous game. Why would anybody want to invest in a currency that will almost certainly depreciate?


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"If the dollar falls by another 30%, as some predict, it would amount to the biggest default in history: not a conventional default on debt service, but default by stealth, wiping trillions off the value of foreigners' dollar assets.

"The dollar's loss of reserve-currency status would lead America's creditors to start cashing those cheques—and what an awful lot of cheques there are to cash. As that process gathered pace, the dollar could tumble further and further. American bond yields (long-term interest rates) would soar, quite likely causing a deep recession. Americans who favour a weak dollar should be careful what they wish for. Cutting the budget deficit looks cheap at the price."


Obviously, we have to cut the deficit, but no one seems to want to take the steps towards doing that. So, maybe it is time to fire up the bunker with canned goods and bottled water, and gather some foreign currency in your piggy banks. I'm afraid we're in for some rocky times.

Posted by Paul Hina at December 7, 2004 11:01 PM