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02-09-2013, 05:03 PM #1
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Currency Wars Often Lead to Trade Wars ... Which In Turn Can Devolve Into Hot Wars
Currency Wars Often Lead to Trade Wars ... Which In Turn Can Devolve Into Hot Wars
Submitted by George Washington on 02/08/2013 17:27 -0500
Currency War → Trade War → Hot War?
According to numerous high-level insiders, the global currency war is accelerating:
- Current Bundesbank president Jens Weidmann
- St. Louis Federal Reserve Bank president James Bullard
- Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank president Charles Plosser
- Outgoing Bank of England chief Mervyn King
- Russian Central Banker Alexei Ulyakeyev
- European Central Bank board member Benoit Coeure
- Reserve Bank of Australia Governor Glenn Stevens
- Brazil's finance minister Guido Mantega
- German chancellor Angela Merkel
- Billionaire investor George Soros
And Japan's escalation of the currency war has caused leaders in the Eurozone (more), Norway, Sweden, South Korea, Taiwan, Columbia, Mexico, Peru, Chile, Venezuela and many other regions to devalue or consider further devaluing their currencies. China may be joining as well. (And James Rickard and Reggie Middleton think that Germany’s demand for its gold is part of the currency war.)
We've been in a global currency war for years.
As the Wall Street Journal asked in 2010:Yes, we are.
Beggar-thy-neighbor currency devaluations proved ruinous for the global economy in the 1930s. Is the world setting off down the same slippery slope again?
Despite drivel from ignorant sources, currency wars don't help the average person.
Quantitative easing - the main lever to depreciate currency - hurts the little guy and only helps the super-elite.
Former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich points out that a weak dollar makes everyone poorer ... and any new jobs created by a a policy of devaluation are low-wage jobs.
Economist Mark Thoma noted in 2010:Philadelphia Federal Reserve Bank president Charles Plosser notes that currency wars would only hurt world trade and the economies that were involved.
While the positive effects a currency war produced in the 1930s [many disagree] are unlikely to reappear, there is a chance of large negative effects such as a simultaneous trade war or the breakdown of the international monetary system, so let's hope a currency war can be avoided.
The IMF noted in 2010 that currency wars "would represent a very serious risk to the global recovery".
Even Paul Krugman is not that keen on currency wars.
Trade Wars
It is widely accepted that currency wars can lead to trade wars. As Time notes:Nouriel Roubini agrees.
A competitive devaluation game can turn into a trade war, whereby losing countries start slapping tariffs on imports and exports to punish countries deemed to be “manipulating” their currencies. Trade wars, of course, make stuff more expensive for everyone, and that’s just about the last thing global consumers – increasingly squeezed by rising unemployment and inflation – need.
Indeed, there are signs that currency war induced trade wars are already starting. And see this.
Hot Wars
Brazilian president-elect Rousseff said in 2010:Billionaire investor Jim Rogers says:
The last time there was a series of competitive devaluations ... it ended in world war two.
Top trend forecaster Gerald Celente has said for years that currency wars turn into trade wars ... which in turn lead to hot wars.
Trade wars always lead to wars.
Jim Rickards agrees:Indeed, trade wars have been leading to hot wars for thousands of years. For example, the war between Rome and Carthage - leading to elephants in the mountains surrounding Rome - essentially started as a trade war.
Currency wars lead to trade wars, which often lead to hot wars. In 2009, Rickards participated in the Pentagon's first-ever "financial" war games. While expressing confidence in America's ability to defeat any other nation-state in battle, Rickards says the U.S. could get dragged into "asymmetric warfare," if currency wars lead to rising inflation and global economic uncertainty.
Indeed, with top economic forecasters predicting war, the American policy of using the military to contain China's growing economic influence, and the U.S. considering economic rivalry to be a basis for war, the global currency and trade wars are creating a tinderbox.
Image by William Banzai
http://www.zerohedge.com/contributed/2013-02-08/currency-wars-often-lead-trade-wars-which-turn-can-devolve-hot-wars
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02-09-2013, 09:18 PM #2
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