6 May 2010

Dollar, Euro, or Ebcu?

The unaccountable power of credit-rating agencies has now come under attack from the EU's most powerful politician, Jose Manuel Barroso, the president of the European Commission. Clearly the speculation against national economies is dangerously destabilising for all the European economies, but behind this attack we may also see a glimpse of the struggle for currency hegemony between the dollar and the euro.

The political purpose behind the establishment of a European currency was to provide an alternative to the dollar, whose role as global trading currency enabled the US to fund its superpower military strength and its unsustainable lifestyle at the cost of the rest of the world's people. The credit-rating agencies, all based in the US, can turn market sentiment against the weaker European economies, thus undermining the currency they share. Hence Angela Merkel's suggestion that Europe needs to establish its own credit-rating agencies.

The European financial crisis is rapidly cycling out of control. We are moving beyond the dealings of young men sitting at computer screens and onto the streets. The anger between some Greek citizens and their government is matched by an anger between different European nations. The EU currency straitjacket is, as was predicted, leading to tension between the vastly different economies it forced together. In currency wars, as in military wars, it is the elites who make the decisions and divide up the spoils, while the poor pay the price.

Green economists have long argued for a political response to this crisis that opens up the question of how money is created. At the global level we suggest a neutral currency, which enables trade between countries without allowing this to accrue benefit to the country that controls the trading currency. If such a currency were linked to carbon dioxide emissions as an environment-backed currency unit (Ebcu) it could also ensure that the global economy stayed within planetary limits.

2 comments:

  1. Actually a currency based on carbon emissions is neither very practical (to calculate) nor free of "eco" problems. Currency based on, for example, calories (work, energy) are free of these problems

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  2. Currency backed by unique contributions to society and imagination is the ultimate societal currency. Unique ideas that enhance life (without denigrating or corrupting it) and human happiness are the most precious commodity of all. Central bankers, unfortunately, do not possess any talent to offer unique ideas to society. They seek power, which holds them back.

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