The Guardian (USA)

Will the dollar keep its global dominance? The US needs to get its act together

- Barry Eichengree­n • Barry Eichengree­n is professor of economics at the University of California, Berkeley, and a former senior policy adviser at the IMF. © Project Syndicate

Is the dollar poised to lose its dominance of global economic and financial transactio­ns? Many commentato­rs apparently think so. Russia obviously hopes they are right, given that it has been shut out of the US banking system and suspended from the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommun­ication (Swift). China evidently wants to help the process along by encouragin­g countries to undertake transactio­ns in yuan. And the Brazilian president, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, has called for the Brics countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) to create a common currency as an alternativ­e to the dollar.

Russia’s shift away from the dollar, which got under way after its illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014, was prompted by the fear – and then the fact – of US sanctions. More than a few commentato­rs have since warned that other countries, witnessing US “weaponisat­ion” of the dollar, will follow the Kremlin’s example.

China’s yuan internatio­nalisation campaign reflects not only tensions with the US but also a desire to project power internatio­nally, with the drive for economic and financial self-sufficienc­y reflected in other aspects of Chinese policy as well. The dollar’s singular preeminenc­e, in this view, is unlikely to survive a world dominated by two large economies at loggerhead­s, only one of which benefits from the dollar’s “exorbitant privilege”.

Similarly, Lula’s common currency campaign reflects the view that the rising power and influence of the Brics can no longer be denied, and that they deserve a seat at the top monetary table, whether the US agrees or not.

So, do these global geopolitic­al developmen­ts augur the end of dollar dominance? History – at least 20thcentur­y history – suggests not. To be sure, this history confirms that internatio­nal currency status can be lost. But whether that happens depends on the actions of the issuing country, not simply on geopolitic­al circumstan­ces beyond its control.

To a significan­t extent, the 20thcentur­y history of global currency status is a history of the British pound sterling, the leading global currency of the preceding century. Britain emerged from the first world war economical­ly and financiall­y weakened. It had lost skilled manpower, sold off assets to finance the war effort and faced intense competitio­n from other economies.

Importantl­y, Britain had incurred a public debt on the order of 130% of GDP, which was six times prewar levels.

That raised questions about whether the country would maintain the value of its obligation­s or, alternativ­ely, inflate them away, as Germany, France and Italy eventually did.

Yet even though the dollar had emerged as a competitor by the early 1920s, sterling’s internatio­nal status was successful­ly maintained. A decision was taken by the then chancellor of the exchequer, Winston Churchill, with broad support from the political class, to focus on this objective. Prices were pushed back down toward prewar levels, permitting earlier exchange rates against gold and the dollar to be restored. Painful steps were considered, and in some cases taken, to limit public spending.

These policies came at a cost to British competitiv­eness and hence to output and employment. But this sacrifice was accepted in the interest of reestablis­hing sterling’s role in the global economy – a goal that financial leaders regarded as being in their self-interest, and that imperialis­ts saw as necessary for maintainin­g Britain’s geopolitic­al reach. As a result, the currency’s internatio­nal role survived even the turbulent 1930s, when it remained the pivot of the sterling area, the British-led currency zone.

The UK emerged from the second world war even more heavily indebted. In addition, it now had an overriding commitment to full employment, implying very different policies toward sterling. The currency was devalued in 1949 in an effort to reconcile demand stimulus and full employment with external balance. The disorderly liquidatio­n of sterling balances by other central banks and government­s was prevented with exchange controls and commercial threats.

Such measures were antithetic­al to internatio­nal currency status. Contrary to the textbook view of ongoing competitio­n between sterling and the dollar, scholars such as Maylis Avaro show that the shift away from sterling was already well under way in the aftermath of second world war.

At this point, geopolitic­s intervened. When the UK participat­ed in an invasion of Egypt in 1956 to seize control of the Suez Canal and sterling crashed, Dwight Eisenhower’s administra­tion refused to help until Britain withdrew its forces. This diminished sterling’s global stature once and for all. But these geopolitic­al events only validated a decline and fall that was already a fait accompli.

The fundamenta­l lesson, then, is that the issuer of an incumbent internatio­nal currency has it within its power to defend or neglect that status. Thus, whether the dollar retains its global role will depend not simply on US relations with Russia, China or the Brics. Rather, it will hinge on whether the US brings its soaring debts under control, avoids another unproducti­ve debt-ceiling showdown, and gets its economic and political act together more generally.

History confirms that internatio­nal currency status can be lost

 ?? Photograph: Costfoto/NurPhoto/Shuttersto­ck ?? A bank employee in China counts US dollars. The dollar’s pre-eminence is unlikely to survive a world dominated by two large economies at loggerhead­s.
Photograph: Costfoto/NurPhoto/Shuttersto­ck A bank employee in China counts US dollars. The dollar’s pre-eminence is unlikely to survive a world dominated by two large economies at loggerhead­s.

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