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The End of Dollar Hegemony
HON. RON PAUL OF TEXAS
Before the U.S. House of Representatives, February 15, 2006
A hundred years ago it was called “dollar diplomacy.” After World War II,
and especially after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1989, that policy evolved
into “dollar hegemony.” But after all these many years of great success, our
dollar dominance is coming to an end.
It has been said, rightly, that he who holds the gold makes the rules. In
earlier times it was readily accepted that fair and honest trade required an
exchange for something of real value.
First it was simply barter of goods. Then it was discovered that gold held
a universal attraction, and was a convenient substitute for more cumbersome
barter transactions. Not only did gold facilitate exchange of goods and
services, it served as a store of value for those who wanted to save for a rainy
day.
Though money developed naturally in the marketplace, as governments grew in
power they assumed monopoly control over money. Sometimes governments succeeded
in guaranteeing the quality and purity of gold, but in time governments learned
to outspend their revenues. New or higher taxes always incurred the disapproval
of the people, so it wasn’t long before Kings and Caesars learned how to inflate
their currencies by reducing the amount of gold in each coin-- always hoping
their subjects wouldn’t discover the fraud. But the people always did, and they
strenuously objected.
This helped pressure leaders to seek more gold by conquering other nations.
The people became accustomed to living beyond their means, and enjoyed the
circuses and bread. Financing extravagances by conquering foreign lands seemed a
logical alternative to working harder and producing more. Besides, conquering
nations not only brought home gold, they brought home slaves as well. Taxing
the people in conquered territories also provided an incentive to build
empires. This system of government worked well for a while, but the moral
decline of the people led to an unwillingness to produce for themselves. There
was a limit to the number of countries that could be sacked for their wealth,
and this always brought empires to an end. When gold no longer could be
obtained, their military might crumbled. In those days those who held the gold
truly wrote the rules and lived well.
That general rule has held fast throughout the ages. When gold was used,
and the rules protected honest commerce, productive nations thrived. Whenever
wealthy nations-- those with powerful armies and gold-- strived only for empire
and easy fortunes to support welfare at home, those nations failed.
Today the principles are the same, but the process is quite different. Gold
no longer is the currency of the realm; paper is. The truth now is: “He who
prints the money makes the rules”-- at least for the time being. Although gold
is not used, the goals are the same: compel foreign countries to produce and
subsidize the country with military superiority and control over the monetary
printing presses.
Since printing paper money is nothing short of counterfeiting, the issuer of
the international currency must always be the country with the military might to
guarantee control over the system. This magnificent scheme seems the perfect
system for obtaining perpetual wealth for the country that issues the de facto
world currency. The one problem, however, is that such a system destroys the
character of the counterfeiting nation’s people-- just as was the case when gold
was the currency and it was obtained by conquering other nations. And this
destroys the incentive to save and produce, while encouraging debt and runaway
welfare.
The pressure at home to inflate the currency comes from the corporate
welfare recipients, as well as those who demand handouts as compensation for
their needs and perceived injuries by others. In both cases personal
responsibility for one’s actions is rejected.
When paper money is rejected, or when gold runs out, wealth and political
stability are lost. The country then must go from living beyond its means to
living beneath its means, until the economic and political systems adjust to the
new rules-- rules no longer written by those who ran the now defunct printing
press.
“Dollar Diplomacy,” a policy instituted by William Howard Taft and his
Secretary of State Philander C. Knox, was designed to enhance U.S. commercial
investments in Latin America and the Far East. McKinley concocted a war against
Spain in 1898, and (Teddy) Roosevelt’s corollary to the Monroe Doctrine
preceded Taft’s aggressive approach to using the U.S. dollar and diplomatic
influence to secure U.S. investments abroad. This earned the popular title of
“Dollar Diplomacy.” The significance of Roosevelt’s change was that our
intervention now could be justified by the mere “appearance” that a country of
interest to us was politically or fiscally vulnerable to European control. Not
only did we claim a right, but even an official U.S. government “obligation” to
protect our commercial interests from Europeans.
This new policy came on the heels of the “gunboat” diplomacy of the late
19th century, and it meant we could buy influence before resorting to the threat
of force. By the time the “dollar diplomacy” of William Howard Taft was clearly
articulated, the seeds of American empire were planted. And they were destined
to grow in the fertile political soil of a country that lost its love and
respect for the republic bequeathed to us by the authors of the Constitution.
