... having established the dollar as the reserve currency (and further
going to considerable lengths to make the world safe for US banks and
investment banks), the US is now
thuggish in how it uses its influence over the dollar payments system...
….
This is a history of US neoliberal Economy that we all need to read. It
is an intervier from Bonnie Faulkner to the greatest US economist Michael Hudson
OPEN: https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-07-13/michael-hudson-de-dollarizing-american-financial-empire
I’M BONNIE
FAULKNER. Today on Guns and Butter, Dr. Michael Hudson.
Today’s show: De-Dollarizing the American Financial Empire. Dr.
Hudson is a financial economist and historian. He is President of the Institute
for the Study of Long-Term Economic Trend, a Wall Street Financial Analyst and
Distinguished Research Professor of Economics at the University of Missouri,
Kansas City. His most recent books include, And Forgive Them Their
Debts … Lending, Foreclosure and Redemption from Bronze Age Finance to the
Jubilee Year; Killing the Host: How Financial Parasites and
Debt Destroy the Global Economy; and J Is for Junk Economics: A
Guide to Reality in an Age of Deception. We return again today to a
discussion of Dr. Hudson’s seminal 1972 book, Super Imperialism:
The Economic Strategy of American Empire, a critique of how the United
States exploited foreign economies through the IMF and World Bank. We
discuss how the United States has dominated the world economically both as the
world’s largest creditor, and then later as the world’s largest debtor, and
take a look at the coming demise of dollar domination.
Bonnie
Faulkner: Michael Hudson, welcome
back.
Michael
Hudson: It’s good to be back,
Bonnie.
Bonnie
Faulkner: Why is President Trump
insisting that the Federal Reserve lower interest rates? I thought they were
already extremely low. And if they did go lower, what effect would this have?
Michael
Hudson: Interest rates are
historically low, and they have been kept low in order to try to keep providing
cheap money for speculators to buy stocks and bonds to make arbitrage gains.
Speculators can borrow at a low rate of interest to buy a stock yielding
dividends (and also making capital gains) at a higher rate of return, or by
buying a bond such as corporate junk bonds that pay higher interest rates, and
keep the difference. In short, low interest rates are a form of financial engineering.
Trump wants interest rates to be low
in order to inflate the housing market and the stock market even more,
as if that is an index of the real economy, not just the financial sector that
is wrapped around the economy of production and consumption. Beyond this
domestic concern, Trump imagines that if you keep interest rates lower than
those of Europe, the dollar’s exchange rate will decline. He thinks that this
will make U.S. exports more competitive with foreign products.
Trump is criticizing the Federal
Reserve for not keeping interest rates even lower than those of Europe. He
he thinks that if interest rates are low, there will be an outflow of capital
from this country to buy foreign stocks and bonds that pay a higher interest
rate. This financial outflow will lower the dollar’s exchange rate. He believes
that this will increase the chance of rebuilding America’s manufacturing
exports.
This is the great neoliberal miscalculation. It also is the
basis for IMF models.
HOW LOW INTEREST RATES LOWER THE DOLLAR’S EXCHANGE
RATE, RAISING IMPORT PRICES
Trump’s guiding idea is that lowering the dollar’s value
will lower the cost of labor to employers. That’s what happens when a currency
is devalued. Depreciation doesn’t lower costs that have a common worldwide
price. There’s a common price for oil in the world, a common price of raw
materials, and pretty much a common price for capital and credit. So the main
thing that’s devalued when you push a currency down is the price of labor and
its working conditions.
Workers are squeezed when a
currency’s exchange rate falls, because they have to pay more for goods
they import. If the dollar goes down against the Chinese yen or European
currency, Chinese imports are going to cost more in dollars. So will European
imports. That is the logic behind “beggar my neighbor” devaluations.
====
WALL STREET VS. THE “REAL” ECONOMY: WHICH TURNS OUT
TO BE MORE REAL?
Bonnie
Faulkner: What is going on with the ruling class in the United
States? Does anybody in its ranks know how to run an economy?
