http://www.ecommercetimes.com/rsstory/68541.html?wlc=1257268380

OPINION
Folding the US Into a Single Global Currency
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By Theodore F. di Stefano
E-Commerce Times 
11/03/09 5:30 AM PT

The U.S. dollar is one of many symbols of U.S. power after World War II and
after the end of the Cold War, but we are now in an increasingly multipolar
collegial world, according to Morrison Bonpasse, president of the Single
Global Currency Association. A multicurrency system simply does not provided
the stability now needed, he argues.


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here have been several suggestions by China, Brazil, Russia and other
countries, and by a U.N. Commission headed by Nobel Laureate Joseph
Stiglitz, as well as by the United Nations Conference on Trade and
Development for a new global reserve currency to replace the U.S. dollar.
Increasingly, the media are running stories and comments about the "demise
of the dollar."

Recently, I asked the president of the Single Global Currency Association,
Morrison Bonpasse, about his take on the future of the U.S. dollar and the
global monetary system. In previous interviews, we've explored the idea of a
single global currency.

Here's what Bonpasse had to say about the recent events and the calls to
move the world's monetary system away from the U.S. dollar.


Theodore F. di Stefano: Why must the current role of the U.S. dollar be
changed?

Morrison Bonpasse: As the Chinese Central Bank Governor, Zhou Xiaochuan,
stated last spring when proposing a new global reserve currency, it no
longer makes sense for the currency of one nation to have such a primary
role as the U.S. dollar.

This statement echoes former Federal Reserve Chair Paul Volcker's wise
refrain, "A global economy requires a global currency." The U.S. dollar is
one of many symbols of U.S. power after World War II and after the end of
the Cold War, but we are now in an increasingly multipolar collegial world.
For a global currency to be trusted and valued, it must be for today, even
for this hour, and not for the past.

di Stefano: What should replace the U.S. dollar?

Bonpasse: Very simply, a single global currency, managed by a Global Central
Bank within a Global Monetary Union, should succeed the dollar. Such a
currency should incorporate the U.S. dollar and not just push it aside, as
the dollar did to the UK pound in the 20th century. The model for the
dollar's future incorporation into a monetary union was the role of the
Deutschmark in the formation of the European Monetary Union.

We do not need yet another global currency, whether reserve or not. What we
need is a global monetary system which will provide monetary stability, and
that stability cannot be achieved in a multicurrency system. By definition,
in a multicurrency system there are unpredictable currency fluctuations and
risky global imbalances.

di Stefano: What should be the role of the International Monetary Fund?

Bonpasse: The IMF was established by the 1944 Bretton Woods Conference to
cope with, or ameliorate, two fundamental problems which bedeviled the
multicurrency world: currency fluctuations and global imbalances. The
elegance of a single global currency is that it will solve both problems.

To repeat, the establishment of a single global currency will eliminate
currency fluctuations and will eliminate the problem of global imbalances.
What the IMF should do is to initiate research and planning for such a
single global currency, and then plan a role for itself in the new system as
part of the Global Central Bank.

di Stefano: What should be the role of the G20?

Bonpasse: At the recent Pittsburgh conference, the problem of global
imbalances was recognized by the G20 countries as one of three major
concerns. The fear is that if the U.S. government continues to run its
gigantic deficits, the world's confidence in soundness of the U.S. will
decline, and when confidence in a government declines, the value of its
currency declines. That's why the future single global currency should be
managed by a representative Global Central Bank, just as the euro is managed
by the European Central Bank.

The primary goal of the Global Central Bank would be the same as for the
ECB: monetary stability. If the IMF is not going to lead in the research and
planning for a single global currency, the G20 should do so. Three of the
G20 countries -- France, Germany and Italy -- are already in a monetary
union, and there are zero currency fluctuations among them and zero currency
imbalances.

Another G20 member is the European Union. The U.K. and Turkey will
eventually join the euro, and other G20 countries are likely to be the cores
of future regional monetary unions, such as Argentina and Brazil, Japan and
China, and South Africa.

Finally, the regional monetary unions will join with each other and with one
or more of the national currencies. Once the tipping point is reached where
one currency supports approximately 40 to 50 percent of the world's GDP, the
movement will accelerate to anoint that currency as the single global
currency.

di Stefano: How long might this process take?

Bonpasse: The goal of the Single Global Currency Association is a single
global currency, managed by a Global Central Bank within a Global Monetary
Union by 2024, which is now 15 years away.

However, the process needn't take that long. If the decision makers in the
U.S. and EMU decided to merge the dollar and the euro into a monetary union,
that could be accomplished in less than five years, and that merged
currency, whatever its name, would become the single global currency. Other
potential mergers could also be executed rapidly. The expansion of the EMU
is once again gathering momentum, after many EU members, and Iceland, too,
understood that belonging to a large monetary union can protect a country
against currency collapse.

di Stefano: What's the next step?

Bonpasse: The claimed benefits of a single global currency deserve serious
study. Is it true that the adoption of a single global currency will save
(US)$400 billion annually in foreign exchange transaction costs and will
eliminate currency fluctuations and will eliminate global imbalances and the
need for foreign exchange reserves? Once these claims are proven valid, then
the leaders of the world's monetary systems will need to agree on the goal
of a single global currency, just as the leaders of Europe agreed in the
1980s on the goal of a common currency in Europe.

When the goal is openly acknowledged and its benefits widely understood by
the people of the world, they will demand its implementation. Hopefully, we
will achieve this goal without another global financial crisis to focus our
attention.

di Stefano: Thank you, Morrison, for sharing your beliefs with us. Good
luck! 

Theodore F. di Stefano is a founder and managing partner at Capital Source
Partners, which provides a wide range of investment banking services to the
small and medium-sized business. He is also a frequent speaker to business
groups on financial and corporate governance matters. He can be contacted at
t...@capitalsourcepartners.com.

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