
For More Than Half A Century, The Dollar Has Been Not Just America's Currency But The World's. It Is Used Globally By Importers, Exporters, Investors, Governments And Central Banks Alike. This Singular Role Of The Dollar Is A Source Of Strength For The United States. It Is, As A Critic Of U.s. Policies Once Put It, America's Exorbitant Privilege. But Now, With U.s. Budget Deficits Extending As Far As The Eye Can See, Holding Dollars Is Viewed As A Losing Proposition. Some Say That The Dollar May Soon Cease To Be The World's Standard Currency, Which Would Depress U.s. Living Standards And Weaken The Country's International Influence. In Exorbitant Privilege, One Of Our Foremost Economists, Barry Eichengreen, Traces The Rise Of The Dollar To International Prominence. He Shows How The Greenback Dominated Internationally In The Second Half Of The 20th Century For The Same Reasons That The United States Dominated The Global Economy. But Now, With The Rise Of China, India, Brazil And Other Emerging Economies, America No Longer Towers Over The Global Economy. It Follows, Eichengreen Argues, That The Dollar Will Not Be As Dominant. But This Does Not Mean That Coming Changes Need Be Sudden And Dire Dl Or That The Dollar Is Doomed To Lose Its International Status. Challenging The Presumption That There Is Room For Only One True Global Currency, Eichengreen Shows That Several Currencies Have Regularly Shared This Role. What Was True In The Distant Past Will Be True, Once Again, In The Not-too-distant Future. The Dollar Will Lose Its International Currency Status, Eichengreen Warns, Only If The United States Repeats The Mistakes That Led To The Financial Crisis And Only If It Fails To Put Its Fiscal And Financial House In Order. Incisive, Challenging And Iconoclastic, Exorbitant Privilege, Is A Fascinating Analysis Of The Changes That Lie Ahead. It Is A Challenge, Equally, To Those Who Warn That The Dollar Is Doomed And To Those Who Regard Its Continuing Dominance As Inevitable
This book investigates whether the U.S. dollar will maintain its status as the world's primary reserve currency amidst shifting global economic power. Barry Eichengreen, a professor of economics and political science at the University of California, Berkeley, utilizes historical analysis of international monetary systems to challenge the assumption that the global economy requires a single dominant currency. He argues that the future will likely involve a multipolar currency system, provided the United States manages its fiscal and financial policies effectively.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to international monetary history and policy discourse. Readers frequently note the clarity of the prose, which makes complex macroeconomic concepts accessible to both students and informed general readers.
Page Count:
222
Publication Date:
2011-01-01
ISBN-10:
019162375X
ISBN-13:
9780191623752
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