Michael
Hudson: The problem is that running an economy to help the people
and raise living standards, and even to lower the cost of living and doing
business, means not running it to help Wall Street. If someone knows how to run
an economy, the financial sector wants to keep them out of any public office.
High finance is short-term, not long-term. It plays the hit-and-run game, not
the much harder task of creating a framework for tangible economic growth.
You can do one of two things:
You can help labor or you can help Wall Street. If running the economy
means helping labor and improving living standards by giving better medical
care, this is going to be at the expense of the financial sector and short-term
corporate profits. So the last thing you want to do is have somebody run the
economy for its own prosperity instead of for Wall Street’s purpose.
At issue is who’s going to do the
planning. Will it be elected public officials in the government, or Wall
Street? Wall Street’s public relations office is the University of Chicago. It
claims that a free market is one where rich Wall Street investors and the
financial class run an economy. But if you let people vote and democratically
elect governments to regulate, that’s called “interference” in a free market.
This is the fight that Trump has
against China. He wants to tell it to let the banks run China and have a
free market. He says that China has grown rich over the last fifty years
by unfair means, with government help and public enterprise. In effect, he
wants Chinese to be as threatened and insecure as American workers. They should
get rid of their public transportation. They should get rid of their subsidies.
They should let a lot of their companies go bankrupt so that Americans can buy
them. They should have the same kind of free market that has wrecked the US
economy.
China doesn’t want that kind of a
free market, of course. It does have a market economy. It is
actually much like the United States was in its 19th-century industrial takeoff,
with strong government subsidy.
U.S. CHANGING MONETARY STRATEGY, FROM
PAYMENTS-SURPLUS TO DEFICIT STATUS
Bonnie
Faulkner: In your seminal work from 1972, Super
Imperialism: The Economic Strategy of American Empire, you write:
“Whereas US domination of the world economy stemmed from 1920 through 1960 from
its creditor position, its control since the 1960s has stemmed from is debtor
position. Not only have the tables been turned, but US diplomats have found
that their leverage as the world’s major debtor economy is fully as strong as
that which formerly had reflected its net creditor position.” This sounds
counter-intuitive. Could you break it down? Let’s start with 1920 through 1960.
How was the United States able to dominate the world economy from its creditor
position?
Michael
Hudson: The U.S. creditor position
really began after World War I, based on the money it lent to the Allies before
it joined the war. When the war ended, U.S. diplomats told England and France
to pay us for the arms they had bought early on. But in the past, for
centuries, the victors usually forgave all the debts among each other once a
war was over. For the first time, America insisted that the Allies pay for the
military support it had sold them before joining them.
The European Allies were pretty
devastated by the war, and they turned to Germany and insisted on reparations
that quickly bankrupted Germany. German bankrupted its economy trying to
pay England and France, which simply sent it on to pay the United States. Their
balance of payments was in deficit, and their currencies weregoing down.
American investors saw an opportunity to buy up their industry. Gold was the
measure of power, the backing for domestic money and credit and hence capital
investment.
America was much more productive,
not having suffered war damage here. Between the end of World War II and
1950 when the Korean War broke out, America accumulated over 75 percent of the
world’s monetary gold. The United States had heavy agricultural exports,
growing industrial exports, and enough money to buy up the leading industries
of Europe and Latin America and other countries.
But beginning in 1950 with the
Korean War, the U.S. balance of payments moved into deficit for the first time.
It got even worse when President Eisenhower decided that America had to support
French colonialism in Southeast Asia, in French Indochina – Vietnam and Laos.
By the time the Vietnam War escalated in the 1960s, the dollar was running
large balance-of-payments deficits. Every week on Wall Street we would watch
the gold supply go down, losing gold to countries that weren’t at war, like
France and Germany. They were cashing in the excess dollars that were being
spent by the U.S. military. By the 1960s it became clear that America was on a trajectory
to run out of gold within a decade because of this overseas war spending.
