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- <text id=92TT1990>
- <title>
- Sep. 07, 1992: Down and Down the Dollar Goes
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Sep. 07, 1992 The Agony of Africa
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ECONOMY, Page 36
- Down and Down the Dollar Goes
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Where it will stop, certainly nobody in Bonn or Washington knows
- </p>
- <p>By John Greenwald--With reporting by Daniel Benjamin/Berlin,
- S.C. Gwynne/Washington and Adam Zagorin/Brussels
- </p>
- <p> European tourists flocked to tony U.S. stores last week,
- snapping up bargains. Shoppers like Pirrera Enza, a bank worker
- from Sicily, stocked up on perfumes and cosmetics at
- Bloomingdale's in New York City for less than half their price
- at home. Enza flew back a few days later with a planeload of
- beaming compatriots toting bags and luggage bulging with
- American-bought goods.
- </p>
- <p> What made the bonanza possible was the U.S. dollar's
- plunge to its lowest level since World War II. But that same
- decline meant that while the Europeans frolicked, Americans
- abroad turned into window shoppers because the cost of
- everything had become so expensive. "A room in a decent hotel
- costs $450, and breakfast $35," fumed Robert McFadden, an
- Atlanta lawyer in London. "It would have been bad enough without
- the dollar's fall. Now it's just outrageous." Said Stephanie
- Bressler, a recent college graduate from Rhode Island who was
- touring Paris with friends: "Like we saw the Louvre, the outside
- of the Louvre, but we couldn't go inside." Neither Bressler nor
- her companions could afford the $7 admission charge.
- </p>
- <p> Welcome once again to the wild and wacky world of foreign
- exchange crises. After several years when major Western
- currencies generally moved in unison on international exchanges
- like pennants gently fluttering in the breeze, the dollar in
- recent days has looked as though it was about to be blown off
- its flagpole. The American currency dropped a dizzying 4%
- against the German mark in a four-day slump that leveled off in
- the middle of last week. In the 1960s, when the dollar was king
- of currencies, it was worth 4 marks; by a year ago, it was still
- worth more than 1.7 marks. But last week the value of the dollar
- was down to just 1.4 marks.
- </p>
- <p> The dollar slump and the ripple effect felt by other
- currencies staggered stock and bond markets around the world.
- Business and consumer confidence, already shaky, suffered
- another setback. Investors watched helplessly as early in the
- week stock prices sank and long-term interest rates turned
- upward, depressing investments and driving up mortgages and
- other borrowing costs. "Rising rates and a falling dollar--that's the definition of a currency crisis," says C. Fred
- Bergsten, director of the Institute for International Economics
- in Washington. "What it says is that foreigners are pulling out
- of both U.S. currency and financial markets."
- </p>
- <p> The cheap dollar, or any cheap currency, offers both
- advantages and disadvantages. It all depends on where you stand.
- American manufacturers generally like a lower dollar because it
- slashes the cost of their products overseas and thus helps
- exports. For example, Ford expects the low exchange rate to
- boost sales of its new right-hand-drive compact, the Probe,
- which it plans to ship to Japan. A cheap dollar, however,
- increases inflation because U.S. consumers have to pay more for
- such foreign goods as Louis Vuitton luggage or Hermes scarves.
- A declining currency is also seen as a vote of no-confidence by
- foreign investors in a country's economy--and in the people
- managing it.
- </p>
- <p> A cheap currency is likewise a mixed blessing for foreign
- countries. For Japanese and European manufacturers, a weak
- dollar hurts sales of goods like cameras and cars because it
- raises their prices in the U.S. But foreign tourists in the U.S.
- can suddenly buy a lot more with their marks, yen or francs.
- </p>
- <p> While business people last week were trying to get used to
- new exchange rates, the currency crisis jolted political
- capitals from Bonn to Tokyo. The dollar's fall was a clear
- embarrassment to President George Bush and his re-election
- campaign. The sharpest plunge came in the two days after Bush's
- much touted acceptance speech to the Republican National
- Convention. The money markets seemed to be sending the message
- that they saw little in his proposals for jump-starting the U.S.
- economy. A wobbly dollar will make it harder for Bush to brag
- during the campaign about the strong U.S. presence around the
- world.
