"..."The Fed's "QE2" risks accelerating the demise of the dollar-based currency system... a chorus of Chinese officials and advisers is demanding that China switch reserves into gold or forms of oil. As this anti-dollar revolt gathers momentum worldwide, the US risks losing its "exorbitant privilege" of currency hegemony." (QE risks currency wars and the end of dollar hegemony, Ambrose-Evans Pritchard, Telegraph)
Or, this from Nobel prize winner, Joseph Stiglitz:
"The world is on the verge of moving to another regime of managed exchange rates and fragmented capital markets....A new global reserve system or an expansion of IMF "money" (called special drawing rights, or SDRs) will be central to this co-operative approach. With such a system, poor countries would no longer need to put aside hundreds of billions of dollars to protect themselves from global volatility, and these would add to global aggregate demand.... with such a system, the US would no longer enjoy the extraordinarily cheap borrowing that comes with being the minter of the most important global reserve currency. But the current arrangement is an anomaly. The world is at a critical juncture." (A currency war has no winners, Joseph Stiglitz, The Guardian)
Or this from economist Michael Hudson who believes that the rising powers Brazil, Russia, India and China (BRIC) will challenge the current dollar-dominated regime leading the way to a new multi-polar world order. Here's what he says:
"The most decisive counter-strategy to U.S. QE II policy is to create a full-fledged BRIC-centered currency bloc that would minimize use of the dollar....A BRIC-centered system would reverse the policy of open and unprotected capital markets put in place after World War II. ... In September, China supported a Russian proposal to start direct trading using the yuan and the ruble rather than pricing their trade or taking payment in U.S. dollars or other foreign currencies. China then negotiated a similar deal with Brazil. And on the eve of the IMF meetings in Washington on Friday, Premier Wen stopped off in Istanbul to reach agreement with Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan to use their own currencies in a planned tripling Turkish-Chinese trade to $50 billion over the next five years, effectively excluding the dollar."
It won't happen overnight, but the transition away from the dollar has already begun. The financial crisis has greatly eroded US moral authority and the trust that's needed to preserve America's role as the steward of the world's reserve currency. Bernanke's misguided hyper-monetarism is merely hastening the dollar's decline. QE2 could very well be the straw that breaks the camel's back..."
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