The President's comments cap (at least for now) a period of extraordinary public debate among politicians and policymakers -- past and present -- over currencies and the Fed's QE2 program.
Ahead of the G20 confab, Germany's finance minister, Wolfgang Schauble called U.S. policy "clueless," while foreign ministers from China, South Africa and France (among others) questioned the wisdom of QE2.
Adding insult to irony, former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan piled on in The FT, where he warned the U.S. is "pursuing a policy of currency weakening." That in turn, prompted a sharp rebuke from Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner, who told CNBC: "We will never seek to weaken our currency as a tool to gain competitive advantage or to grow the economy."
Michael Pento, senior economist at Euro Pacific Capital, says the U.S. doesn't have a leg to stand on when it comes to discussions about currencies, calling Alan Greenspan's comments the "height of irony and hypocrisy," given his easy money policies at the Fed.
"The U.S. is the number one currency manipulator on the planet," he says. "We print up a lot of dollars [and] we can consume more than we produce because of that."
But that policy makes for a "chronically weak" dollar and puts America at the mercy of its foreign creditors, Pento says, restating a warning about the risks of a true dollar crash and sky-rocketing interest rates if we don't change course, soon.
It won't happen overnight, but China is plotting its own exit strategy by slowing rolling its Treasury holdings into the short end of the curve, he says, suggesting other foreign investors will follow suit.
"The credibility of this country is falling faster than the dollar," Pento says. "One day you'll have a Treasury auction without indirect bidders and only Ben Bernanke" will want to buy U.S. debt, he says.
To avoid such a "watershed event," Pento recommends we adopt the bulk of the Deficit Commission Panel's recommendations, as detailed here. He also wants a return to the gold standard, a controversial idea World Bank President Robert Zoellick broached this week.
Going back to the gold standard "would be painful" and even lead to a depression in the near term, Pento concedes. But "all the imbalances would be reconciled and we can start over again with a real economy."
Aaron Task is the host of Tech Ticker. You can follow him on Twitter at @atask or email him at altask@yahoocom
Don't oversell Mr. Pento!!! What is the true value of Gold, or they should form the standard based on inflated Gold prices? Isn't it even better? Enable hedge funds and Gold investors like yourself build their empire smoothly...another bubble...then back to euro and then yen and then RMB standard? Any basis for this super-intellgent scheme or all basis are based on past and present? Do you have any neutral fair suggestion based on future or based on ideal valuations?
Pento and the rest of Wall Street economists are idiots. It doesn't matter how many dollars you print if nobody spends them!!! If economic activity is slow, the money just sits there. I don't understand why bozos who make tons of money can't understand that one simple truth.
Pento advocates a policy (a sort of gold standard) that he admits may cause a depression - which will destroy the lives of hundreds of millions. It's scary that the idea doesn't bother him. Anyone who values finance over human lives is crazy.
You can only be bankrupt if you have no money. But if you can print money, how to be bankrupt??
I think what Bernanke is doing is right on. Every day I get up in the morning, rents are going down, real-estate prices are going down, many people getting new jobs are taking a pay cut. Bids for new work are less. There is deflation out there, perhaps not for commodities but for the other things for sure. Our wages relative to the rest of the world are still too high. What are we going to stand around for the next ten years with our thumb up our a@@s and take more pay cuts as this economy deflates to find a bottom? The world has sponged off the US for 60 years exporting its goods here because of our currency and wage imbalances. They have now grown their economies after the devastation of WWII. Now let’s have a little wage parody. If I have to pay a little more for gas, so what! if it means we can bring jobs to America. The rest of the world maybe squawking with QE2, but they have been doing this to us for 60 years. Isn’t wage parody fair?
So, Pento invests in the Euro Pacific regions. Those regions have a relative advantage over the U.S. right now in world trade. QE will help the U.S. in world trade relative to the rest of the world. So, hum, why is he against QE?
my key board started on fire from obamas lazer focus on jobs
The Greater Depression marches on..
Republicans ruined the economy, not the Democrats, but they're so clueless they don't get it.
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