And indeed they did. It wasn’t too long before dollar “diplomacy” became dollar
“hegemony” in the second half of the 20th century.
This transition only could have occurred with a dramatic change in monetary
policy and the nature of the dollar itself.
Congress created the Federal Reserve System in 1913. Between then and 1971
the principle of sound money was systematically undermined. Between 1913 and
1971, the Federal Reserve found it much easier to expand the money supply at
will for financing war or manipulating the economy with little resistance from
Congress-- while benefiting the special interests that influence government.
Dollar dominance got a huge boost after World War II. We were spared the
destruction that so many other nations suffered, and our coffers were filled
with the world’s gold. But the world chose not to return to the discipline of
the gold standard, and the politicians applauded. Printing money to pay the
bills was a lot more popular than taxing or restraining unnecessary spending.
In spite of the short-term benefits, imbalances were institutionalized for
decades to come.
The 1944 Bretton Woods agreement solidified the dollar as the preeminent
world reserve currency, replacing the British pound. Due to our political and
military muscle, and because we had a huge amount of physical gold, the world
readily accepted our dollar (defined as 1/35th of an ounce of gold) as the
world’s reserve currency. The dollar was said to be “as good as gold,” and
convertible to all foreign central banks at that rate. For American citizens,
however, it remained illegal to own. This was a gold-exchange standard that
from inception was doomed to fail.
The U.S. did exactly what many predicted she would do. She printed more
dollars for which there was no gold backing. But the world was content to
accept those dollars for more than 25 years with little question-- until the
French and others in the late 1960s demanded we fulfill our promise to pay one
ounce of gold for each $35 they delivered to the U.S. Treasury. This resulted
in a huge gold drain that brought an end to a very poorly devised pseudo-gold
standard.
It all ended on August 15, 1971, when Nixon closed the gold window and
refused to pay out any of our remaining 280 million ounces of gold. In essence,
we declared our insolvency and everyone recognized some other monetary system
had to be devised in order to bring stability to the markets.
Amazingly, a new system was devised which allowed the U.S. to operate the
printing presses for the world reserve currency with no restraints placed on
it-- not even a pretense of gold convertibility, none whatsoever! Though the
new policy was even more deeply flawed, it nevertheless opened the door for
dollar hegemony to spread.
Realizing the world was embarking on something new and mind boggling, elite
money managers, with especially strong support from U.S. authorities, struck an
agreement with OPEC to price oil in U.S. dollars exclusively for all worldwide
transactions. This gave the dollar a special place among world currencies and
in essence “backed” the dollar with oil. In return, the U.S. promised to
protect the various oil-rich kingdoms in the Persian Gulf against threat of
invasion or domestic coup. This arrangement helped ignite the radical Islamic
movement among those who resented our influence in the region. The arrangement
gave the dollar artificial strength, with tremendous financial benefits for the
United States. It allowed us to export our monetary inflation by buying oil and
other goods at a great discount as dollar influence flourished.
This post-Bretton Woods system was much more fragile than the system that
existed between 1945 and 1971. Though the dollar/oil arrangement was helpful,
it was not nearly as stable as the pseudo gold standard under Bretton Woods. It
certainly was less stable than the gold standard of the late 19th century.
During the 1970s the dollar nearly collapsed, as oil prices surged and gold
skyrocketed to $800 an ounce. By 1979 interest rates of 21% were required to
rescue the system. The pressure on the dollar in the 1970s, in spite of the
benefits accrued to it, reflected reckless budget deficits and monetary
inflation during the 1960s. The markets were not fooled by LBJ’s claim that we
could afford both “guns and butter.”
Once again the dollar was rescued, and this ushered in the age of true
dollar hegemony lasting from the early 1980s to the present. With tremendous
cooperation coming from the central banks and international commercial banks,
the dollar was accepted as if it were gold.
Fed Chair Alan Greenspan, on several occasions before the House Banking
Committee, answered my challenges to him about his previously held favorable
views on gold by claiming that he and other central bankers had gotten paper
money-- i.e. the dollar system-- to respond as if it were gold. Each time I
strongly disagreed, and pointed out that if they had achieved such a feat they
would have defied centuries of economic history regarding the need for money to
be something of real value. He smugly and confidently concurred with this.
