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Roubini: Emerging Markets Will End Dollar's Reign
By: ROUBINI | Date: 2009-06-16
Roubini: Emerging Markets Will End Dollar's Reign
ROUBINI,
RGE MONITOR, NYU, NEW YORK UNIVERSITY, DOLLAR, CURRENCIES, WORLD
MARKET, ECONOMY, EXPANSION, RESERVE CURRENCY, ECONOMIST, EMERGING
MARKETS, RUSSIA, LATVIA, BRAZIL, BRIC, CHINA, INDIA, IMF, EASTERN
EUROPE, HUNGARY, UKRAINE, ROMANIA, EURO, ECB
Reuters
16 Jun 2009
The
influence of emerging markets in the world economy will continue to
expand and ultimately contribute to ending the dollar's reign as global
reserve currency, economist Nouriel Roubini said on Tuesday.
Roubini,
who predicted the current financial crisis, said at a Reuters
Investment Outlook Summit in New York "the rise of emerging markets is
a fundamental change" and pr
edicted China's economy will eventually
grow larger than that of the United States'.
China
and other heavyweight emerging economies such as Russia and Brazil are
now among the top U.S. creditors, and as they grow stronger will
gradually lose appetite for financing rising U.S. budget and current
account deficits, he said.
"Over
time, the willingness of the U.S. creditors to finance (U.S. spending)
and buy dollar reserves is going to be reduced," Roubini said. "People
are getting nervous rightly about us devaluing or inflating our way out
of the debt problem and causing real losses on the holdings of those
assets."
The process of moving away from
the dollar, however, will take many years, said Roubini, who is
chairman of New York-based research firm RGE Monitor.
"Declines
of major reserve currencies do not occur overnight. It's a slow process
that takes decades," he said, noting the gradual shift in the 20th
century from sterling to the dollar. "This century could be the Asian
or Chinese century, but that will occur over time."
For now, he said China and others with large dollar holdings have no choice but to keep accumulating dollar assets.
Otherwise, they would face upward pressure on their currencies and an accelerated decline in exports.
Emerging
market heavyweights Brazil, Russia, India and China
, also known as the
BRICS, who were meeting in Russia on Tuesday called for a "diversified,
stable and predictable currency system."
Though
they did not explicitly mention the U.S. dollar or an alternative
supranational reserve currency, Chinese and Russian officials in recent
months have questioned the dollar's ability to remain the world's
currency of choice.
Roubini
said some emerging markets are in better shape than others, however,
citing Mexico, Poland and Colombia as examples of countries well-placed
to weather the financial crisis.
That is
less the case in Eastern Europe, where the International Monetary Fund
has initiated aid programs for Hungary, Ukraine, Romania and Latvia.
Latvia's economy may contract by up to 20 percent in 2009.
The
government has resisted pressure to devalue its currency because of the
Baltic country's high foreign currency debt burden and Swedish banks'
exposure to its economy.
But Roubini said efforts to maintain the lat's peg to the euro are doomed.
"Devaluation
in Latvia is unavoidable at this point. If you don't do it, the
economic contraction, depression, debt deflation will only get worse,"
he said.
To prevent the currency from
plunging uncontrollably, he said the European Central Bank might
consider "euroization,"20though he conceded this could be a tough sell
in Frankfurt.
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