Much discussion at ATS on the war in Iraq, Russia to go with the Euro, and conversion of petrodollars to the Euro.
I myself, have started a thread on the
The Bankruptcy of the United States
Where is all this going?
It occured to me that there may be one way out.
There may be one way the USA can avoid total bankruptsy, or another great depression.
The USA begins to trade in Euro's.
The war in Iraq, as many have suggested, was just a political monetary plot, so the United States can maintain it's hold in the international
community trading in dollars for oil, the prime reason the US has been able to float it's currency for so long, and maintain deficits that are huge.
Who is paying for these deficits, and how on earth can they be continued without failing the currency?
Well, the rest of the world has been paying for them. (also refer to top link)
The key to it all is the fiat currency for trading oil. Under an OPEC agreement, all oil has been traded in US dollars since 1971 (after the
dropping of the gold standard) which makes the US dollar the de facto major international trading currency. If other nations have to hoard dollars to
buy oil, then they want to use that hoard for other trading too. This fact gives America a huge trading advantage and helps make it the dominant
economy in the world.
As an economic bloc, the European Union is the only challenger to the USA's economic position, and it created the euro to challenge the dollar in
international markets. However, the EU is not yet united behind the euro -- there is a lot of jingoistic national politics involved, not least in
Britain -- and in any case, so long as nations throughout the world must hoard dollars to buy oil, the euro can make only very limited inroads into
the dollar's dominance.
In 1999, Iraq, with the world's second largest oil reserves, switched to trading its oil in euros. American analysts fell about laughing; Iraq had
just made a mistake that was going to beggar the nation. But two years on, alarm bells were sounding; the euro was rising against the dollar, Iraq had
given itself a huge economic free kick by switching.
Iran started thinking about switching too; Venezuela, the 4th largest oil producer, began looking at it and has been cutting out the dollar by
bartering oil with several nations including America's bete noir, Cuba. Russia is seeking to ramp up oil production with Europe (trading in euros) an
obvious market.
Not Oil, But Dollars vs. Euros
Then one day, one petrol seller says he is going to accept another person's cheques, a couple of others think that might be a good idea. If this
spreads, people are going to stop hoarding your cheques and they will come flying home to the bank. Since you don't have enough in the bank to cover
all the cheques, very nasty stuff is going to hit the fan!
Well, this has been progressing, and actually quite rapidly recently. Gold HAS been brought into the picture, as countries are scrambling for safe
haven, in times of uncertanty. Other countries know what they want, but really dont know what will happen. This is a period of transition and unknown
territory for many.
The United States has been involved in a program of 'Dollarization', whereby dollars are being 'forced' into countries that would not normally be
trading in them, reletive to their accepted trading currency.
Dollarization occurs when residents of a country extensively use the U.S. dollar or another foreign currency alongside or instead of the domestic
currency. Unofficial dollarization occurs when individuals hold foreign-currency bank deposits or notes (paper money) to protect against high
inflation in the domestic currency. Official dollarization occurs when a government adopts foreign currency as the predominant or exclusive legal
tender.
Basics of Dollarization
US Floods Iraq With Dollars
Locking the world back into dollar oil trading would consolidate America's current position and make it all but impregnable as the dominant world
power -- economically and militarily. A splintered Europe (the US is working hard to split Europe; Britain was easy, but other Europeans have offered
support in terms of UN votes) and its euro would suffer a serious setback and might take decades to recover.
A move by Russia, as the world's second largest oil exporter, to trade oil in euros, could provoke a chain reaction among other oil producers
currently mulling a switch and would further boost the euro's gradually growing share of global currency reserves.
Putin: Why Not Price Oil in Euros?
Now, many other countries are hell-bent to retaliate against the US for a variety of reasons. They could see this as an opportunity to 'strike back'
with a force to be dealt with.
Iran's proposal to receive payments for crude oil sales to Europe in euros instead of U.S. dollars is based primarily on economics, Iranian and
industry sources said.
But politics are still likely to be a factor in any decision, they said, as Iran uses the opportunity to hit back at the U.S. government, which
recently labeled it part of an "axis of evil."
Economics Drive Iran Euro Oil Plan, Politics Also Key
Faced with waning international economic power, military superiority is the United States� only tool for world domination. Although, the expense of
this military control is unsustainable, says William Clark, "one of the dirty little secrets of today's international order is that the rest of the
globe could topple the United States from its hegemonic status whenever they so choose with a concerted abandonment of the dollar standard. This is
America's preeminent, inescapable Achilles Heel." If American power is ever perceived globally as a greater liability than the dangers of toppling
the international order, the U.S. systems of control can be eliminated and collapsed. When acting against world opinion � as in Iraq � an
international consensus could brand the United States as a �rogue nation.�
U.S. Dollar vs. the Euro: Another Reason for the Invasion of Iraq
So, the question is...
WHEN will the US become a trader in Euro's, accepting it as a dual currency, at leat, for the preservation of it's economy to say the least?
What is needed is a multilateral meeting of the G-7 nations to reform the international monetary system. Given that future wars will become more
likely over oil and the currency of oil, the author advocates that the global monetary system be reformed without delay. This would include the dollar
and euro being designated as equal international reserve currencies, and placed within an exchange band along with a dual-OPEC oil transaction
currency standard. Additionally, the G-7 nations should also explore a future third reserve currency option regarding a yen/yuan bloc for East Asia. A
compromise on the euro/oil issues via a multilateral treaty with a gradual phase-in of a dual-OPEC transaction currency standard could minimize
economic dislocations within the U.S.
But as countries that formerly held mostly the US dollars in their currency reserves begin to diversify into euros, the currency has taken its
place alongside the dollar, as the world's other global reserve currency. While current data are hard to come by, the euro now accounts for as much
as 35 per cent of global trade and reserve holdings. This new reality makes for a more stable world � and takes the unsustainable burden of the sole
reserve currency status off the US dollar.
Clearly, with its enormous, open-ended commitments in the global war on terrorism, the US economy cannot at the same time, continue to absorb most
of the world's exports � and remain the locomotive of the world's economic growth. This new situation seems a surprise to the Bush Administration.
It is still keen on expanding its overseas commitments, re-building Iraq and offering aid packages to Turkey, Pakistan and other countries whose
support is sought. In the meantime, it has passed a $350 billion tax cut package in late May, 2003.
Dollar-euro-oil equation
Now the 'other' questions...China, and asian countries, etc...
Last year the former US Ambassador to Saudi Arabia told a committee of the US Congress: 'One of the major things the Saudis have historically
done, in part out of friendship with the United States, is to insist that oil continues to be priced in dollars. Therefore, the US Treasury can print
money and buy oil, which is an advantage no other country has. With the emergence of other currencies and with strains in the relationship, I wonder
whether there will not again be, as there have been in the past, people in Saudi Arabia who raise the question of why they should be so kind to the
United States.'
Oil pricing is just the background to a wider issue. The Bank of China and the Russian Central Bank are both rumoured to be waiting for the best
moment to increase the holdings of euros. Only 5 per cent of Chinese reserves are held in euros, but more than 20 per cent of its trade is with
Europe. Middle Eastern states hold $700bn of US assets, but comparatively little in Europe.
When will we buy oil in euros?
And that is the real One Dollar question.
When will the USA begin to trade in Euro's?!
As soon as the international momentum of change, gains such speed and power that resistance thru wars are no longer a viable answer or threat?
As soon as the USD begins a free-fall and international countries begin dumping the dollar as a safe haven for investment?
Let me know what you think !
I feel, that the only protection the american dollar has, is thru investing in euro's as a safe hedge, as well as re-stocking the treasury with gold
reserves.
.