by Petrodollar » Tue 14 Aug 2007, 18:00:57
evil genius wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')ince the 70's the Saudis have played along with America because it has been in their best interest to do so. The embargo didn't really work for them either. It is still in their best interest, but today what the Saudis desire gets a lot more attention in Washington than it did yesterday. Today there is real competition with China for who can line the Saudis mattresses. The US still holds sway, but at what cost? For how long?
...yes, unlike the 1970s, the Saudi-US role is not the only pivotal factor operating in the global economy, and China is indeed beginning to influence the post Cold-War paradigm. Peak Oil is of course exascerbating geopolitical tensions. Well, we are slowly seeing a replay of the 1971-1978 period in which the dollar was in a period of crisis as the world's reserve currency. (OPEC was considering a basket of currencies for oil sales in 1973-74 and again in 1978). In both cases, the historical record shows that the highest levels of the US' gov't intervened with some extraordinary favors for the Saudi Monarchy, and the Saudis came to the dollar's rescue.
This is happening again, but this time I am not sure that our "Saudi friends" can contain events as they unfold in Europe, Iran, Russia, China, Venezuela and perhaps some the oil exporting Caspian states (members of the SCO) as well. I found this interesting article today that pontificates on your observations about the differences b/t the 1970s and today...
http://uspolitics.einnews.com/article.php?nid=318725$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')
A Brief History of the Rise and Fall of the US Dollar: a Foreign Policy AnalysisBy Tracy Dove, Ph.D
Editor, The Russia News Service
August 10, 2007
The sinking stock market and the sub-prime woes have shaken the world's credit institutions and now the central banks of US-friendly nations have stepped in to absorb the shocks- temporarily. There have been many analyses of why this crisis has arisen, but it has been wrongly assigned to greedy lenders and suited traders sitting in New York earning 6-figure salaries.
Unfortunately the troubles are deeper, and without falling into a hand-wringing spiral of despair, it is necessary to weather the storm and accept a gradual decline of the international currency. But there is an explanation that runs deeper that is similar to the doctor telling the patient why he has lung cancer: too many years of abusive behavior.It may come as a surprise, but the United States actually won the war in 1944 already, with the establishment of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank in the famous Bretton Woods agreement of that pivotal year. Until the four powers of Great Britain, France, the Soviet Union and United States finally finished mopping up Hitler's mess of the world, the British Pound had been the de facto international currency, since Britain had an empire upon which the sun never set and the American Dollar was still too weak due to the Great Depression. But Franklin Roosevelt had played a hard hand of poker with Winston Churchill- loaning the British more money than they could pay back in return for loosening its grip on the Empire- and in this way Great Britain actually lost World War II.
Practically bankrupt, Britain agreed to the establishment of these two institutions which gave the Americans a prominence in the financial world by allowing all currencies to fluctuate within range of the price of gold. Stalin agreed as well, but for different reasons. The Soviets believed that territory- and not capitalism- was the safest guard of their eventual power after World War II, and in many ways they were not mistaken. Only the much anticipated disintegration of capitalism never came as Stalin had predicted, and the United States went on to dominate world finance in a way many had never dreamed of.
This was due to the default position of the US as the sole possessor of most of the world's gold at the time. America could afford to rebuild Europe as long as it maintained stable energy prices and had markets to which it could export its manufactured goods. The famous Marshall Plan of 1948 was the culmination of that power, and by underwriting Germany's D-Mark in 1948 the United States had established the Dollar as the preferred reserve currency, and even the Soviets, after years of denial, began to accumulate the currency in its vaults as well. The Cold War developed favorably for the US dollar and the United States in general, and this was the basis upon which the Baby Boom and Golden Years of both the Eisenhower and Kennedy administrations were constructed.
...yes, that was truly the epitome of American leadership and the height of the American Century. The dollar was "as good as gold," but similar to the Vietnam quagmire of 40 years ago that broke Bretton Woods, the current Iraqi quagmire is causing another fundamental shift in the dollar's strengh and status - mainly the slow demise of petrodollar hegemony...but I digress, back to the end of Bretton Woods Agreement...
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he change occurred in the wars of the late 1960's. First and foremost was the Vietnam War, which was draining America's reserves to fight a war which would have no victor. The French realized this early, and Charles de Gaulle began to demand gold in return for the Dollars that France was holding, sensing that it was better to get the yellow stuff back to Paris before America abandoned the gold standard that was reinforced in 1944. The British Pound was further devalued in 1967, putting strains on America's gold as it, too, cashed in its dollars for the safe metal haven.
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Next is a bit of speculation that feeds the conspiracy theorists of American-Saudi cooperation, and one must admit that the evidence points to some kind of secret agreement. Back in 1945, Roosevelt had made an agreement on energy prices with the Saudis in order to secure this source of energy and its low price. America had owned most of the petroleum production in that country, but by 1976, the Saudis were able to acquire a controlling percentage and thus won dominance in oil production profits in the world.
In effect, the Dollar was now boosted by the power of oil, which had increased in price by over 400% by 1976. In this way, the dollar floated primarily on the fact that every nation had to have Dollar reserves in order to purchase oil.
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Nations all over the world are running US-denominated debt, as they all hold the currency. Once the sub-prime worries escalate and the Dollar declines in relative attractiveness, all the OPEC nations need to do is switch their preferred method of payment from Dollars to Euros- or even their own currency- and force a massive devaluation of the Dollar.
Thus the final disaster, as the Arabs called it in 1948- al Nakbah- could finally be America's economic defeat.