Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Reprise: World Reserve Currency. II.

A continuation in my repetition of past writings on current topics of interest.  If all pundits read my blogs and learned, this would not be necessary.  Sigh ... they are lazy, though, and prefer to bloviate, blab & blather instead of thinking.

World Reserve Currency. II.

In response to a question, the reason for these posts about a "World Reserve Currency" is the recent public suggestions by Red China and others that a new reserve currency replace the US dollar. In my thinking about the matter, the realization that those proposing such and the pundits discussing same had no understanding about what they were bloviating quickly become evident.

Yesterday the general criterion for a currency to be a "World Reserve Currency" were listed and the defects of gold and silver for such role were explained.

Today I elaborate on criterion I, viz. "The currency is held by central banks of many nations to provide a base of value for their local currencies."

The currency is, or will be, held by the central banks of many nations to provide a base of value for their local currencies. That's what being a "reserve currency" means, The Reserve Currency is the core monetary base of those nations, in addition to whatever small amounts of gold or silver they own. Let's call the Reserve Currency "RC" for neutrality of the discussion, and the various local currencies "LC". The money supply of those nations becomes inextricably tied to the amount of RC their central banks hold. If the nation expands LC too much compared to its RC, it will likely experience inflation and the perception by its people that the value of their LC is being diminished.

The nation will need RC for this international trade. If too much LC exists and creates more and more demand for imports (that must be paid in RC), that demand for RC to purchase those will slowly drive down the value of LC. Temporarily this demand for RC can be filled by loans. But the amount of loans is limited or default risk grows too large. Thus one can see that the nation must have some net inflows of RC - Reserve Currency - broadly over the long term to have an LC - local currency - that maintains its value.

One can see how and why the local currencies of nations like Argentina and Ukraine can collapse: they simply run out of dollars for international trade and debt service as too much local currency is printed compared to the amounts of reserve currencies they hold. And one can see that without the RC, the population of the nation will be unable to operate in international trade or to purchase anything not produced internally. That people will lose confidence of the local currency's value quite rapidly in any crisis or stress. Such a government can maintain the value of the LC internally only be restricting the freedom of the people at act in international trade, which means foregoing the enormous benefits of having a free economy with free people.

Tomorrow I address Criterion II. Over this week I plan to explore all the dimensions of this fascinating subject.

Word of the Day

"Inspissate" - verb, transitive [$10] literary; "Inspissation" - noun; "Inspissator" - noun.
Inspissate means thicken, condense.
Inspissator means an apparatus for thickening serum, etc. by heat.
Sentence: [T. S. Eliot, Selected Prose, Dante, pg. 207] "... undoubtedly there is an opacity, or inspissation of poetic style throughout Europe after the Renaissance."

3 comments:

Spin-em said...

Big Al...not even a nibble...he must be good for collecting firewood or haulin water..cuz his chatta skills are in deep need of a shot of wiskey..lol

handshake in advance Al

Bud said...

Peanut butter may soon reach its highest price in more than a quarter century on U.S. supermarket shelves as manufacturers pass along cost increases, according to Judy E. Hong, a Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analyst.


yup..........QE2 is workin alright.......common man starving


let it fall my ass

Bud said...

Beef prices are expected to jump 7 percent to 8 percent this year, the biggest spike in a market basket of items that are all cruising to cost more, according to Richard Volpe, chief economist for the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Pork prices are predicted to rise about 7 percent and dairy about 5 percent.




yup.....QE2 workin to perfection




'ranchers and farmers'