It finally did, by August 1971when
President Nixon stopped selling gold on the London exchange and the price was
allowed to soar far above $35 an ounce. The U.S. balance-of-payments was
still running a deep deficit because of the fighting in Southeast Asia and
elsewhere, creating a permanent balance-of-payments deficit. The private sector
was just in balance during the 1950s and 1960s. The entire deficit was
military.
When America went off gold, people
began to wonder what was going to happen. Many predicted an economic
doomsday. It was losing its ability to rule the world through gold. But what I
realized (and was the first to publish) was that if countries no longer could buy
and hold gold in their international reserves, what werethey going
to hold? There was only one asset that they could hold: U.S. Government
securities, that is, Treasury bonds.
A Treasury bond is a loan to the US
Treasury. When a foreign central bank buys a bond, it finances the
domestic U.S. budget deficit. So the balance of payments deficit ends up
financing the domestic budget deficit.
The result is a circular flow of
military spending recycled by foreign central banks. After 1971 the
United States continued to spend abroad militarily, and in 1974 the OPEC
countries quadrupled the price of oil. At that time the United States told
Saudi Arabia that it could charge whatever it wanted for its oil, but it had to
recycle all its net dollar earnings. The Saudis were not to buy gold. The
Saudis were told that it would be an act of war if they didn’t recycle into the
American economy the dollars they received for their oil exports. They were
encouraged to buy U.S. Treasury bonds but, could also buy other U.S. bonds and
stocks to help push up the stock and bond markets here while supporting the
dollar.
The United States kept its own gold
stock, while wanting the rest of the world to hold its savings in the form of
loans to the United States. So the dollar didn’t go down. Other
countries that were receiving dollars simply recycled them to buy U.S.
financial securities.
What would have happened if they wouldn’t have done this?
Let’s say you’re Germany, France or Japan. If you don’t
recycle your dollar receipts back to the U.S. economy, your currency is going
to go up. Dollar inflows from export sales are being converted into your
currency, increasing its exchange rate. But by buying U.S. bonds or stocks, bid
the price of dollars back up against your own currency.
So, when the United States runs a
balance-of-payments deficit under conditions where other countries keep their
foreign reserves in dollars, the effect is for other countries to keep
their currencies’ exchange rates stable – mainly by lending to the U.S. government.
That gives the United States a free ride. It can encircle the world with
military bases, and the dollars that this costs are returned to the United
States.
Imagine writing IOUs when you go out
to spend at a store or restaurant – but your IOUs are never going to be
collected! The store might say, “We have an IOU from Bonnie Faulkner.
Let’s keep it as our savings. Instead of putting it in the bank or asking for
payment in real money, we’re just going to keep collecting these IOUs from
Bonnie Faulkner.” Corporations call such IOUs and trade credit “receivables.”
Now, suppose you went on a spending spree and gave the store a billion dollars’
worth of your IOUs.
There’s no way that you could pay off this billion dollars.
In that case the stores receiving these IOUs would say, “Well, we really don’t
want to foreclose on Bonnie, because we know that she can’t pay. We’d lose the
value of receivables on the asset side of our balance sheet – all these IOUs
that we’ve been collecting.
That’s essentially what foreign
countries are saying about their buildup of dollars. The U.S. position
is, in effect, that we are not going to repay any foreign country the dollar
debt we owe them. As Treasury Secretary John Connolly
said, “It’s our dollars, but your problem.” Other countries have to pay
us or else we’ll bomb them. The military dimension to this arrangement is the
U.S. position that it would be an act of war if other countries don’t keep
spending their export earnings on loans or U.S. stocks and bonds.
That’s what makes the United States
the “exceptional country.” The value of our currency is based on other
countries’ savings. The money they save has to be held in the form of dollars
or securities that we’re never going to repay, even if we could.
