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Along with investment advice, Wiggin provides a brief history of government and consumer spending habits and how they have changed over the past 200 years. In clear language, he states the reasons for the dollar's decline, and provides explanations of the forces behind inflation, modern corporate accounting and adjustment schemes, the parallels between corporate failures and government policies, the implications of the national debt and deficit spending, and the distinctions between productive and consumptive debt. He also discusses how foreign countries, particularly China, are ultimately in control of the U.S.'s economic fate due to the staggering amount of credit they have extended. Wiggin is highly critical of Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan's policies, particularly the massive shift from production to credit that he has espoused, and calls into question his efforts to manage the dollar's value. Of course, Greenspan was not working alone--every president since Ronald Reagan has embraced his views. Written for lay readers, The Demise of the Dollar offers a practical analysis of what the "twilight of the Great Dollar Standard Era" may bring. --Shawn Carkonen
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
79 of 88 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Correct Conclusions, Near-Zero Support for the Conclusions,
This review is from: The Demise of the Dollar... and Why It's Great For Your Investments (Demise of the Dollar & Why It's Even Better for Your Investments) (Paperback)
I am a deep believer in most of the conclusions Mr. Wiggin presents. I have been following him and every single one of his "cohorts" for almost a decade and am very familiar with the conclusions he espouses. I bought the book with the hope that it would summarize the conclusions AND THE LOGIC/DATA BEHIND THESE CONCLUSIONS.
Unfortunately, the book is extremely poorly written. It has numerous unintentional, grammatical errors (did anyone proofread the book?), but this is neither my primary nor secondary complaint. My main complaints are: 1) The author bounces from issue to issue, conclusion to conclusion, often changing subjects within paragraphs. The book lacks structural logic. This makes it nearly impossible for even a seasoned reader of his ideas to follow. 2) The author repeatedly states his conclusions but fails to then back them up with data or logic. Whatever happened to the "scientific method?" Any opponent of his conclusions will have an easy time dismissing his conclusions. Does he really have data for most of his conclusions? I doubt it - even though I am from his camp. It saddened me to see "our conclusions" so poorly presented. No wonder most economists view these conclusions as harebrained.
180 of 207 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Deeply Moving... As In, Time To Pack Up and Go,
By Jack T. (Philadelphia, PA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Demise of the Dollar... and Why It's Great For Your Investments (Demise of the Dollar & Why It's Even Better for Your Investments) (Paperback)
I spend a lot of time travelling overseas. And I can tell you first hand, one doesn't need to read tomes on the coming collapse in the dollar to see what lies ahead. You can feel it every time you reach for your wallet or pay for a coffee.
The dollar is quickly entering the circle of second-class world citizenship. That said, Wiggin's account is artful, direct, and thorough. I liked the historical aspect. But I especially like the way he's hitting on what's happening today. That includes all the things nobody seems to want to talk about or admit. But there's no denying, if we don't face up to them now... the greenback is doomed. And with it, all the things that depend on America keeping a stakehold in the world economy. Wiggin makes that point and makes it hard. This is an eye-opener, worth reading.
104 of 119 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Times Are Changing,
By
This review is from: The Demise of the Dollar... and Why It's Great For Your Investments (Demise of the Dollar & Why It's Even Better for Your Investments) (Paperback)
Addison Wiggin explained the concepts he's informing us about in a very likeable manner and latest quick read, "Demise of the Dollar."
Wiggin touched on many concepts and wrote them in a way that will interest us "non-economist-but-interested folks." The Helicopter theory, pathological consumption, and wealth-driven consumption are delved into. Wiggin noted the many positive to a weaker dollar in comparison to a stronger one. He also gives us aspects of this weaker dollar that can benefit the investor, making this an appropriate and contemporary book. He notes accurately that the greenback is not the mainstay, and explains why and what the potential ramifications will be. American fiscal actions and solvency are explained with some focus on the individual financial habits and psychology of the American consumer, whose spending on consumption propels 2/3 of the American economy. American government and consumer debt is noted. As for the consumer, average per capita debt ratio is the highest in U.S. history, and home equity ownership is the lowest in U.S. history. Wealth in residential real estate, propelled low interest rates, interest-only loans, significant speculation, and pop-flipping, Americans may well be in a state of denial about the strength of the U.S. economy and their personal economic situation: a high percentage of net worth allocated in residential real estate - the house they just happen to be living in. All it will take is an economic hiccup. And, if there is no hiccup, we have wages that are flat and even declining in comparison to housing values and increasing levels of taxation. There are many factors involved in valuation of currencies. As Wiggin notes the positives of a weaker dollar, Obviously, a weaker dollar benefits the U.S. economy as it's more interdependent upon our global economy. A weaker dollar can stimulate the creation of jobs, as well as maintain them. The American policy makers claim that want a strong dollar and promote and ostensibly proclaim a "strong dollar policy." This is not the case, as we all know. But the question of the future may be: how low is good, and how low becomes bad? Worth noting is that currency reserves held by foreign countries in part, are positioned by confidence in a currency and an economy. The American economic engine may very well continue to plough along, with high debt ratios spurring longer work hours and most importantly, boosts in per capita worker efficiency. As of August, 2005, the dollar is actually strengthening a bit. Economists can explain the past, but they can't foretell the future, just like the rest of us.
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