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- <text id=94TT0886>
- <title>
- Jul. 04, 1994: Business:On the Money
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jul. 04, 1994 When Violence Hits Home
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ON THE MONEY, Page 57
- How a Falling Dollar Hurts Us
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By John Rothchild
- </p>
- <p> The past week was a sad one for America. The once almighty
- dollar sank to its lowest level since World War II in relation
- to the Japanese yen. Twenty-five years ago, a $1 bill was worth
- 360 yen. Today it's worth only 100 yen, and at one point last
- Tuesday it dropped below 100. The most common affliction of
- U.S. travelers to Tokyo is not jet lag. It's sticker shock.
- For people who pay in dollars, the top hotels are so expensive,
- they ought to offer mortgages.
- </p>
- <p> It's more or less the same story in Germany, where the dollar
- has fallen in relation to the mark. And it's not only travelers
- who are affected. The falling dollar can also have a big impact
- at home. It can make things more expensive in our own neighborhoods,
- raising the price of everything from Nikons to Nintendos. The
- stock market is already telling us it doesn't like this slump
- in the greenback. The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 139
- points last week, including a 62-point drop on Friday.
- </p>
- <p> If the dollar's decline were a temporary thing, it wouldn't
- be worth worrying about. Countries can make their currencies
- go up and down by buying and selling in the world's foreign-exchange
- markets. The U.S. and its major trading partners were in the
- market last week for the third time this year, buying every
- dollar in sight in an effort to halt the latest slide. It didn't
- help much, and that could force the Federal Reserve to raise
- interest rates some more and risk slowing the economic recovery.
- Yet for all anyone knows, the price of the dollar could rise
- in the next few months.
- </p>
- <p> The trouble is that over the past 20 years, the general direction
- of the dollar has been down. Remember the phrase "sound as a
- dollar"? It used to be popular, back when telephones were black
- and had rotary dials.
- </p>
- <p> A chronically weak currency like ours is a sign that the country
- is living beyond its means. It's a sign that we are deep in
- hock, and for all the wrong reasons. It's O.K. to go into debt
- if you put the money to some useful purpose, such as building
- a new factory or a better computer or a faster airplane. But
- we've borrowed heavily to buy cars, TV sets and more gadgets
- to put in the house. Maybe you haven't, but a lot of the neighbors
- have. Uncle Sam is the biggest offender of all: he borrows just
- to pay the monthly bills.
- </p>
- <p> Worse yet, while we've been bringing home the made-in-Japan
- stuff, the Japanese have neglected to buy our made-in-America
- stuff. On the whole, they are savers and not spenders, and the
- recent hard times from which they are now recovering have made
- them spend even less. We've been paying them in dollars, and
- they've been investing our dollars in new plants and machinery
- to make their country more productive so they can sell us more
- goods and make even more dollars. At this point, Japan and much
- of the rest of the world have a glut of dollars, more than they
- know what to do with. And whenever there's an oversupply of
- something, its price goes down. Hence the falling dollar.
- </p>
- <p> Now we come to the part where the weak dollar can really hurt.
- Not only does the falling currency raise the price we pay for
- Japanese, German and other imported goods; our own companies
- can now afford to raise their prices without fear of losing
- business to foreign competition, and pretty soon we've got widespread
- inflation.
- </p>
- <p> A falling dollar can also mean higher interest rates, and this
- is where the federal deficit comes into play. The U.S. government
- is already $4.5 trillion in the red, and every year it has to
- borrow another $200 billion or so by selling bonds. A hefty
- chunk of this sum comes from foreigners, and they were not born
- yesterday. Seeing the dollar in decline, they sense that our
- plan is to pay them back with devalued money. So they stop buying
- our bonds, and the only way we can lure them back is with higher
- interest rates that affect everyone. Thus, thanks to the falling
- dollar and continuing huge budget deficits, Americans are paying
- more for home loans, car loans and consumer loans than they
- otherwise would.
- </p>
- <p> A falling dollar is good for one thing: it makes our products
- cheaper for foreigners to buy. But this hasn't narrowed our
- trade deficit with Japan, which stands at about $60 billion
- a year; nor has it done much to shrink our $10 billion deficit
- with Germany. And while some currency watchers say our government
- wants the dollar to fall so low that even the Japanese won't
- be able to resist buying U.S. goods, this game of chicken has
- shown few signs of success. Each time the dollar has fallen
- sharply in the past 25 years, the Japanese have responded by
- improving the quality of their products to help maintain their
- competitive edge.
- </p>
- <p> Countries that borrow and consume too much are destined to lose
- out, and a cheap currency cannot save them in the end. Eighty
- years ago, the world's most powerful currency was the British
- pound sterling, which enjoyed the same almighty reputation as
- the dollar once did. But the country's post-World War II collapse
- sent the pound reeling, and while further declines in the currency
- have occasionally boosted British exports, Britain is no longer
- the prosperous place it once was. Any visitor can see that.
- </p>
- <p> We applaud other countries with weak currencies and large deficits
- when they adopt austerity measures, sack bureaucrats and reduce
- the size of their government deficits. In places like Chile
- and Argentina, these harsh moves have begun to pay off in rising
- standards of living. But America continues to spend too much
- and to save too little, and the falling dollar is the world's
- way of canceling our credit card.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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