This is a huge free ride. You’d
think that Donald Trump would want to keep it going. But he claims that
China is manipulating its currency by recycling its dollars into loans to the
U.S. Treasury. What does he mean by that? China is earning a lot
of dollars by exports its goods to the United States. What does it do with
these dollars? It tried to do what America did with Europe and South America:
It tried to buy American companies. But the United States blocked it from doing
this, on specious national security grounds. The government claims that our
national security would be threatened if China would buy a chain of filling
stations, as it wanted to do in California. The United
States thus has a double standard, claiming that it is threatened if
China buys any company, but insisting on its right to buy out the commanding
heights of foreign economies with its electronic dollar credit.
That leaves China with only one option: It can buy U.S.
Treasury bonds, lending its export earnings to the U.S. Treasury.
TRUMP IS NOW DRIVING OTHER COUNTRIES OUT OF THE
DOLLAR ORBIT
China now realizes that the U.S. Treasury isn’t going to
repay. Even if it wanted to recycle its export earnings into Treasury bonds or
U.S. stocks and bonds or real estate, Donald Trump now is saying that he
doesn’t want China to support the dollar’s exchange rate (and keep its own
exchange rate down) by buying U.S. assets. We’re telling China not to do what
we’ve told other countries to do for the past forty years: to buy U.S.
securities. Trump accuses countries of artificial currency manipulation if they
keep their foreign reserves in dollars. So he’s telling them, and specifically
China, to get rid of their dollar holdings, not to buy dollars with their
export earnings anymore.
So China is buying gold. Russia also
is buying gold and much of the world is now in the process of reverting to the
gold-exchange standard (meaning that gold is used to settle
international payments imbalances, but is not connected to domestic money
creation). Countries realize that there’s a great advantage of the
gold-exchange standard: There’s only a limited amount of gold in the world’s
central banks. This means that any country that wages war is going to run such
a large balance-of-payments deficit that it’s going to lose its gold reserves. So
reviving the role of gold may prevent any country, including the United States,
from going to war and suffering a military deficit.
The irony is that Trump is breaking
up America’s financial free ride – its policy of monetary imperialism –
by telling counties to stop recycling their dollar inflows. They’ve got to
de-dollarize their economies.
The effect is to make these
economies independent of the United States. Trump already has announced
that we won’t hire Chinese in our IT sectors or let Chinese study subjects at
university that might enable them to rival us. So our economies are going to
separate.
In effect, Trump has said that if we
can’t win in a trade deal, if we can’t make other countries lose and become
more dependent on U.S. suppliers and monopoly pricing, then we’re not going to
sign an agreement. This stance is driving not only China but Russia and
even Europe and other countries all out of the U.S. orbit. The end result is
going to be that the United States is going to be isolated, without being able
to manufacture like it used to do. It’s dismantled its manufacturing. So
how willit get by?
Some population figures were released a week ago showing the
middle of America is emptying out. The population is moving from the Midwestern
and mountain states to the East and the West coasts and the Gulf Coast. So Trump’s policies are accelerating the de-industrialization of
the United States without doing anything to put new productive powers in place,
and not even wanting other countries to invest here. The German car companies
see Trump putting tariffs on the imported steel they need to build cars in the
United States. It built them here to get around America’s tariff barriers
against German and other automobiles. But now Trump is
not even letting them import the parts that they need to assemble these cars in
the non-unionized plants they’ve built in the South.
What can they do? Perhaps they’ll
propose a trade with General Motors and Chrysler. The Europeans will get
the factories that American companies own in Europe, and give them their
American factories in exchange.
This kind of split is occurring without any attempt to make
American labor more competitive by lowering its cost of housing, or the price
of its health insurance and medical care, or its transportation costs or the
infrastructure costs. So America is being left high and dry as a high-priced economy in a
nationalistic world, while running a huge balance-of-payments deficit to
support its military spending all over the globe.
Bonnie
Faulkner: So it sounds like when
the United States went off the gold standard, the dollar basically replaced
gold as the main asset in which foreign governments could hold their assets.
Now you’re saying that when there was no more gold standard, if foreign economies
didn’t buy U.S. Treasuries, the price of their currency would rise and make
them uncompetitive.
