Let us begin with a few abstract matters. Suppose there is Country A, which has its own denominated currency and trades with many other nations, including Country B, which has its separately denominated currency. Suppose the former complains that the latter's currency is undervalued, thus unfairly hurting the export trades of Country A and making imports to its insatiable citizens unreasonably cheaper than they should be. Then -- a big leap of faith here -- suppose the currency value of Country B alters, and gets stronger, and stronger, and stronger. What happens then?
Resist an immediate turn to President Obama's recent two-hour meeting with Chinese Premier
Is that all? Well, unfortunately, no, and for various reasons. The first is that Country B may possess materials like rare ores than Country A desperately needs and cannot find elsewhere in the world -- so it now pays more for the same amount of such imports. And Country A may no longer possess firms that manufacture items such as children's toys and bicycle gears and high-class binoculars, so it still needs to buy those goods from Country B, unfortunately at a higher price. Perhaps, over time, Country A may find entrepreneurs who will start manufacturing bicycle gears at home, but how long is "over time"? Ten years?
Secondly, and even more importantly in a rough-and-tumble world where nations are not just trading units but power-and-influence units as well, a country with a weakening currency starts to feel the consequences on the international stage. The first is the impact upon its international purchasing power, something that most American economists steadfastly decline to bring into their policy prescriptions, perhaps because they grew up in a dollar-denominated world and think only of domestic purchasing power. But that way of thinking is out of date.
Suppose, for example, a certain African country possesses deposits of vital minerals such as tungsten, manganese and cobalt, all of which are needed for state-of-the-art communications systems, including modern weaponry. These are minerals acutely necessary to America's economy, but no less so to the economies of
But of course it isn't. President Obama's well-meaning administration, sniped at by trade unions on the one hand and
But the largest reason why
Reduced dollars means reduced influence. Forget about the whinings of the U.S. middle classes as they emerged from their French and Italian cafes this summer with a considerable hole in their dollar-denominated credit-card accounts. That is not the point here. The point is that the more the dollar weakens (or other currencies increase in value, which is the same thing), the more that America's international heft diminishes. You can't possess international strength on a slipping currency. For decades, Japanese nationalists had a slogan something like "Strong Army, Big Country!" To paraphrase for today, the saying might be "Healthy Currency, Influential Nation!" Weakness or strength in one aspect of national power usually translates into the next.
In 1945, America stood at the apex of its relative power in world affairs. Almost everywhere else was in wartime devastation, or colonial backwardness, or economic doldrums.
Pressing the Chinese to revalue their currency is a fool's errand.
But will anyone in
Clearly, there is no easy option for a beleaguered Fed or a beleaguered
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(C) 2010 Paul Kennedy