In recent years central banks and various financial institutions, all with
vested interests in maintaining a workable fiat dollar standard, were not
secretive about selling and loaning large amounts of gold to the market even
while decreasing gold prices raised serious questions about the wisdom of such a
policy. They never admitted to gold price fixing, but the evidence is abundant
that they believed if the gold price fell it would convey a sense of confidence
to the market, confidence that they indeed had achieved amazing success in
turning paper into gold.
Increasing gold prices historically are viewed as an indicator of distrust
in paper currency. This recent effort was not a whole lot different than the
U.S. Treasury selling gold at $35 an ounce in the 1960s, in an attempt to
convince the world the dollar was sound and as good as gold. Even during the
Depression, one of Roosevelt’s first acts was to remove free market gold pricing
as an indication of a flawed monetary system by making it illegal for American
citizens to own gold. Economic law eventually limited that effort, as it did in
the early 1970s when our Treasury and the IMF tried to fix the price of gold by
dumping tons into the market to dampen the enthusiasm of those seeking a safe
haven for a falling dollar after gold ownership was re-legalized.
Once again the effort between 1980 and 2000 to fool the market as to the
true value of the dollar proved unsuccessful. In the past 5 years the dollar
has been devalued in terms of gold by more than 50%. You just can’t fool all
the people all the time, even with the power of the mighty printing press and
money creating system of the Federal Reserve.
Even with all the shortcomings of the fiat monetary system, dollar influence
thrived. The results seemed beneficial, but gross distortions built into the
system remained. And true to form, Washington politicians are only too anxious
to solve the problems cropping up with window dressing, while failing to
understand and deal with the underlying flawed policy. Protectionism, fixing
exchange rates, punitive tariffs, politically motivated sanctions, corporate
subsidies, international trade management, price controls, interest rate and
wage controls, super-nationalist sentiments, threats of force, and even war are
resorted to—all to solve the problems artificially created by deeply flawed
monetary and economic systems.
In the short run, the issuer of a fiat reserve currency can accrue great
economic benefits. In the long run, it poses a threat to the country issuing
the world currency. In this case that’s the United States. As long as foreign
countries take our dollars in return for real goods, we come out ahead. This is
a benefit many in Congress fail to recognize, as they bash China for maintaining
a positive trade balance with us. But this leads to a loss of manufacturing
jobs to overseas markets, as we become more dependent on others and less
self-sufficient. Foreign countries accumulate our dollars due to their high
savings rates, and graciously loan them back to us at low interest rates to
finance our excessive consumption.
It sounds like a great deal for everyone, except the time will come when our
dollars-- due to their depreciation-- will be received less enthusiastically or
even be rejected by foreign countries. That could create a whole new ballgame
and force us to pay a price for living beyond our means and our production. The
shift in sentiment regarding the dollar has already started, but the worst is
yet to come.
The agreement with OPEC in the 1970s to price oil in dollars has provided
tremendous artificial strength to the dollar as the preeminent reserve
currency. This has created a universal demand for the dollar, and soaks up the
huge number of new dollars generated each year. Last year alone M3 increased
over $700 billion.
The artificial demand for our dollar, along with our military might, places
us in the unique position to “rule” the world without productive work or
savings, and without limits on consumer spending or deficits. The problem is,
it can’t last.
Price inflation is raising its ugly head, and the NASDAQ bubble-- generated
by easy money-- has burst. The housing bubble likewise created is deflating.
Gold prices have doubled, and federal spending is out of sight with zero
political will to rein it in. The trade deficit last year was over $728
billion. A $2 trillion war is raging, and plans are being laid to expand the
war into Iran and possibly Syria. The only restraining force will be the
world’s rejection of the dollar. It’s bound to come and create conditions worse
than 1979-1980, which required 21% interest rates to correct. But everything
possible will be done to protect the dollar in the meantime. We have a shared
interest with those who hold our dollars to keep the whole charade going.
Greenspan, in his first speech after leaving the Fed, said that gold prices
were up because of concern about terrorism, and not because of monetary concerns
or because he created too many dollars during his tenure. Gold has to be
discredited and the dollar propped up. Even when the dollar comes under serious
attack by market forces, the central banks and the IMF surely will do everything
conceivable to soak up the dollars in hope of restoring stability. Eventually
they will fail.
