by threadbear » Fri 27 Oct 2006, 15:44:42
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Kingcoal', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('threadbear', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Kingcoal', 'I')’ve come to the conclusion that focusing on currencies is barking up the wrong tree. The thing to focus on is the economy. The US economy is so big that not only can it keep its own citizens occupied, but also the citizens of other countries. It really is all about keeping workers around the world occupied. Systemic unemployment is a huge problem for countries. Unemployed people are potential troublemakers. The world economy is a cure for world war. Wars keep citizens occupied, but are nonproductive and destructive and need I say more? The world economy is a solution to world war. The little spats we call wars these days are nothing compared to WW2, WW1, etc.
Fiat currencies work, all you need is a steady supply of cheap oil and we’re all set for the future.
Kingcoal, The strong dollar is only strong because people who are watching other people, think that those people think it is strong, and so on and so on. This kind of looking over the shoulder rather than on the fundamental strength of the currency is not going to end well.
The US economy is big, but hollow. It rests on a massive accumulation of govt and personal debt and trade deficits. And you call importing, without exporting, "keeping other countries busy too"? Oh dear. So massive trade deficits are a good thing, then?
But hey--don't listen to me--read der Spiegel.
"Of course they see it! Investors can see what is happening. They wonder about it and shake their heads. It even scares them a little, sending chills down their spine. But they keep buying dollars as though possessed. The greater their doubts, the more greedily they order dollars. Indeed, that's exactly what is so crazy about these investors and their behavior: The client isn't just a client. He creates the security he's purchasing by the very act of purchasing it. If he were to stop buying dollars tomorrow, suspicion about the currency would spread and insecurity would grow. Then the dream would end. The dollar would start to falter and all the wealth held in dollars would lose its value. Of course, that's not something investors want to see happen."
http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1 ... 54,00.html What makes one fiat currency better than another? If it's simply printing less money than your competitor, then the small country currencies should reign supreme because there is less of them in the world. All fiat currencies are the same, they are like ride tickets in a huge amusement park. You need dollars to go on the American rides...
I think you miss my point though; I said all you need to keep things going is cheap commodities, particularly oil. Expensive oil threatens the world economy and hence the dollar more than anything.