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April 8, 2003
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There's an interesting article by Irish Economist Richard Douthwaite in
Resurgence
about how to stop the war (or at least prevent the next one against Iran
or whoever) by boycotting American and British currency. This doesn't
entail not buying goods from those countries. Rather, it involves short-selling
the war-mongering governments' currencies against any other currency of your
choice (your domestic currency if you don't live in either of these countries;
the Euro would be a particularly apt choice if you do).
If enough people sell their U.S- and U.K.-currency denominated investments,
and replace them with investments denominated in other currencies, and then,
to the extent they can afford it, short-sell these currencies (details of
how to do so in the article), the effect would be to push down the inflated
(per IMF, World Bank and The Economist) values of these currencies,
and as a result make it prohibitively expensive, very quickly, to finance
foreign wars. Result: The troops come home.
I'm not an economist, but the irony of using a monetary boycott against
the U.S. and U.K. governments certainly appeals to me. Could any economist
in the blogosphere please read Douthwaite's article and tell me if this could
really work?
I'm sure that American and British readers will worry that this is a self-punishing
proposition and that it might be unpatriotic or anti-American/British to
participate. I think its impact would be positive for the citizens
of both countries, for three reasons:
- A lower U.S./U.K. currency would make it more expensive for these
countries to import goods, and cheaper for them to export goods. That's great
news for workers in the U.S. and the U.K., since it would encourage more domestic
production with domestic labour (take it from me, a Canadian, this is a fact).
- The requirement to slash government spending would have the additional
benefit of making Bush's new tax cuts for the rich unaffordable, and require
them to be rescinded.
- These corrections are inevitable anyway, and by having them occur
now rather than later they will force some spending restraint now rather than
delaying it and saddling future generations with paying for today's fiscal
incompetence and excess. Even Chairman Greenspan would applaud that.
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11:58:07 PM
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If you want to see how your favourite news source or local paper spins the
news, find out how they reported (or didn't report) yesterday's protest in
Oakland. What I read in the U.S. press didn't make any sense to me, so I
tried the international press. Here is what really happened: Ten protesters
and seven longshoremen were hospitalized when unprovoked (per first-hand
interviews with a city councillor and a school board officer interviewed
at the scene) police fired wooden dowels, rubber bullets and tear gas at
close range into a crowd that refused to move out of the way to let delivery
vehicles pass to load munitions onto ships headed for Iraq. The impact can
be seen in the picture at left. The longshoremen, not known for wimpiness,
said they were 'terrified'. But that's not what most of the U.S. media reported,
if they bothered to report the incident at all.
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1:43:32 PM
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© Copyright 2004
Dave Pollard.
Last update:
19/02/2004; 2:42:53 PM. |
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