The Dollar Trap: How the U.S. Dollar Tightened Its Grip on Global Finance.
Bragues, George
THE DOLLAR TRAP: HOW THE U.S. DOLLAR TIGHTENED ITS GRIP ON GLOBAL
FINANCE
ESWAR S. PRASAD
PRINCETON: PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2014, 432 PP.
The great mystery of international finance is how the U.S. dollar
has managed to retain its dominance. This is a currency, after all, that
has lost about 83 percent of its purchasing power since President
Richard Nixon cut the dollar's remaining link to gold in August
1971. More recently, in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, the
Federal Reserve has sought to resuscitate the American economy by
directly endeavoring to generate an abundance of dollars through the
policy of quantitative easing. All the while, the level of the
country's public debt has escalated above 100 percent of GDP, thus
portending a continued outpouring of dollars from America's central
bank to pay what is owed, with all that entails in cheapening the
currency.
Yet for all this, the greenback is still used in an overwhelming
majority of transactions in the foreign exchange market. As of April
2013, its share of all trades stood at 87 percent, far greater than its
closest counterpart, the Euro (Bank of International Settlements, 2014).
When it comes to global trade in goods and services, the U.S. dollar was
used to settle 81 percent of all transactions as of October 2013 (SWIFT,
2013). The latest figures for the first quarter of 2014 show the
world's central banks retaining their confidence in the greenback
as a store of value, holding 61 percent of their foreign exchange
reserves in U.S. dollars, not much different from where that proportion
was back in 1996, and still well ahead of its peers (International
Monetary Fund, 2014). Topping it all off is the fact that investors the
world over remain eager to purchase securities denominated in American
dollars, with Treasury bonds a particular favorite despite these
carrying historically low yields.
So what is going on? Are we witnessing the financial equivalent of
a seemingly well-structured and prosperous city moments before a massive
earthquake exposes the rickety foundations of its buildings? Or is the
resiliency of the greenback reflective of forces assuring its
paramountcy going forward? These are the questions taken up by Eswar S.
Prasad, the Tolani Senior Professor of Trade Policy at Cornell
University, in his book The Dollar Trap. Prasad argues the thesis that a
confluence of politico-economic trends and seminal events over the past
several decades, including the 2008 financial crisis originating out of
the U.S. housing sector, have cemented the American dollar's reign
over the global financial system Though he acknowledges various threats
to the greenback, Prasad does not think it will fall from its perch
anytime soon This will not be ideal, he concedes, but he does maintain
that the continued supremacy of the U.S. dollar is the best we can
expect under the present circumstances. It will be
"suboptimal", as he puts it, but at least it will be
"stable and reinforcing" (p. 307). Prasad tells a fairly
convincing story about the recent strengthening of the greenback's
position in global finance, but he is too accepting of the status quo.
First, some basic facts about the political economy of foreign
exchange. Just as money exists to facilitate the trade of goods and
services amongst individuals and firms, so foreign exchange exists to
smooth that trade when it takes place between parties across national
borders. For as each nation often has its own currency, and sellers
typically desire to be ultimately paid in their national unit, a market
will emerge to exchange the different monies of the world. Inevitably,
purchases and sales between various countries will not balance; on
aggregate, individuals and firms in certain nations will buy a greater
value of goods with money than they sell, while those in other nations
will sell a greater value of goods for money than they buy From the
economic point of view, this is not a problem, inasmuch as the
imbalances merely reflect an accounting by which people have been
artificially sorted into national groups. One could just as easily carve
up the population within national frontiers, by say tallying the
transactions of those who reside in Long Island against those in
southern California, and find an array of surpluses and deficits. What
matters is how each of us fares irrespective of where we happen to live.
Clearly, everyone benefits from cross-border trade, for they would not
have otherwise engaged in it.
Politically, however, the imbalances have posed a dilemma because
of the adjustment in the currency that is required Prior to World War I,
when the major currencies were backed by gold, the adjustment was
supposed to be made through a change in the quantity of money Countries
that imported more than they exported were supposed to enable outflows
of gold, whereas those that exported more than they imported were
enjoined to tolerate inflows. After World War I, the world progressively
moved away from this regime, eventually reaching the point with the
breakdown of Bretton Woods in the early 1970s in which the advanced
nations have opted to rely on price as the adjustment mechanism This has
spawned a gargantuan mart of floating fiat monies, where currency values
can fall for countries with deficits and rise for those running
surpluses, following the script laid out by Milton Friedman (1962, pp.
56-74) for a flexible exchange rate regime.
That the architecture of global finance has evolved in this
direction is a sign that it better suits the needs of politicians.