Michael
Hudson: Yes. Imagine if Americans
would have to pay more and more dollars to buy German cars. There’s going to be
a larger demand for German currency, the euro, whose exchange rate would rise.
That was happening throughout the 1960s and 1970s, before the euro. The only
way that Germany could keep down the value of its mark was to buy something
that cost dollars. It didn’t buy American exports, because America already was
making and exporting less and less, except for food – and Germany can only eat
so much wheat and soybeans. So the only thing that Germany could buy that was
priced in dollars were U.S. Treasury bonds. That kept the German mark from rising
even more rapidly, and kept the balance of payments in balance.
Japan had a similar problem. The Japanese tried to buy U.S.
real estate, but they didn’t have any idea of what made real estate valuable
here. They lost a reported billion dollars on buying Rockefeller Center, not
realizing that the building was separate from the land value, and the land was
owned by Columbia University. The building itself was running at a deficit.
Most of the rental value paid was to the owner of the land’s groundrent. The
Japanese had no idea of how American real estate worked.
THE EURO IS ONLY A SATELLITE CURRENCY OF THE U.S.
DOLLAR
Some Americans worried that the euro might become a rival to
the dollar. After all, Europe is not de-industrializing.
It is moving forward and producing better cars, airplanes and other exports. So
the United States persuaded foreign politicians to cripple the euro by making
it an austerity currency, creating so few government bonds that there’s no euro
vehicle large enough for foreign countries to keep their foreign reserves in.
The United States can create more and more dollar debt by
running a budget deficit. We can follow Keynesian policies by running a deficit
to employ more labor. But the eurozone refuses to let countries run a budget
deficit of more than 3 percent of its GDP. Now running more than 3 percent of
their GDP. That level is very marginal compared to the United States. And if
you’re trying not to run any deficit at all – and even if you keep it less than
3% – then you’re imposing austerity on your country, keeping your employment
down. You’re stifling your internal market, cutting your throat by being unable
to create a real rival to the dollar. That’s why Donald Rumsfeld called Europe
a dead zone, and why the only alternatives for a rival currency are the Chinese
yuan. They’re moving into a gold-based currency area along with Russia, Iran
and other members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization.
Bonnie
Faulkner: The European Union not allowing European countries
within the eurozone to not run deficits more than 3 percent was basically
cutting their own throat. Why would they do such a thing?
Michael
Hudson: Because the heads of the Central Bank are fighting a class
war. They look at themselves as financial generals in the economic fight
against labor, to hurt the working class, lower wages and help their political
constituency, the wealthy investing class. Europe always has had a more vicious
class war than the United States does. It’s never really emerged from its
aristocratic post-feudal system. Its central bankers and universities follow
the University of Chicago free-market school, saying that the way to get rich
is to make your labor poorer, and to create a government where labor doesn’t
have a voice. That’s Europe’s economic philosophy, and it’s why Europe has not
matched the growth that China and other countries are experiencing.
Bonnie
Faulkner: So it sounds like then
the United States has been able to dominate the world economy since 1971 from a
debtor position.
Michael
Hudson: When it was losing gold, from 1950 to 1971, that wasn’t
dominating; that was losing America’s gold supply to France, Germany, Japan and
other countries. Only when it stopped the gold-exchange standard and left
countries with no alternative for their international savings but to buy U.S.
Treasury bonds or other securities was it able to pay for its military spending
without losing its power.
Since 1971, world diplomacy has essentially been backed by
American military power. It’s not a free market. Military power keeps countries
in a financial strait jacket in which the United States can run into debt
without having to repay it. Other countries that run payments deficits are not
allowed to expand their economies, either to rival the United States or even to
improve living standards for their labor force. Only countries outside the U.S.
orbit – China, and in principle Russia and some other countries in Asia – are
able to increase their living standards and capital investment and technology
by being free of this globalized financial class war.
