Global economic imbalances and the future of the US dollar
Global economic imbalance, a result of capital flow, trade imbalance, monetary system
imbalance and unsuitable policies of some advanced countries, is fundamentally
caused by the north-south divide. The global imbalances are widely seen as a problem,
especially by the
as a cause of the financial crisis. Yet such imbalances – i.e. current-account surpluses
and deficits – reflect international intertemporal trade, and there should be gains from
such trade as from ‘ordinary’ trade, on the basis of standard arguments for free trade.
Furthermore, an advantage of the present system is that an international general
equilibrium is established which yields a set of current-account imbalances that do not
require international central planning or coordination, but which respond to particular
circumstances in different countries. The system depends, of course, on a relatively free
international capital market.
Global imbalances are defined as “external positions of systematically important
economies that reflect distortions or entail risks for the global economy”
The World is concerned that the dollar cannot play the role of the main reserve currency
any longer after the financial crisis sparked by the collapse of the
market led to the worst global recession since the 1930s. The Government’s stimulus
packages, financial bailouts, the need to support liquidity in Treasuries, keeping
interest rates at the lowest level under the circumstances of low economic growth,
high unemployment and low tax collection make it print more dollars. This leads to a
high risk of substantial inflation, or hyperinflation in a long-run. Although there is still no
significant inflation data in the
grew abnormally within the last eleven months. Analysts called it the “flight from the
dollar” or “diversifying risks.” There are many factors evidencing against the future of the
dollar as a global reserve currency. Due to the limited space, in the present article future
of dollar com pays attention just to several crucial points of analysis after conducting an
extensive research on the topic.
1. National Debt
In the middle of February
2010, President Obama signed into law the bill increasing
the public debt ceiling from $12.394 trillion to $14.294 trillion. This is a second increase
in the upper limit on the national debt in less than two months
“The Financial Management Services of the U.S. Treasury estimated that the total
obligations of the
Asset Management indicated in his research. They include hospital insurance,
supplementary medical insurance, and social security. The collected money (which
Treasury has borrowed and Congress spent) falls far short of what is required to fulfill
the long-term obligations of those programs, even if it had not already been spent.
Almost all of the $90 trillion are promised obligations with no established method of
payment.”
“Including unfunded obligations, the
total 625% of GDP.”
2. Unemployment
This past February, the economy lost 36,000 jobs after losing 26,000 jobs in January
and 109,000 jobs in December, and the unemployment rate held at 9.7%. In January,
the unemployment rate fell from 10.0 to 9.7% in January. According to Reuters “a
sharp increase in the number of people giving up looking for work helped to depress
the jobless rate. The number of 'discouraged job seekers' rose to 1.1 million in January
from 734,000 a year ago.” The number of discouraged workers rose to 1.2 million
in February.
workforce was underemployed during the month of January, translating to close to 30
million Americans who are working less than their desired capacity.”
3. Budget deficit
The
that ended in September. The deficit will probably again exceed one trillion dollars in the
current fiscal year as it is already over $651 billion.
The excess of spending over revenue in the
as opposed to a deficit of $193.9 billion in February 2009, the Treasury Department
announced in its monthly budget statement. It was the 17th straight month in which the
government posted a deficit, CNNMoney.com said.
In the beginning of February 2010 Obama transmitted a $3.8 trillion budget for 2011 to
the Congress with a record $1.6 trillion deficit. During the debate on the national debt
the Senate “rejected a proposed bipartisan commission to recommend ways to reduce
the U.S. budget deficit, Bloomberg reported. “The legislation would have required that
the panel’s recommendations be voted on by Congress without being amended. Instead
of the initial idea of the commission discussed by Congress, President Obama is trying
to establish a government-based deficit commission that would lack any requirement for
Congress to act on its advice. Specialists consider it a symbolic rather than a concrete
step.
4. China’s peg to the dollar: -
So far China is enjoying low yuan rate giving its exports competitive advantage in
relation to those countries with appreciating currencies against the U.S. dollar. As the
result China is actually “stealing” jobs from many countries since with appreciating
currencies their companies are not able to compete with Chinese producers. In relation
to the United States this means that the country should not count on sooner recovery.
China’s peg to the dollar makes imports into the U.S. cheaper. This supports high level
of unemployment in America. Unemployment prevents the growth of GDP and reduces
revenues.
CONCLUSION: -
Therefore, we came to a conclusion that, unfortunately, the U.S. economy and the dollar
are losing confidence. The U.S. government must work even harder now to restore
Although there is still no significant inflation data in the United States international stock
and commodity markets grew abnormally within the last eleven months. Analysts called
it the “flight from the dollar” or “diversifying risks.
SUBMITTED TO : - GURDEEPAK SIR
SUBMITTED BY : - GAGANDEEP SINGH
MBA 1(A)
Gagan Late so penalty of 1 mark. A good try but title not as per guidelines and no referencing. Structure not as per guidelines....
ReplyDeleteyes sir... i did mistake so penalty i hv to pay....
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