- </p>
- <p> The international currency instability left many European
- countries in similar binds. While Britain, France and Italy
- would like to cut interest rates to stimulate growth, the
- European Monetary System obliges them to keep their currencies
- from falling too far behind the mark. "It is the economics of
- the madhouse, but we have agreed to play by the rules," says
- Peter Morgan, director general of the London-based Institute of
- Directors, an international organization of corporate board
- members. "The danger is that if we stick by the rules, the
- recession continues even longer."
- </p>
- <p> The currency chaos compounds the uncertainty over the
- outcome of the September 20 referendum in France on the
- Maastricht treaty, which is supposed to lay the basis for a
- European Union. French voters could decide they do not like the
- high interest rates dictated by Germany and vote non on the
- treaty. That would doom it and change the shape of post-cold war
- Europe.
- </p>
- <p> The cause of the flight from the dollar is a fundamental
- disagreement between the German central bank and the Bush
- Administration and the Federal Reserve. The Germans have been
- pushing interest rates up in an attempt to fight domestic
- inflation brought on by the absorption of the former East
- Germany. The costly unification has raised the annual inflation
- rate to about 4%, a low level for most countries but an
- uncomfortable one by German standards. German central bankers
- are willing to accept less growth in return for less inflation.
- </p>
- <p> The Bush Administration and the Federal Reserve, on the
- other hand, are fighting a totally different war. The Federal
- Reserve, under not-so-subtle pressure from the White House, has
- been pushing interest rates down for more than a year in hopes
- of stimulating the U.S. economy out of its long bout of
- sluggish growth in order to help the President's re-election
- campaign.
- </p>
- <p> With German rates high and American ones low, a yawning
- interest-rate gap exists between the two countries. Investors
- put their money in countries that pay the most interest, and
- right now German banks are paying about 6.5% more than U.S.
- ones. Result: the international savvy money has been flowing out
- of dollars and into marks. "What is happening now is absolutely
- logical," says economist Barry Bosworth of the Brookings
- Institution in Washington. "The only puzzle in my mind is why
- it took so long for it to happen."
- </p>
- <p> As companies, consumers and tourists scramble to cope with
- volatile money rates, the dollar's slide could continue to
- resonate in the U.S. election-year fray. Supporters of
- presidential nominee Bill Clinton recognize political fodder.
- "This is not a campaign issue in the sense that it has a major
- impact on the voter directly," says Gene Sperling, economic
- policy director for the Clinton campaign. "But it provides
- background music that gives legitimacy to the instinctive
- feeling that people have given up on the current policies of
- this Administration."
- </p>
- <p> Bush aides blame the falling dollar on the Bundesbank's
- relentless policy of raising rates and forgetting about the rest
- of the world. Administration officials point out that Washington
- has been urging the German central bank to bring down rates for
- more than a year. Such jawboning, however, has failed to budge
- the staunchly independent Bundesbank.
- </p>
- <p> The Bush Administration has the sympathy of the government
- of Chancellor Helmut Kohl. Tired of being portrayed as the bad
- guys on the international monetary scene, German officials
- would also like to see their interest rates fall. "Bonn is
- definitely not happy about the policy the Bundesbank pursues,"
- says Jurgen Pfister, head of economic research at the
- Commerzbank. "But the government would harm itself if it
- criticized the Bundesbank too overtly. The majority of the
- public still thinks stability is the main goal."
- </p>
- <p> The real problem is that there is little to stop the
- dollar from sliding or the mark from climbing as long as
- government and financial leaders pursue conflicting goals. "What
- you have in Europe is policy gridlock," says James O'Neill, head
- of financial-markets research for Swiss Bank Corp. in London.
- "The Bundesbank is performing a domestically mandated task that
- has provoked increasing irritation around the Continent. No one
- has a ready solution, and until one is found, financial markets
- will remain in turmoil."
- </p>
- <p> In a world where almost all the major countries are
- suffering through either slow growth or no growth, the last
- thing international business needs is a period of new
- instability and currency crises, which would only inhibit new
- growth. Yet the combination of economic stagnation and low
- interest rates in the U.S. and high interest rates in Germany
- remains a prescription for monetary disarray and instability.
- Until the Americans and Germans can stop pushing and pulling
- their economic policies in opposite directions and narrow the
- interest-rate gap through policies that are good for both of
- them--and for the rest of the world--businesses, consumers
- and even those happy tourists buying bargains will continue to
- watch currencies gyrate.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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