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CCIM rejects NHRC Batla House Encounter Report |
Aya Ali
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NHRC
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Gujarat riot victims hail HC directive to interrogate Modi:
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What do China, India, Brazil, Russia, France and Germany have in
common? These countries most often can't agree on anything. But they
are united in one strange—and ominous—way. They blame the United
States for wrecking the global economy. And they think the dollar is
the wrecking ball.
One rock-solid, foundational belief underpins almost all economic
theory in America: faith in the dollar's unassailable status as the
world's reserve currency. Foreigners hold so many dollars that they
can't afford to stop buying them, the theory goes. Therefore the
dollar's status as the world's reserve currency is sound. But the
dollar is now coming under a concentrated attack. Are American
economists about to get schooled?
Has a dollar-killer been minted? Angela Merkel summed up the
dollar-skeptic viewpoint last year. "Excessively cheap money in the
U.S. was a driver of today's crisis," she told the German
parliament. And America's solution—even more cheap money—was just
setting the world up for another crisis, she said. It was just a
matter of time.
The irony is that America is completely blind to the catastrophe
heading its way. As the economic crisis unfolded at the end of last
year, investors made a mad rush out of global stock markets and into
other assets. The biggest beneficiary of the panic was the one
market large enough and liquid enough to handle the trillions of
dollars being moved: the U.S. dollar market. This caused the dollar
to surge in value.
America grossly misdiagnosed the demand for dollars as a vote of
confidence in the U.S. economic system. In fact, it was primarily a
case of investors looking for a place they could quickly and easily
get their money in—and out.
Now that the initial panic has subsided, the dollar's international
purchasing power has resumed its former downward trajectory. Since
the post-crisis high in March, the dollar has fallen by a
portfolio-shredding 10 percent.
America's foreign creditors are again questioning the wisdom of
holding so many U.S. dollars. And they're looking for a way out.
"Leaders from Brazil, Russia, India and China are demanding a
greater stake in the management of the global economy and
challenging the dollar as the primary denomination for world
reserves," reported Bloomberg about the recent G-8 summit.
But is dumping the dollar just wishful thinking on the part of these
nations? Or is there some tangible alternative? Well, how about
this: Some think they've already minted a dollar-killer.
Russia's president is pushing to remove the dollar and reinstate
some version of a gold standard. Dmitry Medvedev unveiled a newly
minted gold bullion coin that he said was a true "symbol of unity,"
and "our desire to solve such issues." It was a test sample of a new
supranational currency referred to as the United Future World
Currency. Samples were issued to each of the world leaders attending
the G-8 summit.
"We are discussing the creation or, to be more correct, the
appearance of new reserve currencies," said Medvedev.
"Debate" about Bretton Woods is flowery code for an attack on the
dollar. What is even more surprising is that the dollar assaults
have come not only from perennial U.S. antagonists but also from its
more democratic allies. At the G-8 summit, French President Nicolas
Sarkozy called for a complete revamp of the global currency system,
saying that the dollar's supremacy is outdated. "[W]e've still got
the Bretton Woods system of 1945," Sarkozy stated on July 9.
"Frankly, 60 years afterwards, we've got to ask: Shouldn't a
politically multipolar world correspond to an economically
multi-currency world?"
Bretton Woods was the historic conference that laid the foundation
for a postwar global economy centered on the dollar. "Even if it's a
difficult topic," Sarkozy said, "There has to be a debate." "Debate"
about Bretton Woods is flowery code for an attack on the dollar.
India too seems to be moving into the anti-dollar camp. Suresh
Tendulkar, an economic adviser to Indian Prime Minister Manmohan
Singh, is urging the government to diversify its foreign-exchange
reserves and hold fewer dollars. India holds over $250 billion
worth.
Such a decision could break the U.S. dollar bond market. But the
next blow to the dollar may come as a complete surprise to
Washington policymakers. Since World War II, Japan has been a
stalwart dollar supporter and a close collaborator with Federal
Reserve monetary policy. That may be about to end. For only the
second time in 54 years, the opposition in Japan is close to taking
over the government. Japan's economy, like those of the rest of the
world, is in severe contraction, and disgruntled voters are
upsetting the balance of power and pushing for radical reforms.
Back in May, Masaharu Nakagawa, the chief finance spokesman for the
opposition, told the bbc that he was worried about the future value
of the dollar. He said that if his party were elected in the
upcoming national elections, Japan would refuse to purchase any more
U.S. treasuries unless they were denominated in Japanese yen instead
of dollars.
Such a decision could break the U.S. dollar bond market.
Japan is America's second-most important creditor nation—lending the
U.S. billions of dollars each year. If Japan won't lend unless
America pays it back in yen, then China and other major lenders may
quickly follow suit. This would eliminate America's ability to use
inflation to cheat on its debt payments. America's debt burden would
soar, interest rates would jump, and national
default—Argentina-style—could be staring America in the face within
months instead of years.
"America is making a terrible mistake which will result in the
greatest fall in all of mankind's history!" Tim Thompson wrote for
the Trumpet in 2000. "As soon as America is no longer a safe place
for foreign money, that money will be gone. And once the foreign
money is gone, it will leave us with a mountain of debt that we
cannot repay."
What Japan is proposing could be the first steps of a great exodus
from the U.S. bond market and consequently the end of the dollar as
the world's reserve currency.
America's leaders seem blind to the looming dollar revolt. Global
economies are in crisis. Unemployment rolls are soaring. People want
answers and solutions. The jobless will demand action, and culpable
politicians will look for scapegoats and distractions. The first
step, blaming the U.S. and its currency for the global recession,
has already begun.
A new global currency—and leveraging it to knock the U.S. down—will
be the solution.
The highly trained economic theorists who keep telling us that
foreigners can't afford to stop supporting the U.S. are about to get
reeducated at Reality U.
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