China and the Dollar Markets don't like Treasury talking down the dollar's
status.

Mr. Geithner is learning on the job, and yesterday's lesson is that it isn't
smart to fool with currency markets when you are already tempting fate with
a gigantic U.S. reflation. Treasury and the Federal Reserve are flooding the
world with dollars to break the recession, and the world is rightly getting
nervous. The solution floated by Chinese central bank governor Zhou
Xiaochuan -- an increased role for the International Monetary Fund -- isn't
desirable. But his warning about the dangers of dollar weakness and
exchange-rate instability is still worth heeding.

Since the collapse of Bretton Woods in 1971, the global economy has tried to
function with floating exchange rates, in which the "market" is said to set
currency prices. As the world discovered in the 1970s and the Bush Treasury
forgot, however, the market for currencies isn't the same as for apples or
copper. Central banks control the supply of currencies through their
monopoly on money creation. Often, as at the Alan Greenspan-Ben
Bernanke-Donald Kohn Federal Reserve this decade, they get policy wrong,
with disastrous consequences. Amid the global economic downturn, some
central banks, like Vietnam's, are also turning to currency devaluation for
a trade advantage.

Mr. Zhou may want to head off this potential train wreck. On Monday he
proposed an international reserve currency "anchored to a stable benchmark
and issued according to a clear set of rules." He wants the supply of money
to allow for "timely adjustment" to "changing demand," and those adjustments
to be "disconnected from economic conditions and sovereign interests of any
single country." And he thinks the IMF can create a global currency by
expanding the use of its already-existing Special Drawing Rights (SDRs), a
synthetic currency linked to the underlying currencies of IMF states.

Yet who would determine the "right price" of the SDR -- the IMF? The
multilateral institution's economic prescriptions have sent numerous nations
into tailspins, particularly in Asia. There's nothing to say, too, that
national monetary authorities wouldn't cheat and adjust their domestic money
supplies as they saw fit -- or apply political pressure on the IMF to change
the SDR's currency weightings in their favor.

But the main problem with the SDR is that it can't be used for anything in
the real world. When the IMF allocates SDRs, recipient countries exchange
them for local currencies at local central banks. That money is then used to
buy real assets and facilitate trade. That exchange inflates the money
supply of the domestic country that's accepting the SDRs in exchange for
local currency.

There isn't consensus within China's central bank on the idea of empowering
the IMF, though Beijing is eager to have more say at the institution. Hu
Xiaolian, a vice governor of the bank, said Monday that "investing in U.S.
Treasury bonds is an important component of China's foreign currency reserve
investments." She added: "We are naturally relatively concerned with the
safety and profitability of U.S. government bonds."

Ms. Hu isn't alone, and we only wish the Treasury, the White House and the
Fed were equally as concerned. The dollar's status as a reserve currency
gives the U.S. enormous advantages, and it should be protected ferociously
by our public officials. It means we don't have to repay our debts in
foreign currency and that our borrowing costs are cheaper. To the extent
that the rest of the world follows a dollar standard, it also gives us far
greater global sway.

It is this influence that Russia, China and others sometimes resent and
would like to see displaced. The problem is that there really isn't an
obvious successor to the dollar. No other economy is large enough, with deep
enough capital markets. The euro might become an alternative down the road,
but it remains too new and lacks the necessary underpinning of political
cohesion.

Yet Mr. Zhou's demarche is also a warning that reserve currency status
carries special obligations. It means the U.S. isn't conducting monetary
policy only for itself but for much of the world. And it means that when the
U.S. falls for the temptation to debase its currency, it sends shocks
through the entire global trading system. The dollar's sharp but needless
gyrations during this decade are in our view one of the major causes of the
housing and commodity asset bubbles that led to the financial panic and
global recession.

If Mr. Geithner meant yesterday that he is "open" to broader monetary and
exchange-rate cooperation, that could be a step forward. But instead of
abdicating to IMF bureaucrats, this would mean working with the world's most
important governments and central banks -- for starters, the Fed, ECB, and
the Banks of England, Japan and China. The world could use monetary reform,
but the goal should be to reduce currency fluctuations and enhance price
stability and world trade. In the meantime, the dollar's special status is
an asset worth preserving.

-- 
Best Regards,
Haresh Soneji

+++++++++++++++++++++
END PIECE - CRY PLEDGE
"Before anything else, I'm an Indian. And so is this little child. The
rights I enjoy as a citizen of this free country are hers too. She has a
right to be free. She has a right to be happy. But I'm going to fight for
her because she has the right to be a child. I'm going to fight for her
every single day, every single moment. With my skills. With my resources.
With my heart. I'm going to fight for her because I can. And she can't."
+++++++++++++++++++++

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