By Nick Beams
30 September 2003
The sharp drop in the value of the dollar in money markets last week has pointed to the underlying instability of the international financial system and the ever-present possibility of a major crisis. The dollar’s decline followed a meeting of the Group of Seven (G7) finance ministers in Dubai which called for exchange rates to reflect “economic fundamentals.”
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This is an unprecedented situation in which the world’s leading economy is being financed by the accumulation of debt.
The “orthodox” method for unravelling this situation and ensuring global “rebalancing” is a reduction in the value of the US dollar, thereby cutting the balance of payments deficit and lessening the dependence on foreign capital inflows, coupled with increased growth in Europe and Japan in order to ensure alternative sources of world growth US.
That appears to have been the thinking behind the remarks on currency rates contained in the G7 statement. However, the rapidity of the dollar’s fall in the subsequent days ignited fears that too rapid a loss of value could spark an outflow of capital from the US, leading to a jump in interest rates and a fall in equity markets.
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http://www.wsws.org/articles/2003/sep2003/doll-s30.shtmlmy comment: hey everybody, i'm a newbie when it comes to global economics (and i've never posted in this forum before), so i'd like to hear people's opinions on this piece and the fall of the dollar generally, so that i can learn something. is this article accurate? are its conclusions supported by the evidence? any comments would be appreciated.
fire away!
:bounce: