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Exorbitant Privilege: The Rise and Fall of the Dollar and the Future of the International Monetary System Reprint Edition
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Review
"A fascinating and readable account of the dollar's rise and potential fall"--The Economist
"A rare combination of macroeconomic mastery, historical erudition, good political instincts and the sort of stubborn common sense that is constantly placing familiar problems in a new light."--Financial Times
"This short, accessible book about the U.S. dollar by Barry Eichengreen may be one of the most important published this year.--Barron's
"[A] brisk primer on the dollar's role in the international monetary system."--Bloomberg News
"Exorbitant Privilege is a book for anyone who has been perplexed why, despite the frequent predictions of the dollar's demise over the last fifty years, it has managed to maintain its position as the world's pre-eminent reserve currency. The book includes both a lively historical account of the dollar's role in the international monetary system and an incisive and balanced discussion of future challenges."--Liaquat Ahamed, author of Lords of Finance
"Short and eminently readable.... In just 177 pages of text, [Eichengreen] provides a wealth of material for both the lay reader and the scholar.... You can't do better than Eichengreen for a solid read on the dollar's wild ride."--The American Prospect
"Compact and readable...Eichengreen adds much needed nuance and subtlety to the U.S. dollar debate....is [also] a pithy and amusing history of the international monetary system....for those fascinated by historical figures and events, behind-the-scenes machinations, and the logistical elements that make a complex currency and trade system work, the telling is very well done."--Business Insider
"Barry Eichengreen's book couldn't be more timely... Elegant and pithy."--Finance & Development, IMF.org
"The book, written for the general public, is useful and pleasant to read also by the so-called professionals. Those used to Eichengreens clear and fluent prose will find here a particularly light touch obtained by dropping here and there a good dose of anecdotal hints to lessen the weight of serious history and rigorous economics...provides a masterful users manual for the crisis that began in 2007."--EH.net
"This slender and pleasant book is a story of the dollar in the world financial system, and an attempt at speculating on the future of the U.S. currency.... [It] is good reading, contains well organized facts and discussions, and raises important and difficult questions."--Journal of Economic Literature
"The historical narrative in this book is fascinating and I highly recommend it to both specialists and nonexpert advanced readers."--Journal of Economic History"[A] detailed and fast-moving analysis of the rise of the greenback as an international currency." --EnlightenmentEconomics.com
"This is a brisk and invigorating account of a century of international monetary developments by one of America's foremost economic historians.... As would be expected, Exorbitant Privilege is extremely well informed, cogently argued, and broadly persuasive. Events and policies, such as the Suez war, the EMS breakdown or the current financial crisis--together with sharp criticism of the excessive deregulation favoured by both Alan Greenspan and Larry Summers--are splendidly documented. Conflicting views of what might happen in the future are clearly put forward and analysed. Unexpectedly, perhaps, the book also displays fairly frequent touches of humour. In other words, it is both erudite and readable."--New Left Review
"When everyone from Brazil's leader to Sarah Palin questions the dollar's status as a reserve currency, it is time for an expert to sort out the truth from the hyperbole. Barry Eichengreen performs this service with unwavering clarity."--Sebastian Mallaby, Council on Foreign Relations
"A truly superb book on the role and global standing of the dollar--past, present and future. Those exposed to the evolution of the globally economy, and that's virtually all of us, will find his book extremely thoughtful and a great read."--Mohamed El-Erian, CEO and co-CIO of PIMCO
"Eichengreen is the master of international money in history and its troubles. Exorbitant Privilege is a fine account of whence it came and a judicious survey of where it might go."--James K. Galbraith, author of The Predator State: How Conservatives Abandoned the Free Market and Why Liberals Should Too
"Barry Eichengreen again demonstrates his ability to integrate economic history and theory with political analysis in order to illuminate the critical issues of international finance. The timely and accessible book is must reading for all concerned with the prospective balance of international power--financial, economic and political--in a multi-polar world."--William H. Janeway, Warburg Pincus
"Surprisingly compact and readable book, Eichengreen adds much needed nuance and subtlety to the U.S. dollar debate.... A pithy and amusing history of the international monetary system.... Those fascinated by historical figures and events, behind-the-scenes machinations, and the logistical elements that make a complex currency and trade system work, the telling is very well done." --BusinessInsider.com
"A brief and readable account of how the international monetary system got where it is today and of past efforts, both successful and (mainly) unsuccessful, to reform it." --Foreign Affairs
"A timely book on monetary economics and currencies that is clear and easy to read, with elements of drama and excitement."--The Finance Professionals' Post, a publication of the New York Society of Security Analysts