Bonnie
Faulkner: In Super
Imperialismyou write that, “Pressures to create a New International
Economic Order collapsed by the end of the 1970s.” Are you saying that other
countries simply gave up and acquiesced to American monetary imperialism? What
happened?
Michael
Hudson: I’m told that there was
wholesale bribery. Officials in the Reagan administration told me that they
just paid off foreign officials to support the U.S. position, not a New
International Economic Order. U.S. agencies maneuvered within the party
politics of European and Near Eastern countries to promote pro-American
officials and sideline those who did not agree to act as U.S. satellites. A lot
of money was involved in this meddling.
So the United Stateshas corrupted democratic politics
throughout Europe and the Near East, and much of Asia. That has succeeded in
sterilizing foreign independence in the United States. Meanwhile, Thatcher’s
and Reagan’s neoliberal ideas were promoted instead of the kind of mixed
economy that Roosevelt and social democracy had been pressing for fifty years.
WHO WILL PLAN ECONOMIES: FINANCIAL MANAGERS, OR
DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENTS?
Bonnie
Faulkner: If there were pressures
to create a New International Economic Order in the 1970s, what was this new
order looking to achieve?
Michael
Hudson: Other countries wanted to
do for their economies what the United States has long done for its own
economy: to use their governments’ deficit spending to build up their
infrastructure, raise living standards, create housing and promote progressive
taxation that would prevent a rentierclass, a landlord and
financial class from taking over economic management. In the financial field,
they wanted governments to create their own money, to promote their own
development, just like the United States does. The role of neoliberalism was
the opposite: it was to promote the financial and real estate sector and
monopolies to take economic management away from government.
So the real question from the 1980s on was about who would
be the basic planning center of society. Would it be the financial sector – the
banks and bondholders, whose interest is really the One Percent that own most
of the banks’ bonds and stocks? Or, is it going to be governments trying to
subsidize the economy to help the 99 Percent grow and prosper? That was the
social democratic view opposed by Thatcherism and Reaganism.
THE INTERNATIONAL DRIVE TO DE-DOLLARIZE
Bonnie
Faulkner: Was this pressure that
blocked a New International Economic Order brought on by the United States
going off the gold-exchange standard?
Michael
Hudson: No. It was a reaction
against the U.S. policy of siphoning off the commanding heights of foreign
economies. The United States wants to control their raw-materials exports,
especially their oil and gas. It wants to control their financial system, so
that all of their economic gains will go to foreign investors, mainly U.S.
investors. It wants to turn other economies into service economies to the
United States, and to make them into a kind of super-NATO military alliance
that will oppose any country that does not want to be part of the U.S.-centered
unilateral global order.
Bonnie
Faulkner: How does today’s monetary
imperialism – super imperialism – differ from the imperialism of the past?
Michael
Hudson: It’s a higher stage of
imperialism. The old imperialism was colonialism. You would come in and use
military power to install a client ruling class. But each country would have
its own currency. What has made imperialism “super” is that America doesn’t
have to colonize another country. It doesn’t have to invade a country or
actually go to war with it. All it needs is to have the country invest its
savings, its export earnings in loans to the United States Government. This
enables the United States to keep its interest rates low and enable American
investors to borrow from American banks at a low rate to buy up foreign
industry and agriculture that’s yielding 10 percent, 15 percent or more. So
American investors realize that despite the balance-of-payments deficit, they
can borrow back these dollars at such a low rate from foreign countries –
paying only 1 percent to 3 percent on the Treasury bonds they hold – while
pumping dollars into foreign economies by buying up their industry and
agriculture and infrastructure and public utilities, making large capital
gains. The hope is that and soon, we’ll earn our way out of debt by this free
ride arrangement.
IMPERIALISM is getting
something for nothing. It is a strategy to obtain other
countries’ surplus without playing a productive role, but by creating an
extractive rentier system. An imperialist power obliges
other countries to pay tribute. Of course, America doesn’t come right out and
tell other countries, “You have to pay us tribute,” like Roman emperors told
the provinces they governed. U.S. diplomats simply insist that other countries
invest their balance-of-payments inflows and official central-bank savings in
US dollars, especially U.S. Treasury IOUs. This
Treasury-bill standard turns the global monetary and financial system into a
tributary system.