Rather than stand by as the money supply fluctuates with the
international activities of their citizens, policymakers would much
prefer to have a free hand in influencing its quantity in order to swing
the economy in their political favor--which is precisely what the
current system gives them. But as the exertion of this control over
quantity also impacts the prices of currencies, the present framework
has had the baleful consequence of turning the movements of the US
dollar, Euro, Japanese yen, Chinese renminbi and all the rest into a
political battleground. Instead of furthering economic co-operation
between the peoples of the world as it ought to do, the foreign exchange
market has become a source of national discord.
Prasad nicely details this conflict. The chief protagonists are the
U.S., the Euro zone, along with the developing world, principally the
so-called BRICS nations, which include Brazil, Russia, India, China, and
South Africa. Echoing all the discussion of late concerning the
renminbi's ascent in currency markets, China looms large in
Prasad's account, due to that country's size, rapid economic
growth, and geopolitical ambitions As the leading player, the U S dollar
attained its status in the 20th century, assuming it from the British
pound that dominated in the 19th century, and consolidating it after
World War II with the establishment of Bretton Woods. When this exchange
rate system fell apart with Nixon's 1971 decision to abandon gold,
one might have expected the US dollar to lose its preeminence. That it
instead gained influence Prasad explains by observing that everything is
relative in international finance. Though the U.S. government
effectively devalued its currency with respect to gold, what mattered
for the dollar henceforth was how it stood compared to other fiat
currencies in the eyes of investors, businesses, central banks, and
governments.
On this score, the greenback has consistently trounced the rest of
the field. According to Prasad, this is owing to the extent and depth of
America's financial markets, which offer a multitude of highly
liquid alternatives to deploy any funds set aside for future uses.
Prasad also believes it reflects the superiority of America's
political and legal institutions. For all the hue and cry about
partisanship and gridlock in Washington, the U.S. democratic system,
with its various checks and balances, gives assurance to holders of the
country's debt that a default is unlikely, whether done explicitly
through non-payment or implicitly through higher inflation. Likewise,
property rights and the sanctity of contracts are protected by
America's courts.
Reinforcing the dominance of the greenback are the policies of
developing nations. As Prasad well observes, there are both insurance
and neo-mercantilist motives at work here. Mindful of the balance of
payment crises that befell Mexico, Thailand, Indonesia among others
during the 1990s, developing nations have taken to bulking up their
foreign exchange reserves. The greater these are, the more wherewithal
governments have to defend their currencies, as well pay for imports and
any maturing external debt, should foreigners suddenly decide to take
flight with their capital. To perform this insurance function, however,
foreign exchange reserves have to be invested into something safe and no
instrument in the financial markets is thought to have a better
guarantee of repayment than U.S. Treasury bonds. Bolstering this demand
for American dollars is the penchant among developing nations of
pursuing growth through export promotion, a neo-mercantilist strategy
best executed with a low currency. However, any country that succeeds in
exporting more than it imports will invariably come head on against the
economic reality that surpluses push the currency upwards, everything
else remaining equal. How governments deal with this is to intervene in
the foreign exchange market by purchasing another currency using their
own and then adding it to reserves Again, the dollar is preferred for
this purpose on the belief that it can be parked safely in U.S. Treasury
bonds. China is exhibit A of this practice, as Prasad duly notes. By
2013, its central bank had amassed an eye-popping $3.8 trillion of
foreign exchange reserves.
Prasad points out, too, that there exists a wider demand for safe
assets. From pension funds, insurance companies, commercial banks to
private investors with a low risk tolerance, the desire for securities
bearing a guaranteed return of principal is always present in financial
markets, making itself felt especially in periods of uncertainty and
turbulence As such, the demand for safe havens has risen since the
recent financial crisis. At the same time, the economic carnage that
ensued in the aftermath of that crisis has diminished the supply of safe
assets. Over the past five years, bonds issued by numerous governments
around the globe once thought to be secure have come to be seen as risky
bets U.S. Treasury bonds now compete with fewer debt securities for the
title of sure thing, further strengthening the greenback's
position. Prasad recognizes the irony of the country that started the
financial crisis being the one whose currency has gained the most
prestige from it.
