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gpond
07-01-2003, 12:54 PM
Oh great! Here it comes, guys... More of the picture revealed.THINKING THINGS OVER World Money at the Palazzo Mundell
Does the global economy need a global currency?

BY ROBERT L. BARTLEY
Monday, June 30, 2003 12:01 a.m.

SANTA COLOMBA, Italy--At this rural crossroads a short cab ride outside Siena's medieval gates, the question of the day is: "Does the Global Economy Need a Global Currency?"

"Yes," declares former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, adding that the 15 or so onlookers here are maybe half the people in the world willing to entertain the question seriously. They include former Israeli central bank head Jacob Frenkel, former Argentine Finance Minister Domingo Cavallo and currency-board champion Steve Hanke. They've been gathered by Nobel Prize economist Robert Mundell for his 10th Santa Colomba Conference. The first conference was held in 1971, three weeks after President Nixon's Aug. 15 announcement severing the link between the dollar and gold and breaking up the Bretton Woods international monetary system. This was also two years after young Professor Mundell spent $20,000 to buy the five-story limestone castle once owned by Pandolfo "Il Magnifico" Petrucci, who ruled Siena from 1487 until his death in 1512. Filled with endless shelves of books, it's now Palazzo Mundell, home and personal conference center for a man who's influenced the world not by Petrucci's notorious treachery and violence, but by the force of ideas. Mundell ideas motivated both the Reagan administration economic policies in the U.S. and the advent of the euro on this side of the Atlantic.

And if the euro can replace the franc, mark and lira, why can't a new world currency merge the dollar, euro and yen? The euro's recent recovery against the dollar almost certainly establishes its credibility as a permanent currency. While major eurozone economies remain troubled, practically no one so far is blaming the European Central Bank. This suggests success for the grandest reform of all, a supra-national central bank. The ECB Executive Board and Governing Council could yet become political targets, of course, especially if much-discussed deflation actually sets in. But even with strikes in Germany and France, few politicians seek a way out in a little more inflation or currency depreciation; few complain about the loss of "monetary sovereignty."
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World money, with a world central bank, seems a next logical step. The small band of dreamers decamped to the hills of Tuscany has always been skeptical of prevailing wisdom that the answer to all exchange-rate problems is "float." The euro was introduced at $1.18 to the dollar on Jan. 1, 1999, floated to below 83 cents in October 2000, and floated back to $1.18 this spring. In four years, that is, down 31% and back up 44%, with no obvious economic fundamentals to explain the float, er, gyrations.

In theory such monetary gyrations will disturb the real economy, and for whatever reason the years 1999-2003 have indeed been peculiar ones, with a tech-stock "bubble," a stock-market crash and a grudging world recovery. Over this time, too, U.S. monetary policy has tended toward the hyperactive, with the Fed tightening in 1999, easing dramatically in 2001 and just now cutting its open-market interest rate to an all-time low. It's not easy to tease out the skein of causation connecting these events, but we do know from history that changes in the international monetary order have powerful effects, economic and often political. The Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates provided an international monetary stability that helped rebuild the world after World War II, for example. Its breakdown led to a decade of world inflation, an "energy crisis" and war in the Middle East. With the advent of the euro, the world has evolved a system of currency blocs. The dollar and euro zones are perhaps each large enough not to be overwhelmed by currency changes--or at least, say, to delay the inflationary impact of the recent decline in the dollar.

But around the world small and open economies--Argentina, for example--suffer profound economic and political shocks when the two currencies in which they trade gyrate by 30% or 40%. For such nations in particular, the Mundell view stresses that floating exchange rates, recently a standard prescription of the International Monetary Fund, are not a policy but the lack of a policy. Under fixed rates, the central bank of a small nation devotes monetary policy to targeting the exchange rate with a larger neighbor; this is a policy. But a "float" simply takes away the anchor; for a policy you need another target--historically the price of gold, more recently some measure of the domestic inflation rate. Under the second Bush administration, the United States has set out to establish itself as a positive force for order in the world, but it has been uninterested in the non-military side of world power, in particular the monetary leadership exercised so successfully by the U.S. during Bretton Woods or Great Britain during the 19th century. A world money would be an extraordinary boon to international stability.

When the U.S. gets ready to seize world leadership, Bob Mundell has a plan, based on the euro and looking toward the year 2040. To wit, all currencies convertible into an international money, the dey (dollar, euro, yen) or perhaps the intor. The supply of this currency under supervision of an international board; monetary gains from its issue split along IMF quotas.
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As the Palazzo Mundell finale, he gave a banquet suitable for "Il Magnifico," with a suckling pig turning on an open spit and diners seated at a table guarded by twin suits of armor. He'll take his latest Santa Colomba conclusions to the IMF meeting in Dubai in September. Could it happen that his ideas will reach beyond a few dreamers in Tuscany to the real world? Well, with supply-side tax cuts and the euro, I've seen it happen twice before.

