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The Bush-Dollar Curve
Obscure economic indicator: Does the dollar fall when the president is
unpopular?
By Daniel Gross
Posted Friday, May 4, 2007, at 5:12 PM ET

Quick quiz: Is the dollar weak because Americans think President Bush
is a miserable failure?

Tom Gallagher of the ISI Group has observed a bizarre, and obscure,
economic indicator: The fortunes of the American president and the
fortunes of the American currency seem to move in tandem. Though there
is no clear reason the dollar and the president's popularity should be
connected, as the chart shows, for at least the past 18 years, there
has been what Gallagher calls "a loose correlation" between
presidential approval ratings, as measured by the Gallup organization,
and the value of the U.S. currency, as measured by the trade-weighted
dollar. In general, the dollar is buoyant against its global
competition when Americans approve of their president. Performance
slumps when Americans disapprove. Both President Bush and the
greenback have been in the grips of a steep decline since their
respective early-2002 peaks.

Now, Gallagher has more hedges around this simple data presentation
than you'll find ringing estates in Southampton. Correlation does not
imply causation. He is quick to note that there are a
gazillion-and-one factors that influence the market values of
currencies and presidents. Since currency traders and Americans are
essentially economic beings, it could be that they tend to buy the
security (the dollar, or the president) when the U.S. economy is
thriving and short it when the U.S. economy is in the dumps. In other
words, both the presidential approval ratings and the dollar may be
following economic health and are independent of each other.

Gallagher, though almost sheepish about boiling down the complexity of
the dollar-president relationship to a chart, puts forth a poli-sci
argument about how a weak president might help weaken the dollar. "I
think it makes sense that the political standing of the president is a
factor in the dollar's value," he said. Just as the dollar occupies an
outsized role in the global currency stage, so does the U.S.
president. If the president is politically weak, then Congress has a
stronger hand. And, international investors like to a see a strong
U.S. executive because they prefer a single national decider setting
the agenda and fear a fractious, parochial Congress—regardless of
which party controls which branch of government. "You'd rather have
the person with the national perspective running economic policy," he
said.

The Bush-dollar curve may also have a psychological component. By
definition, a currency that isn't backed by a precious metal is backed
by faith and confidence. In general, the dollar tends to strengthen
when investors believe the U.S. economy is churning ahead and
outperforming other economies, as was the case in the late 1990s, and
tends to weaken when investors believe the U.S. economy is slowing
down and being outperformed by other economies, as is the case today.
When those closest to the president (i.e., the American people) think
he's making a mess of things, it could well cause the currency's
stature to suffer abroad. Deeply unpopular presidents like President
Bush get that way because the public develops misgivings about their
competency to handle big issues. "You feel better as a global investor
if there's a strong president, because he's more capable of crisis
management and making good long-term policy," Gallagher said.

What about the reverse? Is it possible that the weaker dollar causes
lower presidential-approval ratings? The case for that is considerably
feebler. In theory, a declining dollar would make imports more
expensive, thus making American consumers feel poorer. In their
reduced straits, they might take out their anger at the president. But
a huge and growing chunk of imports originate in China, which has
pegged its currency tightly to the dollar in recent years. The dollar
today may buy fewer BMWs and Prada shoes than it did in 2002, but it
buys about the same amount of Chinese-made microwaves, T-shirts, and
toys. And yes, Americans who suddenly find travel to Europe
prohibitively expensive might be expected to come home enraged. But
most of these travelers already hated Bush. An August 2004 poll showed
that voters with passports preferred John Kerry to Bush by a whopping
23-point margin.

So, the dollar and President Bush remain shackled together. Neither
shows signs of reversing the longstanding downward trend. Given the
global interest-rate climate—the U.S. Federal Reserve's next move will
most likely be to cut interest rates if the economy continues to flag,
while the rest of the world is still going full steam ahead—the forces
driving down the dollar are strong. As for Bush, he continues to plumb
new depths of unpopularity, and the news flow—on Iraq, on the domestic
economy, on the scandal front—isn't getting any better.

In my neck of the woods, the heartland of Bushenfreude, new bumper
stickers have begun to appear on the Audis, Volvos, and Priuses driven
by liberal-leaning financial-services professionals: "1.20.09." The
message: Things will get better when the Bush administration ends,
regardless of who the successor is. Or maybe they're just predicting
when the next bull market for the dollar will begin.
Daniel Gross (www.danielgross.net) writes Slate's "Moneybox" column.
You can e-mail him at [EMAIL PROTECTED] He is the author of Pop! Why
Bubbles Are Great for the Economy.

Article URL: http://www.slate.com/id/2165579/

--
Jim Devine /  "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your
own way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.

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