Most importantly, the dollar/oil relationship has to be maintained to keep
the dollar as a preeminent currency. Any attack on this relationship will be
forcefully challenged—as it already has been.
In November 2000 Saddam Hussein demanded Euros for his oil. His arrogance
was a threat to the dollar; his lack of any military might was never a threat.
At the first cabinet meeting with the new administration in 2001, as reported by
Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neill, the major topic was how we would get rid of
Saddam Hussein-- though there was no evidence whatsoever he posed a threat to
us. This deep concern for Saddam Hussein surprised and shocked O’Neill.
It now is common knowledge that the immediate reaction of the administration
after 9/11 revolved around how they could connect Saddam Hussein to the attacks,
to justify an invasion and overthrow of his government. Even with no evidence
of any connection to 9/11, or evidence of weapons of mass destruction, public
and congressional support was generated through distortions and flat out
misrepresentation of the facts to justify overthrowing Saddam Hussein.
There was no public talk of removing Saddam Hussein because of his attack on
the integrity of the dollar as a reserve currency by selling oil in Euros. Many
believe this was the real reason for our obsession with Iraq. I doubt it was
the only reason, but it may well have played a significant role in our
motivation to wage war. Within a very short period after the military victory,
all Iraqi oil sales were carried out in dollars. The Euro was abandoned.
In 2001, Venezuela’s ambassador to Russia spoke of Venezuela switching to
the Euro for all their oil sales. Within a year there was a coup attempt
against Chavez, reportedly with assistance from our CIA.
After these attempts to nudge the Euro toward replacing the dollar as the
world’s reserve currency were met with resistance, the sharp fall of the dollar
against the Euro was reversed. These events may well have played a significant
role in maintaining dollar dominance.
It’s become clear the U.S. administration was sympathetic to those who
plotted the overthrow of Chavez, and was embarrassed by its failure. The fact
that Chavez was democratically elected had little influence on which side we
supported.
Now, a new attempt is being made against the petrodollar system. Iran,
another member of the “axis of evil,” has announced her plans to initiate an oil
bourse in March of this year. Guess what, the oil sales will be priced Euros,
not dollars.
Most Americans forget how our policies have systematically and needlessly
antagonized the Iranians over the years. In 1953 the CIA helped overthrow a
democratically elected president, Mohammed Mossadeqh, and install the
authoritarian Shah, who was friendly to the U.S. The Iranians were still fuming
over this when the hostages were seized in 1979. Our alliance with Saddam
Hussein in his invasion of Iran in the early 1980s did not help matters, and
obviously did not do much for our relationship with Saddam Hussein. The
administration announcement in 2001 that Iran was part of the axis of evil
didn’t do much to improve the diplomatic relationship between our two
countries. Recent threats over nuclear power, while ignoring the fact that they
are surrounded by countries with nuclear weapons, doesn’t seem to register with
those who continue to provoke Iran. With what most Muslims perceive as our war
against Islam, and this recent history, there’s little wonder why Iran might
choose to harm America by undermining the dollar. Iran, like Iraq, has zero
capability to attack us. But that didn’t stop us from turning Saddam Hussein
into a modern day Hitler ready to take over the world. Now Iran, especially
since she’s made plans for pricing oil in Euros, has been on the receiving end
of a propaganda war not unlike that waged against Iraq before our invasion.
It’s not likely that maintaining dollar supremacy was the only motivating
factor for the war against Iraq, nor for agitating against Iran. Though the
real reasons for going to war are complex, we now know the reasons given before
the war started, like the presence of weapons of mass destruction and Saddam
Hussein’s connection to 9/11, were false. The dollar’s importance is obvious,
but this does not diminish the influence of the distinct plans laid out years
ago by the neo-conservatives to remake the Middle East. Israel’s influence, as
well as that of the Christian Zionists, likewise played a role in prosecuting
this war. Protecting “our” oil supplies has influenced our Middle East policy
for decades.
But the truth is that paying the bills for this aggressive intervention is
impossible the old fashioned way, with more taxes, more savings, and more
production by the American people. Much of the expense of the Persian Gulf War
in 1991 was shouldered by many of our willing allies. That’s not so today.