That is what pays the costs of U.S. military spending,
including its 800 military bases throughout the world, and its foreign legion
of Isis, Al Qaeda fighters and “color revolutions” to destabilize countries
that don’t adhere to the dollar-centered global economic system.
Bonnie
Faulkner: You write: “Today it would be necessary for Europe and
Asia to design an artificial, politically created alternative to the dollar as
an international store of value. This promises to become the crux of
international political tensions for the next generation.” How does the world
break out of this double-standard dollar domination?
Michael
Hudson: It’s already coming about.
And Trump is a great catalyst speeding departing guests. China and Russia are
reducing their dollar holdings. They don’t want to hold American Treasury
bonds, because if America goes to war with them, it will do to them what it did
to Iran. It will just keep all the money, not pay back the investment China has
kept in U.S. banks and the Treasury. So they’re getting rid of the dollars that
they hold. They’re buying gold, and are moving as quickly as they can to be
independent of any reliance on U.S. exports. They are building up their
military, so that if the United States tries to threaten them, they can defend
themselves. The world is fracturing.
Bonnie
Faulkner: What are foreign
countries like China and Russia using to buy gold? Are they buying it with
dollars?
Michael
Hudson: Yes. They earn dollars or
euros from what they’re exporting. This money goes into the central bank of
China, because Chinese exporters want domestic yuan to pay their own workers
and suppliers. So they go to the Bank of China and they exchange their dollars
for yuan. The Bank of China, the central bank, then decides what to do with
this foreign currency. They may go into the open market and buy gold. Or, they
may spend it in foreign countries, on the Belt and Road Initiative to build a
railway and steamship infrastructure and port development to help China’s
exporters integrate their economy with others and ultimately with Europe,
replacing the United States as customer and supplier. They see the United
States as a dying economy.
Bonnie
Faulkner: Can the Chinese build up
their Belt and Road infrastructure projects with dollars?
Michael
Hudson: No, they are getting rid of
dollars. They already are receiving such a large surplus each year that they
only use the dollars to buy gold or some goods, such as Boeing airplanes, but
mostly food and raw materials. When China buys iron from Australia, for
instance, they sell dollars from their foreign-exchange reserves and buy
Australian currency to pay Australians for the iron ore that they import. They
use dollars to pay other countries that are still part of the dollar area and
still willing to keep adding these dollars to their official monetary reserves
instead of holding gold.
Bonnie Faulkner:
Well, it is kind of surprising, Michael, that countries haven’t started doing
this a lot sooner.
Michael
Hudson: There has been political
pressure not to withdraw from the dollar-debt system. If countries act
independently, they risk being overthrown. It takes a strong government to
resist American interference and dirty tricks to put its own country first
instead of following the U.S. advisors and agents who pay them to serve the
U.S. economy rather than their own, or to resist brainwashing by University of
Chicago’s junk economics.
Bonnie
Faulkner: How far along is the
dollar’s demise as the world’s reserve currency?
Michael
Hudson: It’s already slowing. Trump
is doing everything he can to accelerate it, by threatening that if foreign
countries continue to recycle their export earnings into dollars (raising the dollar’s
exchange rate), we’ll accuse them of manipulating their currency. So he would
like to end it all by the end of his second term in 2024.
Bonnie
Faulkner: What would the United States look like if the dollar is
no longer the world’s reserve currency?
Michael
Hudson: If it continues to let Wall
Street do the economic planning, the economy will look like that of Argentina.
Bonnie
Faulkner: And what does Argentina
look like?
Michael
Hudson: A narrow oligarchy at the
top, keeping labor at the bottom, taking away labor’s rights to unionize – an
economy whose financial and military sectors have won the class war.
