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The Declining Dollar Erodes Personal Savings
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
A recent article
in BusinessWeek magazine by James Mehring paints a stark
picture of the ongoing decline of the U.S. dollar. The dollar has
lost 5% against a blend of worldwide currencies just since April,
falling to a 12-month low against the Euro and an 8-month low against
the Japanese yen. Overall, the dollar fell 28% against other currencies
between 2002 and 2004. It then rebounded slightly, but even the
cheerleaders in the American financial press cannot shrug off this
latest decline.
Of course the
real measure of just how far the dollar has fallen can be found
in the price of gold, which has reached a 25-year high of more than
$700 per ounce. Its much more accurate to measure the dollar
against a stable store of value like gold, rather than against other
fiat currencies. Gold has nearly tripled against the dollar since
2001, when the price was $250 per ounce. By this measure the dollar
is losing value at an alarming rate.
Remember, gold
is static. Gold isnt going up, the dollar is going down. And
its going to continue until the American people demand an
end to deficit spending by Congress and unrestrained creation of
new dollars by the Federal Reserve and Treasury department.
A sharply rising
gold price is really a vote of no confidence in Congress
ability to control the budget, the Feds ability to control
the money supply, and the administrations ability to bring
stability to the Middle East.
As Mr. Mehring
suggests, the Federal Reserve may have no choice but to raise interest
rates to maintain foreign enthusiasm for our dollar. Its a
serious problem that new Fed Chair Benjamin Bernanke must address
sooner or later: propping up the dollar with higher interest rates
without killing the U.S. economy in the process.
The world financial
markets are betting against the dollar and against Mr. Bernankes
chances of correcting the imbalances caused by Alan Greenspan. Our
creditors, particularly Asian central banks, are losing their appetite
for U.S. Treasuries. Our federal governments huge debt and
voracious appetite for deficit spending make our economy dependent
on the actions of foreign governments and central bankers. Yet few
Americans realize the extent to which their own government has sold
out American sovereignty by borrowing money overseas.
The
consequences of a rapidly declining dollar are not yet fully understood
by the American public. The long-term significance has not sunk
in, but when it does there will be political hell to pay in Washington.
Our relative wealth as a nation is measured in dollars, and the
steady erosion of the value of those dollars means we will all be
poorer in the future. The artificial stimulation of our economy
through cheap money comes with a price. When dollars are abundant,
they are worth less. This is the reality facing Americans today,
especially older Americans who rely on savings to finance their
retirement years.
May
16, 2006
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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