Now, more than ever, the dollar hegemony-- it’s dominance as the world reserve
currency-- is required to finance our huge war expenditures. This $2 trillion
never-ending war must be paid for, one way or another. Dollar hegemony provides
the vehicle to do just that.
For the most part the true victims aren’t aware of how they pay the bills.
The license to create money out of thin air allows the bills to be paid through
price inflation. American citizens, as well as average citizens of Japan,
China, and other countries suffer from price inflation, which represents the
“tax” that pays the bills for our military adventures. That is until the fraud
is discovered, and the foreign producers decide not to take dollars nor hold
them very long in payment for their goods. Everything possible is done to
prevent the fraud of the monetary system from being exposed to the masses who
suffer from it. If oil markets replace dollars with Euros, it would in time
curtail our ability to continue to print, without restraint, the world’s reserve
currency.
It is an unbelievable benefit to us to import valuable goods and export
depreciating dollars. The exporting countries have become addicted to our
purchases for their economic growth. This dependency makes them allies in
continuing the fraud, and their participation keeps the dollar’s value
artificially high. If this system were workable long term, American citizens
would never have to work again. We too could enjoy “bread and circuses” just as
the Romans did, but their gold finally ran out and the inability of Rome to
continue to plunder conquered nations brought an end to her empire.
The same thing will happen to us if we don’t change our ways. Though we
don’t occupy foreign countries to directly plunder, we nevertheless have spread
our troops across 130 nations of the world. Our intense effort to spread our
power in the oil-rich Middle East is not a coincidence. But unlike the old
days, we don’t declare direct ownership of the natural resources-- we just
insist that we can buy what we want and pay for it with our paper money. Any
country that challenges our authority does so at great risk.
Once again Congress has bought into the war propaganda against Iran, just as
it did against Iraq. Arguments are now made for attacking Iran economically,
and militarily if necessary. These arguments are all based on the same false
reasons given for the ill-fated and costly occupation of Iraq.
Our whole economic system depends on continuing the current monetary
arrangement, which means recycling the dollar is crucial. Currently, we borrow
over $700 billion every year from our gracious benefactors, who work hard and
take our paper for their goods. Then we borrow all the money we need to secure
the empire (DOD budget $450 billion) plus more. The military might we enjoy
becomes the “backing” of our currency. There are no other countries that can
challenge our military superiority, and therefore they have little choice but to
accept the dollars we declare are today’s “gold.” This is why countries that
challenge the system-- like Iraq, Iran and Venezuela-- become targets of our
plans for regime change.
Ironically, dollar superiority depends on our strong military, and our
strong military depends on the dollar. As long as foreign recipients take our
dollars for real goods and are willing to finance our extravagant consumption
and militarism, the status quo will continue regardless of how huge our foreign
debt and current account deficit become.
But real threats come from our political adversaries who are incapable of
confronting us militarily, yet are not bashful about confronting us
economically. That’s why we see the new challenge from Iran being taken so
seriously. The urgent arguments about Iran posing a military threat to the
security of the United States are no more plausible than the false charges
levied against Iraq. Yet there is no effort to resist this march to
confrontation by those who grandstand for political reasons against the Iraq
war.
It seems that the people and Congress are easily persuaded by the jingoism
of the preemptive war promoters. It’s only after the cost in human life and
dollars are tallied up that the people object to unwise militarism.
The strange thing is that the failure in Iraq is now apparent to a large
majority of American people, yet they and Congress are acquiescing to the call
for a needless and dangerous confrontation with Iran.
But then again, our failure to find Osama bin Laden and destroy his network
did not dissuade us from taking on the Iraqis in a war totally unrelated to
9/11.
Concern for pricing oil only in dollars helps explain our willingness to
drop everything and teach Saddam Hussein a lesson for his defiance in demanding
Euros for oil.
And once again there’s this urgent call for sanctions and threats of force
against Iran at the precise time Iran is opening a new oil exchange with all
transactions in Euros.
Using force to compel people to accept money without real value can only
work in the short run. It ultimately leads to economic dislocation, both
domestic and international, and always ends with a price to be paid.
The economic law that honest exchange demands only things of real value as
currency cannot be repealed. The chaos that one day will ensue from our 35-year
experiment with worldwide fiat money will require a return to money of real
value. We will know that day is approaching when oil-producing countries demand
gold, or its equivalent, for their oil rather than dollars or Euros. The sooner
the better.
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