Bonnie
Faulkner: China, with its Belt and
Road infrastructure project, is now buying gold on the open market, as are a
number of other countries. Has the Western banking system penetrated China? And
if so, how would you characterize China’s banking system?
Michael
Hudson: There’s an attempt by the
United States to penetrate China. In the recent trade agreements China did
permit U.S. banks to create their own credit. I’m not sure that this is going
to really take off, now that Trump is accelerating the trade war. But
basically, in America you have private banks extending credit to corporations.
In China you have the government banks extending the loans. That saves China
from having a financial crisis in the way that the United States does.
About 12 percent of American companies are said to be zombie
companies. They’re already insolvent, not able to make a profit after paying
their heavy debt service. But banks are still giving them enough credit to stay
in business, so they won’t have to go bankrupt and create a crisis. China
doesn’t have that problem, because when Chinese industry and factories are not
able to pay, the public Bank of China can simply forgive the debt. Its choice
is clear: Either it can let companies go bankrupt and be sold at a low price to
some buyer, mainly an American; or, it can wipe the bad debts off the books.
If China had been crazy enough to have student loans and
leave its graduates impoverished instead of providing free universities,
China’s central bank could simply write off the student loans. No investors
would lose, because the banks are owned by the government. Its position is, “If
you’re a factory, we don’t want you to have to close down and unemploy your
labor. We’ll just write down the debt. And if your employees are having a
really hard time, we’ll just write down their debts, so that they can spend
their money on goods and services to help expand our internal market.”
America’s banks are owned by the stockholders and
bondholders, who would never let Chase Manhattan or Citibank or Wells Fargo
just forgive their various categories of loans. That’s why public banking is so
much more efficient from an economy-wide level than private banks. It’s why
banking should be a public utility, not privatized.
Bonnie
Faulkner: Can you explain further
how writing down debts is good for the economy?
Michael
Hudson: Well, think of the
alternative to writing down debts. If you don’t write down America’s student
debts, the graduates are going to have to pay so much of the student debt
service (now to the government) that they’re not going to have enough money to
be able to buy a house, they won’t have enough money to get married, they won’t
have enough money to buy goods and services. It means that most people who can
buy houses are graduates with trust funds – students whose parents are rich
enough that they didn’t have to take out a student loan to pay for their
children’s education. These hereditary families are rich enough to buy them
their own apartment.
That’s why the American economy is polarizing between people
who inherit enough money to be able to have their own housing and budgets free
of student loans and other debts, compared to families that are debt strapped
and running deeper into debt and without much savings. This financial
bifurcation is making us poorer. Yet neoliberal economic theory sees this as a
competitive advantage. For them, and for employers, poverty is not a problem to
be solved; it is the solution to their own aim of profitability.
Bonnie
Faulkner: So is this whole
privatization scheme, particularly the privatization of the banking system and
privatizing a lot of infrastructure what’s bankrupting the United States?
Michael
Hudson: Yes, just as it’s
bankrupted England and other countries that followed Thatcherism or the
neo-liberal philosophy since about 1980.
Bonnie
Faulkner: Michael Hudson, thank you
again.
Michael
Hudson: It’s always a pleasure to
have these discussions.
Bonnie Faulkner:
I’ve been speaking with Dr. Michael Hudson. Today’s show has been:
De-Dollarizing the American Financial Empire. Dr. Hudson is a financial
economist and historian. He is President of the Institute for the Study
of Long-Term Economic Trend, a Wall Street Financial Analyst and Distinguished
Research Professor of Economics at the University of Missouri, Kansas
City. His 1972 book, Super Imperialism: The Economic
Strategy of American Empire, the subject of today’s broadcast, is posted in
PDF format on his website at michael-hudson.com. He is also author
of Trade, Development and Foreign Debt, which is the academic
sister volume to Super Imperialism. Dr. Hudson acts as an
economic advisor to governments worldwide on finance and tax law. Visit
his website at michael-hudson.com.
….
SOURCE: https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-07-13/michael-hudson-de-dollarizing-american-financial-empire
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