Any system that produces this kind of outcome is bound to be
subject to grumbling. A long standing sore point, going back to the
French government led by Charles de Gaulle in the 1960s, is that the
dollar has an "exorbitant privilege" by which the Fed can
simply issue currency to finance U.S. trade deficits instead of having
to pay for imports with real goods Both American consumers and
governments can spend lavishly and rack up big debts because foreigners
are willing to hold the country's dollar denominated bonds
Developing nations, in turn, protest feeling the brunt of the Fed's
easy money ways. The added liquidity finds its way into their economies,
boosting their currency to a level that renders their exports
uncompetitive, while fomenting a transient boom that abruptly turns into
a bust as soon as the Fed is compelled to tighten and the foreign money
departs to safer locales Understandably, developing countries have
reacted by attempting to displace the dollar, with the BRICS nations
going so far recently as to agree to pool their reserves. Even as the
hegemon, the U.S. finds much to complain about, whether it involves
shifting blame from the Fed's monetary policy by admonishing
developing nations to reform their economies or the regular allegations
against countries (Japan twenty to thirty years ago and China nowadays)
of harm to American companies from too low a currency.
This is a lot of tension for an international financial system to
shoulder What makes it all the more damaging is that capital ends up
flowing in the wrong direction from the developing to the developed
world. It is the Chinas and Indias of the world that have a greater need
for capital in order to make their workers more productive; and it is
there that holders of capital from places like the U.S. can obtain the
highest return on their investments. Prasad's only suggested fix is
a global insurance scheme that would create a reserve fund which
countries could tap into whenever they ran into balance of payments
difficulties. Premiums would depend both on the size of the
country's economy and the quality of its economic policies. Prasad
figures that such insurance would convince developing countries to stop
bulking up their reserves. But lack of agreement among countries on what
constitutes good policy is enough to make this proposal a non-starter.
Will developing nations suddenly see the light and agree that the
pursuit of neo-mercantilism deserves a higher premium?
Since even he concedes that the insurance scheme is unworkable,
Prasad ends up defaulting to the current U.S. dollar standard. In part,
he does so because he fears that its end would generate chaos in the
financial markets and wreak havoc on the economy. A decisive
consideration for him, though, is how the quest for safe assets plays a
stabilizing role in global finance. Whenever a crisis affects any part
of the system, the demand that arises for a safe haven in the U.S.
dollar serves to buttress that system at its most critical structural
point precisely when that is needed the most Still, the greenback can
only serve this function so long as it is perceived as a gateway to the
safety of U.S. treasury bonds. How long will that perception last as the
U.S. public debt continues its relentless climb amid an aging population
driving entitlement spending inexorably higher? Prasad acknowledges this
threat without ever adequately explaining why it does not vitiate his
model of a self-equilibrating financial order. Aside from arguing that
China would only harm itself were it to dump its large US Treasury bond
portfolio, he just clings to the idea that all is relative in finance
and that, therefore, investors have no safer option than the U.S.
dollar.
What about gold? The most disappointing part of this book is that
Prasad never seriously considers a return to the yellow metal as the
basis of the international financial system. He does consider the
possibility, but dismisses it with a nod to Barry Eichengreen's
(1995) contention that the gold standard worsened the Great Depression,
as if a mere citation can resolve such a highly contested topic in
economic history Prasad's main objection, however, is that there is
not enough gold in existence for it to function as a reserve asset. Yet
scarcity is hardly an obstacle, since that can be dealt with by allowing
the price of gold to appreciate. As this review is being written, half
of the entire American money supply, as defined by M2, could be backed
up by U.S. current official holdings of gold at a price of $21,863 per
ounce. The issue with reviving the gold standard is not so much about
quantity as it is about political will Prasad worries also about
gold's price volatility, even though Britain somehow managed to
keep it at 4.25 pounds per ounce for 93 years up to 1914. We are not
trapped into the U.S. dollar.
REFERENCES
Bank of International Settlements. 2014. "Triennial Bank
Survey--Foreign Exchange Turnover in April 2013: Preliminary
Results" Available at http://www.bis.org/publ/rpfx13fx.pdf.
Eichengreen, Barry. 1995. Golden Fetters: The Gold Standard and the
Great Depression, 1919-1939. New York: Oxford University Press.
Friedman, Milton. 1962. Capitalism and Freedom. Chicago: University
of Chicago Press.
International Monetary Fund. 2014. "Currency Composition of
Official Foreign Exchange Reserves." June 20. Available at
http://www.imf.org/external/np/sta/cofer/eng/.
SWIFT. 2013. "RMB Now 2nd Most Used Currency in Trade Finance,
Overtaking the Euro." Dec. 13. Available at
http://www.swift.com/about_swift/shownews?param_dcr=news.data/
en/swift_com/2013/PR_RMB_nov.xml.
George Bragues (George.bragues@guelphhumber.ca) is Assistant
Vice-Provost and Program Head of Business at the University of
Guelph-Humber.