Those who
follow financial markets may be familiar with the term strong-dollar
policy, which is used by Bush administration officials and
Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan himself. One might assume
that such a policy entailed a course of action designed to strengthen
the value of the U.S. dollar. However, if we judge Fed policy
by Mr. Greenspans actions rather than his words, it appears
we have a weak-dollar policy, a policy that erodes the value of
your personal savings. The strong-dollar policy is
nothing more than an empty political slogan.
The inescapable
truth is that the value of the U.S. dollar has fallen over 30%
in the past year, which to most people would not seem indicative
of strength. There are several reasons for this decline, but the
single biggest factor has been Mr. Greenspans relentless
increase of the money supply. There are roughly sixteen trillion
dollars in worldwide use today, five trillion more than when Greenspan
became Fed chair. The law of supply is immutable: When dollars
are abundant they are also cheap.
For much
of our history a gold standard imposed discipline on U.S. dollar
policy, since every dollar printed theoretically was redeemable
in gold. Since the last links between the dollar and gold were
severed in 1971, the dollar essentially has operated as an article
of faith. Christopher
Mayer, writing for the Ludwig von Mises Institute, states:
Faith that paper money itself was of any lasting value would
have struck our forebears as patently absurd.
The problem
is that faith can be shaken, and the precipitous drop in the dollar
shows how investors around the globe are very concerned about
American deficits and debt. When government policies in a fiat
system are the sole measure of a currencys worth, the currency
markets act as a reliable barometer of how those policies are
viewed around the world. Politicians often manage to fool voters
and the media, but they rarely fool the financial markets over
time. When investors lack faith in the U.S. dollar, they really
lack faith in the economic policies of the U.S. government. The
Medicare prescription drug bill passed two weeks ago provides
an example of this phenomenon the day after the bill passed,
the dollar dropped once again. Investors understand that the new
entitlement will cost trillions over coming decades, trillions
that will come from Treasury printing presses and further devalue
existing dollars.
Ultra-cautious
investor Warren Buffett is trading heavily in foreign currencies
for the first time, demonstrating his lack of faith in the dollar.
His predicament is simple: He holds billions of dollars, and cannot
afford to sit by and watch the value of those dollars drop another
30%. By taking a position against the U.S. dollar, his actions
speak volumes.
Unlike
Warren Buffett, most Americans are stuck with their U.S. dollars.
Average people, particularly those who depend on savings or fixed
incomes to fund their retirement years, cannot abide the continued
devaluation of our currency. A true strong-dollar policy would
require constriction of the money supply and higher interest rates,
both of which would cause some short-term pain for the American
economy. In the long run, however, such a correction is the only
alternative to the continued erosion of our dollars.