Money and Finance
Requiem for the Dollar – By James Grant
Ben S. Bernanke doesn't know how lucky he is. Tongue-lashings from Bernie Sanders, the populist senator from Vermont, are one thing. The hangman's noose is another. Section 19 of this country's founding monetary legislation, the Coinage Act of 1792, prescribed the death penalty for any official who fraudulently debased the people's money. Was the massive printing of dollar bills to lift Wall Street (and the rest of us, too) off the rocks last year a kind of fraud? If the U.S. Senate so determines, it may send Mr. Bernanke back home to Princeton. But not even Ron Paul, the Texas Republican sponsor of a bill to subject the Fed to periodic congressional audits, is calling for the Federal Reserve chairman's head.
I wonder, though, just how far we have really come in the past 200-odd years. To give modernity its due, the dollar has cut a swath in the world. There's no greater success story in the long history of money than the common greenback. Of no intrinsic value, collateralized by nothing, it passes from hand to trusting hand the world over. More than half of the $923 billion's worth of currency in circulation is in the possession of foreigners.
In ancient times, the solidus circulated far and wide. But it was a tangible thing, a gold coin struck by the Byzantine Empire. Between Waterloo and the Great Depression, the pound sterling ruled the roost. But it was convertible into gold—slip your bank notes through a teller's window and the Bank of England would return the appropriate number of gold sovereigns. The dollar is faith-based. There's nothing behind it but Congress.
But now the world is losing faith, as well it might. It's not that the dollar is overvalued—economists at Deutsche Bank estimate it's 20% too cheap against the euro. The problem lies with its management. The greenback is a glorious old brand that's looking more and more like General Motors.
You get the strong impression that Mr. Bernanke fails to appreciate the tenuousness of the situation—fails to understand that the pure paper dollar is a contrivance only 38 years old, brand new, really, and that the experiment may yet come to naught. Indeed, history and mathematics agree that it will certainly come to naught. Paper currencies are wasting assets. In time, they lose all their value. Persistent inflation at even seemingly trifling amounts adds up over the course of half a century. Before you know it, that bill in your wallet won't buy a pack of gum.
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Related link: 1991 Interview with John Exter
Related book: Mr. Market Miscalculates
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The Villain – By Roger Lowenstein
Found via ValueWalk. THE U.S. FEDERAL RESERVE was founded 99 years ago, as a bulwark to the banking system and an antidote to its frequent runs and panics. Strictly speaking, it was America’s third attempt at a central bank. The first, organized by...
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The Nixon Shock - By Roger Lowenstein
Found via the Corner of Berkshire & Fairfax. How Nixon stopped backing the dollar with gold and changed global finance, a 40-year-old decision that still echoes in Greece, Ireland, and the U.S. “Inauguration Day was cloudy, grim,” wrote Arthur...
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1991 Moneychanger Interview With John Exter
Thanks to Will for passing this along after seeing John Exter quoted in the Op-Ed piece from Jim Grant.MONEYCHANGER You recognised very early that one major problem with Keynesianism was its reliance on debt. EXTER That’s what my upside-down debt pyramid...
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Advisor Perspectives: Au Revoir Jean-marie Eveillard: A Final Interview
Which worries you more – a decline in the dollar, rapid inflation, or deflation? How are you positioning your portfolio to defend against these scenarios? We have many worries, but we are not positioned against any particular outcome. Our top-down...
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Fortune Article By Warren E. Buffett Regarding U.s. Trade Deficit - November 10, 2003
With all the foreign investment in the U.S. lately, capped off by InBev's offer for Anheuser-Busch, there is bound to be some kind of political upheaval. But, as Mr. Buffett discussed nearly 5 years ago, our country's trade policy has made this...
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