Book Description
About the Author
- ISBN-100199931097
- ISBN-13978-0199931095
- EditionReprint
- PublisherOxford University Press
- Publication dateSeptember 1, 2012
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions9.1 x 6 x 0.7 inches
- Print length226 pages
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- Publisher : Oxford University Press; Reprint edition (September 1, 2012)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 226 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0199931097
- ISBN-13 : 978-0199931095
- Item Weight : 11.2 ounces
- Dimensions : 9.1 x 6 x 0.7 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #537,960 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #321 in Money & Monetary Policy (Books)
- #451 in International Economics (Books)
- #1,094 in Economic History (Books)
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About the author

Barry Eichengreen is George C. Pardee and Helen N. Pardee Professor of Economics and Political Science at the University of California, NBER Research Associate, and CEPR Research Fellow. He was formerly Senior Policy Advisor at the International Monetary Fund (Washington, D.C.), fellow of the Center for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences (Palo Alto), and fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study (Berlin). He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He writes a monthly column for Project Syndicate and periodic columns for Estadao Sao Paulo (Brazil), Finanz und Wirtschaft (Switzerland), Handelsblatt (Germany), and Eurointelligence (in Europe). He is past president of the Economic History Association, winner of the Schumpeter Prize of the International Schumpeter Society. and has been named one of the 100 most important public intellectuals by Foreign Policy Magazine. You can follow his tweets at b_eichengreeen@twitter.com.
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Calls for the death of the dollar - and reference to the U.S. as a great nation gone "banana republic" - date back to the early 1970s.
The fact that dollar doomsayers still rely on arguments put forth forty years ago should be enough to give one pause. If they were wrong in 1973, why should they be right today?
The question is not whether America is in financial crisis, but whether current conditions - along with sweeping change in emerging markets - will be enough to shock the international monetary system into a new form.
There are powerful reasons why a highly liquid reserve currency is needed for the purpose of facilitating global trade. There are also powerful reasons why the $USD has few true challengers.
(As for the euro, one need only look to Greece, Portugal and Ireland - and Europe's lack of true political union - to get a sense of the troubles there. Meanwhile the yen is in its own world of hurt, and the renminbi is far from ready for prime time.)
In this surprisingly compact and readable book, Eichengreen adds much needed nuance and subtlety to the U.S. dollar debate. His main message appears to be that, despite appearances, it will not be some form of external shock that will end the dollar's role as sole reserve currency. As with the majority of empires, downfall is a combination of gradual change at the margins and gnawing decay from within.
Eichengreen's views have potential to upset folks on both sides of the aisle. Those who picture the greenback as a disaster waiting to happen, for example, will be disappointed to hear the traditional imminent doom scenarios are not all that realistic.
On the other hand, those who think everything is fine will be disappointed by Eichengreen's view that out-of-control budget deficits really could present a long-term problem, and possibly trigger a dollar crash, by way of investor capital flight.
(Though the question still remains as to what investors will flee into, on leaving the $USD behind. The precious metals markets are microscopic in comparison to international trade flows, and a more official recognition of gold / silver would make supply even scarcer by way of hoarding. Various emerging markets, meanwhile, could not handle undue strengthening of their currencies - the flipside of a dollar rout -- without seeing their own economies hobbled. The U.S. has an ace up its sleeve not just in terms of size and superpower status, but in its vital role as trading partner and the asset side of its balance sheet.)
Eichengreen draws many instructive lessons from the rise and fall of sterling, the one-time world reserve currency of Britain. Unsettlingly for America bulls, one lesson via Britain's experience is that downfall can in fact happen relatively quickly - not overnight, but over a period of, say, ten years.
Eichengreen points out that China, too, is a student of monetary history, with Chinese policy makers laying the early groundwork for an eventual renminbi challenge (though they still have a long way to go).
The book further presents evidence that, as economic prosperity reaches more corners of the globe, we will naturally edge towards a more multi-polar currency world. This would be a world in which currency competitors do not necessarily challenge the dollar head on, but become increasingly more important to regional trade.
In addition to summing up the current situation, "Exorbitant Privilege" is a pithy and amusing history of the international monetary system (including the story of where the phrase "exorbitant privilege" actually came from). Some may find it dry, but for those fascinated by historical figures and events, behind-the-scenes machinations, and the logistical elements that make a complex currency and trade system work, the telling is very well done.
