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Euro Implications for US Foreign
Policy
George F. Paik
The introduction of the Euro as the common currency of
several EU countries has to date had little impact on
relations between the US and those countries. But the
agglomeration of European countries in this arrangement
raises a certain potential risk. It gives relations
between the US and a collective Europe
a new and visible playing field. US and “Euro zone”
management of this new interplay could affect popular
political attitudes on both sides of the
Atlantic,
either exacerbating or calming transatlantic tensions.
The fact that the Euro represents some of the most
developed economies in the world made it an important
currency from the outset, notwithstanding its 20-plus
percent depreciation in its market debut. The economic
power of the Euro zone raises the possibility that the
Euro will take on a share of the Dollar's historical
role as the global reserve currency. This possibility
would reduce the flexibility available to American
economic policy-makers. The perpetual US trade
deficits, currently running at a half trillion dollar
annual pace, are financed by investment inflows;
likewise US fiscal deficits of similar magnitude are
financed in large part by foreign purchases of US
treasury securities. Investors around the world have
long favored Dollar-denominated investments as the safe
haven for wealth. US investments have thus enjoyed
premium (i.e. lower) interest rates for decades. This
feature has allowed us to indulge our twin deficits at
minimal incremental cost.
A Euro as reserve currency would break our monopoly on
safe haven investments. Investors would be able to
demand higher rates on dollar denominated investments,
including US Treasury securities. This in itself would
deepen US fiscal deficits, which would raise rate
requirements further again, in a spiral effect. Aside
from this potential “competition effect”, the United
States’ borrowing needs, already high, will likely
become much greater. A study by economists Jagadeesh
Gokhale and Kent Smetters (cited in The National
Interest’s Fall 2003 issue) estimates that the US
government's future earnings fall short of its future
obligations by a present-valued total of $45 trillion.
As the Social Security, healthcare, debt service and
other payouts which underlie that negative number start
coming due, US borrowing needs will soar; this
additional need for funds will exert yet more upward
pressure on rates for US government obligations.
The prospect of Euro-denominated paper competing with
Dollar-denominated paper in global markets is all too
plausible. In that case, the European Central Bank
would have strong influence over the effectiveness of
any US monetary or fiscal policies. It is conceivable
at some point that ECB policies could cause US interest
rates to skyrocket, even subject the US economy to
liquidity crunches that we associate with emerging
economies today. Furthermore, European countries also
face potentially large borrowing needs. If the two
issuers of reserve currencies have to compete for funds,
the historically technical, collaborative diplomacy of
exchange rate management could become an exercise in
power politics.
Under this kind of pressure, and given that the Euro is
the currency for several countries, could the Euro
create a strategic divergence between the US and the EU?
There are already items on which the US and many EU
countries are at odds. Of course diplomacy over Iraq
has highlighted anti-Americanism in European countries.
That and other items could grow into a confluence of
issues in which the US and Europe
are adversaries. Common opposition to the
Soviet Union no
longer provides an automatic override to such items.
Global trade issues have long created tensions between
the EU and the US, both in negotiations under the
Uruguay Round of GATT talks, and in ongoing give and
take over subsidies, anti-dumping duties, and product
bans. US non-participation in the Kyoto Convention on
climate change and the International Criminal Court
suggest a transatlantic cultural divergence. These
issues are today balanced against longstanding economic,
political, military and cultural ties between Europe and
the United States. Could contention over exchange rates
become the straw that tips that balance?
Strategic hostility between
Europe
and the
US
is difficult to imagine. However, tensions arise and,
in this context, the management of exchange rate
policies between the US and the Euro zone takes on
significance beyond the traditional nature of exchange
rate diplomacy. A considered US strategy for that
management becomes necessary if we strive for the unity
of the democracies, as we should.
Given the crimp that an alternative reserve currency
places on American economic policy, the financing needs
we will face in coming years and the danger it might
pose to democratic unity, Americans might be tempted to
wish the Euro away. One could undermine it. Limits on
national deficits under the Maastricht “Stability Pact”
have already been violated by
France
and Germany, and the structural weaknesses in many
European economies will sustain political pressures for
economic stimulus. The likely continuing non-observance
of the Stability Pact will put further strain on the
political arrangements underpinning the Euro. A
persistently weak Dollar, possibly maintained under the
guise of macroeconomic policy needs, could conceivably
exacerbate those tensions. Alternatively, a
persistently weak Dollar might cede status to the Euro
as a reserve currency; economic analysis would be needed
to estimate which effect would “win the race.” But a
weak Dollar policy applied with discernible intent to
bust the Euro would only raise tensions. Solidarity
among democracies would be damaged.
Whether we believe the Euro will collapse of its
political weight tomorrow, or whether we believe it will
surpass the dollar as the world’s reserve currency, it
would be wise to preclude the chance that exchange rates
could become a source of contention among the
democracies. One wonders if the US and the EU are
already sparring over the strength of the Euro and its
potential to become a reserve currency. The US should
act to calm tensions now, before the Euro assumes too
much of a reserve currency character and tempts its
users to use it as an instrument of power politics.
Ideally, we would eliminate the conditions that make us
vulnerable to any new reserve currency, and let the Euro
evolve as it might. We must align our outlays with our
resources to make future borrowing needs manageable,
with or without competition from the Euro. However, the
sheer size of the gap between our government’s needs and
resources makes this possible only in many steps, over
many years. Exchange rate diplomacy will require a
careful balancing of our need to borrow on the best
possible terms against our need to foster the sense that
the US and Europe
share fundamental values.
We might propose an explicit goal for the G8 and related
forums to help the US and European countries coordinate
efforts to bring burdens imposed by pension obligations,
structural impediments to growth and health care into
line with resources. As borrowing pressures recede, so
will potential tensions. A collaborative effort among
the developed democracies will make it easier for all to
manage their burdens and confirm Dollar-Euro exchange
rate management as one more joint exercise among these
countries, rather than as a point of US-Europe
divergence. Above all, it will accustom democratic
governments to explicitly managing short term material
interests under a discipline of preserving the unity of
free peoples.
George F. Paik spent
seven years in the US Foreign Service, and has worked in
capital markets for banks in New York and Pittsburgh.
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