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Path: news.eternal-september.org!eternal-september.org!feeder3.eternal-september.org!news.quux.org!news.nk.ca!rocksolid2!i2pn2.org!.POSTED!not-for-mail From: ltlee1@hotmail.com (ltlee1) Newsgroups: soc.culture.china,alt.politics.usa Subject: This time really is different for the dollar Date: Wed, 14 May 2025 17:36:31 +0000 Organization: novaBBS Message-ID: <714d5fe526909d2bd85db39ce365a47f@www.novabbs.com> MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Injection-Info: i2pn2.org; logging-data="350011"; mail-complaints-to="usenet@i2pn2.org"; posting-account="pxsmGrN7Y7mF0hfJcY//7F6kiWqDRq/tZN4FOOcim3s"; User-Agent: Rocksolid Light X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 4.0.0 X-Rslight-Posting-User: 0099cdd7dc5bd7b25c488bf8bcfab81a117b2ffc X-Rslight-Site: $2y$10$sTkltF747PF88bi6.bTM9.zCLNv4OVQPNXio2mjhXhfT36ufzq69q "This time really is different for the dollar Kenneth Rogoff To paraphrase a common saying: it ain’t what you don’t know that kills you. It’s what you think you know that ain’t so. Nothing could better describe the numb-skulled thinking behind the havoc that President Donald Trump and his trade Rasputin, Peter Navarro, have wrought on the global economy. Among the likely casualties will be the supreme status of the dollar. Although the greenback will almost certainly remain the world’s dominant currency for at least a couple more decades, it will probably fall several notches. Expect the yuan and the euro to encroach on the dollar in the legal economy. Cryptocurrencies will do the same in the underground economy, which is roughly a fifth of global GDP. Reduced market share will mean higher interest rates on long-term dollar debt, and a weakening of the effectiveness of American financial sanctions, among other problems. Even before Mr Trump, dollar dominance had been in slow decline. There are many measures of the dollar’s footprint on the global economy, including central-bank reserve holdings, the currency used in trade invoicing and the denomination of international borrowing. A particularly useful one is what currency central banks focus on as their exchange-rate anchor or reference currency. Given that national central banks have intricate knowledge of their economies’ inner workings and how exchange-rate movements affect them, anchor or reference currency choices may be thought of as a portmanteau measure of dominance. By this measure, dollar dominance peaked around 2015, after which China gradually began to make its currency more flexible. This was a change long in the making, since a large economy like China’s can experience very different business cycles than America’s, and there is no reason to make its central bank dance to the Federal Reserve’s tune. American sanctions on Russia, including the freezing of over $300bn-worth of central-bank reserves, have also put a fire under China’s efforts to decouple, given the likelihood of an eventual reckoning over Taiwan. As China’s exchange-rate regime has evolved, so too have those of its neighbours, given that China is at least as important a trading partner as America for most. With Asia constituting roughly half of the dollar bloc—ie, economies that focus on the dollar when managing their own currency’s exchange rates—a gradual splintering was already under way. Europe, too, chafes at the tentacles of control that dollar dominance gives America; the European Central Bank’s moves to establish a central-bank digital currency should be viewed in part as an effort to compete more effectively with the dollar. The biggest challenges to dollar dominance come from within, including America’s unsustainable debt trajectory. It is already under strain from the inevitable ending of a period of very low long-term real interest rates. If Mr Trump’s chaos keeps undermining the dollar’s “exorbitant privilege”—the borrowing discount America’s government enjoys thanks to the greenback’s dominance—rates will rise even more. ..."