JS
How does reserve currency status confer a privilege to the issuing country? Author Barry Eichengreen, one of the most esteemed monetary economists in the nation, addresses the question somewhat haphazardly. In fact, it feels as though the book is missing an entire chapter, one devoted to articulating the advantages and (yes) disadvantages of being a reserve currency, along with estimates of the tangible economic impacts. Instead, the book is structured thematically with commentary concerning the advantages of reserve currency peppered throughout.
One thing is for certain: despite many premature predictions of the dollar’s demise, the greenback is still very much on top of the currency world. Over 60% of foreign reserves are held in dollars. The Euro is a distant second at 25%, with gold at 10%, and sterling and the yen at 4% and 3%, respectively. Moreover, 85% of foreign exchange transactions worldwide are in dollars. Nearly 50% of international debt securities are denominated in dollars. Indeed, the dollar reigns supreme, even as America’s role on the global economic stage has declined nearly 50% over the past half-century, from 40% in 1960 to around 20% today. Meanwhile, the US share of world exports has slipped to 13%.
Eichengreen never clearly delineates, ranks and estimates the various aspects making up the so-called “exorbitant privilege,” so I will try to do it here, with the help of several third-party studies and essays.
First, because foreign governments must buy US government bonds to hold as reserves, the additional demand for Treasury bonds lowers US interest rates. “The effect is substantial,” Eichengreen writes, “the interest that the United States must pay on its foreign liabilities is two to three percentage points less than the rate of return on its foreign investments.” The upshot is that the US can consistently run an external deficit, “importing more than it exports and consuming more than it produces year after year without becoming more indebted to the rest of the world.”
It was this aspect of reserve currency status that Valery Giscard d’Estaing had in mind when he made his claim about an “exorbitant privilege.” Eichengreen notes that if the dollar loses its reserve currency status “We will no longer be able to consume and invest a trillion dollars more than we produce each year simply because central banks and other foreign investors have a voracious appetite for dollars that require no real resources to supply.” The trillion-dollar estimate is derived from the fact that the United States runs an external deficit of 6% of national income on an annual basis. With US GNP at $18.75 trillion in 2016 (I had to look this figure up), that comes out to over $1 trillion, but Eichengreen never provides this level of detail and only mentions this fact in the last few pages of the book. Talk about burying the lead!
Not everyone seems to agree with Eichengreen’s perspective and estimates on the benefits of being a global reserve currency, however. Anyone reading this book should also consult the discussion paper, “An exorbitant privilege? Implications of reserve currencies for competitiveness,” published by the McKinsey Global Institute in December 2009. That study estimates that all the extra demand chasing dollar securities because of its reserve status pushes down the US borrowing rate by 50 to 60 basis points (i.e. roughly half-a-percent), resulting in a net borrowing benefit to the US government, households, and companies of about $130 billion. A significant sum, no doubt, but hardly the trillion-dollar windfall Eichengreen projects.
The second material benefit accruing to the issuer of the global reserve currency is something called “seignorage,” which is the difference between what it costs the government to print dollars and what a foreigner must pay to procure them. About half of US currency circulates outside of the country (Eichengreen estimates the number at $500 billion; McKinsey reports $400 billion). McKinsey estimates that the seignorage income generated by the Federal Reserve comes out to roughly $10 billion a year (the vast majority of notes outside of the US have been in circulation for years). Eichengreen never hazards a guess.
A third advantage to being a reserve currency is monetary policy independence. The US Federal Reserve has two core missions: maintain low inflation and low unemployment. Central banks around the world have a third mission in their remit: maintain exchange rate stability against the dollar. This was particularly true in the first couple of decades after the Second World War when the global economy was managed under the Bretton Woods System. As the only country that maintains its national debt in its own currency, the Fed doesn’t have to worry about exchange rate risk. For the rest of the world, where over 60% of national currency reserves are held in dollars, a sharp slide in the exchange rate could result in significant losses.
Finally, there is arguably some prestige in being the global reserve currency. Indeed, non-other than former Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke argues in a recent white paper “…the benefits of having an international currency are arguably mostly symbolic.” British pounds sterling once held the mantle. Now the dollar stands alone. Not because it is perfect, but because there is no viable alternative. Or, as Eichengreen colorfully puts it, the dollar is the “least dirty shirt in the pile.”
