Begin forwarded message:

> From: dasg...@aol.com
> Date: August 5, 2010 8:15:26 PM PDT
> To: ramille...@aol.com
> Cc: ema...@aol.com, j...@aol.com, jim6...@cwnet.com, christian.r...@gmail.com
> Subject: The UN and IMF Agree: US Dollar Too Unsound to Serve as a Global 
> Currency
> 
> IMF document illustrates plan to raise global currency
> 
> 
> By Stephen C. Webster
> August 5th, 2010
> http://rawstory.com/rs/2010/0805/imf-documents-illustrate-plan-turn-drawing-rights-global-currency/
> 
> It's no secret that many of the world's largest industrialized nations are 
> somewhat eager to ease their reliance on the U.S. dollar. For months China 
> and Russia have pushed ever subtly, for a new "global reserve currency," to 
> give governments around the world enhanced economic stability in the event of 
> greater fluctuations in the dollar's value.
> 
> But what wasn't known, until recently, is how far along the International 
> Monetary Fund was in the planning of elevating its so-called "special drawing 
> rights" from mere international agreement to an actual, legitimate global 
> currency.
> 
> The report examines what it calls the "imperfections" of the global reserve 
> banking structures, and how hoarding of reserves by sovereign nations can 
> subject the system to risk and occasional shocks.
> 
> In 35 pages of extrapolation and footnotes, the IMF's Strategy, Policy and 
> Review Department lays out the how and why of a global currency, which would 
> move from an "inside money" as the SDR to an "outside money" that is traded 
> by governments.
> 
> However, they conclude that "the ideas discussed are unlikely to materialize 
> in the foreseeable future absent a dramatic shift in appetite for 
> international cooperation."
> 
> The PDF document appeared to have been taken offline at time of this writing, 
> but a cached version was still available. The document is from April, but was 
> only recently noticed by Financial Times.
> 
> "[In] the eyes of the IMF at least, the best way to ensure the stability of 
> the international monetary system (post crisis) is actually by launching a 
> global currency," they note.
> 
> "And that, the IMF says, is largely because sovereigns — as they stand — 
> cannot be trusted to redistribute surplus reserves, or battle their deficits, 
> themselves."
> 
> The IMF goes on to explain:
> 
> Reserve accumulation has accelerated dramatically in the past decade, 
> particularly since the 2003-4. At the end of 2009, reserves had risen to 13 
> percent of global GDP, doubling from their 2000 level, and over 50 percent of 
> total imports of goods and services. Emerging market holdings rose to 32 
> percent of their GDP (26 percent excluding China). Twenty-seven of the top 40 
> reserve holders, accounting for over 90 percent of total reserve holdings, 
> recorded double digit average growth in reserves over 1999-2008.
> 
> Holdings have also become increasingly concentrated, with over half the total 
> held by only five countries. These numbers exclude substantial foreign    
> assets of the official sector not recorded as reserves, including in 
> sovereign wealth funds (SWFs), and yet invested in liquid, dollar denominated 
> financial instruments, that have grown even more in recent years.
> 
> The global currency IMF envisions, they simply call "bancor". They continue:
> 
> though an SDR-based system would move away from a dominant national currency, 
> the SDR’s value remains heavily linked to the conditions and performance of 
> the major component countries. A more ambitious reform option would be to 
> build on the previous ideas and develop, over time, a global currency. 
> Called, for example, bancor in honor of Keynes, such a currency could be used 
> as a medium of exchange — an “outside money” in contrast to the SDR which 
> remains an “inside money”.
> 
> Were the industrial nations of the world to agree to the IMF's prescription 
> for the global financial system, the fund would undertake a new realm of 
> responsibilities. It describes them as:
> 
> Encouraging reserve holders to adjust the currency composition of reserves 
> only gradually and discourage any “active” currency management that could 
> potentially cause large swings between reserve currencies.
> 
> Requiring all reserve holding members to report their reserve composition to 
> the Fund (possibly confidentially) including information on reserve holder’s 
> benchmark for the currency composition of reserves. Using this information, 
> the Fund could advise reserve holders on the pace of reserve diversification 
> (if and when the latter express interest inadjusting the currency composition 
> of their reserves) to maintain stability in the adjustment process, including 
> during the transition phase to a balanced reserve system. For instance Truman 
> and Wong (2006) propose an international reserve diversification standard 
> comprising two basic elements: (i) routine disclosure of the currency 
> composition of official foreign exchange holdings; and (ii) a commitment by 
> reserveholders to adjust gradually the actual currency composition of its 
> reserves to any newbenchmark for those holdings.
> 
> Engaging with potential major reserve issuers to help remove obstacles to 
> broader use oftheir currencies, if the authorities so desire.
> 
> Considering mechanisms to facilitate the use of emerging market assets to 
> draw liquiditywith greater certainty to attenuate their demand for 
> hard-currency reserves.
> 
> The report was issued months before a recent United Nations Economic and 
> Social Council called on nations to move away from the dollar as their 
> reserve currency.  The U.N. based its advice on the adverse effects felt by 
> developing nations that were hit especially hard during the 2008-2009 U.S. 
> economic instability.
> 
> President Obama, Treasury Secretary Geithner and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben 
> Bernanke have steadfastly maintained that the world does not need a new 
> reserve currency.
> 
> To the contrary, Russia has predicted the world is a mere decade away from 
> that inevitability.
> 
> “There is a need to make the IMF a true representative of the world’s leading 
> economies. It’s not there right now,” said Russian Finance Minister Alexei 
> Kudrin during a June 2009 economic forum, noting that China had a lower 
> representation quota than Switzerland or Belgium.
> 

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