Mr. Bartley is editor emeritus of The Wall Street Journal. His column appears Mondays in the Journal and on OpinionJournal.com.

Don't we already have a de-facto world currency? Universally recognized and accepted? If only we would use it!!!

Tachyon Flare
07-02-2003, 01:52 AM
gpond,
I would suggest an eye opening book titled "Alternatives to Monetary Disorder," written by Fred Hirsch, Michael Doyle and Edward L. Morse, the book was published under the 1980s project by Council On Foreign Relations which proposed alternative monetary regimes that are mostly hierarchal / tiered systems. Interestingly enough, they felt the need to break local economies to reintegrate into a large system (international central bank) to stabilize disorder. This is possibly reasonable however; the sovereignty nation-state would no longer apply economically. Personally speaking, although they make some interesting points, it is rather distasteful (The quote below on controlled disintegration is disturbing). It almost seems that select groups of institutions want a self-induced disintegration to introduce a world currency. (Note: J. M. Keynes wanted the world currency to be called "bancor," the "unita" [proposed by World War II U.S. Treasury official Harry Dexter White]).

"In a tiered system the tasks for American statecraft will be great. What is being requested is that a form of collective leadership be developed in the management of the interanational economy to replace the individualistic leadership of the United States that has prevailed since World War II."

-Edward L. Morse

"The obvious danger in such a regime resides in its potential instability. Some limited loosening is by no means unequivocally undesirable. It can be seen as a rational response to the earlier tendency, which was most manifest in the 1960s, for economic integration to run far ahead of both actual and desired political integration, thereby forcing countries into suboptimal policy choices. A degree of controlled disintegration in the world economy is a legitimate objective for the 1980s and may be the most realistic one for a moderate international economic order. A central normative problem for the international economic order in the years ahead is how to ensure that the dis-integration indeed occurs in a controlled way and does not rather spiral into damaging restrictionism."

-Fred Hirsch and Michael Doyle

-Tachyon

gpond
07-02-2003, 01:35 PM
That does sound like an interesting book. I do fear if I were to begin reading it that at some point I may fly into a rage and rip it into tiny little pieces.:rant: But I probably would learn something if I could manage to postpone that urge for a few chapters.

Yes, I find these quotations distasteful also.

I do not understand what is a tiered system? It sounds like, perhaps, using some world currency as reserves to back the various domestic currencies? Or perhaps to settle accounts between "nations" with a world currency such as SDR, Unita, Dey?

In the article above they state that "World money, with a world central bank, seems a next logical step." To me, this begs the question: The next logical step to what?!? I'm not sure I want to know the answer. But I'm afraid I already do.

Tachyon Flare
07-02-2003, 04:16 PM
That does sound like an interesting book. I do fear if I were to begin reading it that at some point I may fly into a rage and rip it into tiny little pieces.:rant: But I probably would learn something if I could manage to postpone that urge for a few chapters.

Yes, I find these quotations distasteful also.

I do not understand what is a tiered system? It sounds like, perhaps, using some world currency as reserves to back the various domestic currencies? Or perhaps to settle accounts between "nations" with a world currency such as SDR, Unita, Dey?

In the article above they state that "World money, with a world central bank, seems a next logical step." To me, this begs the question: The next logical step to what?!? I'm not sure I want to know the answer. But I'm afraid I already do.

The tiered system would be a group of industrialized nations governing order and international relationships, not necessarily like the BIS to handle balance of payments, but to have control of monetary policy, second world nations would be the peripheral nations, third world and last fourth world.

I was thinking about this last night and realized how this book is any different now? Is Brazil and Argentina not subjugated or dependent on economic policies to the IMF? Are peripheral nations not dependent on the dollar? Though the book advocated fixed exchange rates, they want non-government organizations (BIS, IMF) to centralize economic policy thereby completely bypassing nation sovereignty. The book does not come out and say it, but I get the sense it was promoting dictatorship over world finance. Interesting enough one of the chief architects of the BIS was Hjalmar Schacht (Head Reichsbank) and Bank of England's Montagu Norman.

My trusty copy of "Tragedy and Hope" by Carrol Quigley comes in handy:

"The powers of financial capital had another far-reaching aim, nothing less than to create a world system of financial control in private hands able to dominate the political system of each country and the economy of the world as a whole. This system was to be controlled in a feudalist fashion by the central banks of the world acting in concert, by secret agreements arrived at in frequent private meetings and conferences. The apex of the system was to be the Bank for International Settlements in Basle, Switzerland, a private bank owned and controlled by the world's central banks which were themselves private corporations. Each central bank, in the hands of men like Montagu Norman of the Bank of England, Benjamin Strong of the New York Federal Reserve Bank, Charles Rist of the Bank of France, and Hjalmar Schacht of the Reichsbank, sought to dominate its government by its ability to control Treasury loans, to manipulate foreign exchanges, to influence the level of economic activity in the country, and to influence cooperative politicians by subsequent economic rewards in the business world."

These people seem quite serious in their objectives.

-Tachyon

IrishGold
07-02-2003, 06:14 PM
.........snip......These people seem quite serious in their objectives.

-Tachyon



You are oh so right! they will stop at nothing in their quest for total world domination.
But.................do we know who "they" are?

Tachyon Flare
07-02-2003, 09:04 PM
You are oh so right! they will stop at nothing in their quest for total world domination.
But.................do we know who "they" are?

Wish I knew IrishGold . . . only that a number of individuals and institutions have flirted with the idea of global currency.


-Tachyon

IrishGold
07-02-2003, 09:36 PM
Wish I knew IrishGold . . . only that a number of individuals and institutions have flirted with the idea of global currency.


-Tachyon

Certainly here is one ............possibility!?
Trilateral Commission Clear in Directing World Government

Joey Dauben June 23 2003

World banker David Rockefeller is very clear: The states, the peoples, the governments and the economies of all nations must serve the needs of multinational banks and corporations.
corporations.

In Rockefeller's book, "The Trilateral Cmmissin and Elite Planning for World Management," (written by Holly Sklar, but at the discretion of Rockefeller), Rockefeller does not hide the fact that his network of organizations, banks, corporations or governments works at the whim of his financial influence.

The owners and managers of the Trilateralist global corporations, the book states, "view the entire world as their factory, farm, and playground." History, Rockefeller says, "shows that every effective international system requires a custodian."

And Rockefeller even goes on to state that there are other organizations helping in the cause for world government, organizations he's funded: the Bilderberg Group and the Council on Foreign Relations are just two notable examples of the Rockefeller-directed One Worlders.

Even the thoughts of any "secret society" working to direct foreign policy, or shape public opinion, are met with a stern Rockefeller put-down: he calls the cabal-calling conspiracy theorists "extremists."

It's all laid out on the table, he says. Nothing to hide.

Anyway, it is also good to note some of the Trilateral Commission's guidelines, as presented by Sklar, but according to Rockefeller himself.

- Trilateralists propose strategies for the management of dependence.

This in itself is obvious; took a gander inside one of the U.S. History books our children are studying. There's much to be said about the Standard Oil Company and many of the giant corporations that have directed Rockefeller's policies (i.e., Ford, IBM).

- Marketing, Trilateralists say, is like militarism - it is a means of managing social change.

Look at the mainstream media (ABC, NBC, CBS, Time, etc.) - they're all owned and operated by members of the Big Three (TC, Bilderbergs, CFR). Has our country gotten better since the 1960s? I'm afraid not, but then again, that's the plan.

- Global corporations, writes TC-co-founder and former Carter Administration official Zbigniew Brzezinski - depend on the political, economic, and repressive power commanded by the ruling class of the nation-state to maintain a "favorable investment climate."

And when those nation-states, countries, or governments fail to adhere to the gloabalists' claims, they are, in simple terms, "dealt with."

For example, the Vietnam War, according to the TC, "undermined severely the U.S. role as global police for international capitalism."

The globalists had things going perfectly until John F. Kennedy's abrupt change in policy - JFK, if you will remember, helped "fight communism [TC: war for capitalism]" but found out things were not what they seemed; he later told a group of college students shortly before his execution of a "grave threat to the American people." This threat, JFK later found out, was within his own government. His executive order to start the withdrawal of American servicemen in Vietnam was a globalist "no-no." And the rest is history.

Or what about Richard Nixon? Nixon and Treasury Secretary John Connally "unilaterally demolished the Bretton Woods System" on Aug. 15, 1971. Now, observers of the global government being put in place and free-market capitalists will know that free trade is the unobstructed flow of money, goods and services between countries. The Bretton Woods, New Hampshire pact in 1944 established the "pro-world capitalist" International Monetary Fund, World Bank, and the International Federation for World Development - basically the financial institutions funding our crusade for world government.

Well, Nixon came up with a plan of his own, called the "New Economic Policy." It strongly favored, according to the TC, our domestic economy, which were losing out in international trade competition (plans similar to Nixon's are still in place - hence South American protests of free trade agreemetnts).

And not too long after Nixon's economic venture, the Washington Post, affiliated with Rockefeller's Bilderberger Group and the CFR, broke Watergate - and, yes, the rest is history.

When governments or political leaders turn unfriendly, according to Brzezinski, the Trilateral co-founder, the globalists "attempt to discipline them" through economic and political maneuvers." Or, "through military and covert action."

This is all spelled out, in the Elite Planning for World Management - you can pick up a copy at your local bookstore or library.

There's no secret about it, folks. Like Communism, World Capitalism attempts (and is doing a good job at it, I might add) to only benefit the few.

Trilateralism, Rockefeller says, is the "current attempt by ruling elites to manage both dependence and democracy - at home and abroad."

And by the looks of it, his plan is working.
Joey Dauben is a reporter for The Ellis County Press, an independent weekly newspaper based 20 miles south of Dallas, Texas. He can be reached at http://www.joeydauben.com (http://www.joeydauben.com/).