What about the downsides? Does issuing the global reserve currency come with any costs? Eichengreen barely acknowledges the fact that being a global reserve currency has tangible drawbacks, but it does. For example, when foreigners actively buy dollar assets they force down the value of their currency against the dollar. McKinsey estimates that global demand for dollars because of its reserve status pushes up the price of the dollar by 5%-10%. US manufacturers are thus penalized by the overvalued dollar and so must reduce production and fire American workers. The only way to prevent unemployment from rising then is for the United States to increase domestic demand — and with it domestic employment — by running up public or private debt.
This higher dollar exchange rate disadvantages US companies that export goods and services as well as US firms that compete against imported goods, but benefits Americans consumers of imported goods and services. In a recent essay in Foreign Policy Magazine (“An Exorbitant Burden: Why keeping the dollar as the world's reserve currency is a massive drag on the struggling US economy.” September 7, 2011), Michael Pettis argues that the overvalued dollar and chronic current account deficits amount to compulsory overconsumption and under production. McKinsey estimates that the overvaluation of 5%-10% leads to $45 billion to $85 billion in lost US exports annually. Even worse, the safe haven status of the dollar exacerbates the situation for American firms when global economic conditions are most difficult, as the jittery foreigners race to the safety of dollars, pushing up the exchange rate even higher.
So, is being a reserve currency an “exorbitant privilege”? Eichengreen certainly seems to think so. I’m not so sure after reading his book and doing some independent research. For instance, McKinsey estimates “Taking the income costs and benefits together generates an overall net benefit from reserve currency status of $40 billion to $70 billion a year. This is equivalent to a financial transfer of an amount in this range from the rest of the world to the United States in return for the provision of a liquid reserve currency.” In other words, the tangible benefit of being a global reserve currency is a boost equivalent to 0.3% to 0.5% of US GDP. A privilege, for sure; but hardly an “exorbitant” one. Or, as Ben Bernanke puts it: “the fact that English is the common language of international business and politics is of considerably more benefit to the United States than is the global role of the dollar. The exorbitant privilege is not so exorbitant anymore.”
Are there any credible challengers for the privilege, exorbitant or otherwise, of being a global reserve currency? Not anytime soon, Eichengreen says. However, the historical example of the dollar suggests that, under the right conditions, change in the international system can be swift. In the opening chapter, “Debut,” Eichengreen notes “From a standing start, in 1914, the dollar had already overtaken sterling by 1925.”
What does it take to be a global reserve currency? “Historically, the leading international currency has always been issued by the leading international power,” according to Eichengreen. But he is quick to point out that there is more to it than that. “Stability is the sine qua non of a currency that is widely used in international transactions.”
And what generates stability for a global reserve currency? Broadly speaking, a professionally managed central bank and a deep and liquid market for trading the currency. It is these two elements that have assured the continued dominance of the dollar over the nearest challengers, the euro, and renminbi. “The US treasury market is, quite simply, the most liquid financial market in the world,” Eichengreen says. Nobody else even comes close. As for the euro, the “absence of a euro-area government is the main factor preventing the euro from matching the dollar in international importance.” According to Eichengreen, the challenges facing China are broad and significant. “Markets must first become more transparent. Banks must be commercialized. Supervision and regulation must be strengthened. Monetary and fiscal policies must be sound and stable, and the exchange rate must be made more flexible to accommodate a larger volume of capital flows.”
In summary, the benefits of being a global reserve currency are tangible but limited and not without costs. The US dollar, while far from perfect, is the only international currency capable of filling the role for the foreseeable future. Eichengreen does a poor job explaining the first point and an excellent job on the second.
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The key link between the financial history and the present analysis is Eichengreen's presentations of financial crises, ranging from the collapse of Bretton Woods, to Britain's withdrawal from Suez. Here is offered apt comparison with current affairs.
Eichengreen is not a doomsayer by any means, but nor is he a naive optimist. Whilst not ruling out a collapse of the dollar, Eichengreen presents the case that a collapse due to geo-political disagreements, like the run on Sterling following the UK-US disagreement on Suez, is a scenario unlikely to repeat itself under present conditions.
The notion that the Chinese would offload their massive warchest of dollar reserves is unlikely, contends Eichengreen, due to the fact that such a move would be a self inflicted wound on the Chinese economy.
What is more likely is a loss of investor confidence through homegrown financial mismanagement.
The case for such a scenario is presented through an analysis of the current circumstances following the 2008 recession, and the current trajectory of the US economy, particularly the unsustainable nature of Social Security and Medicare in their current form, leading to a possible loss of investor confidence in the dollar.
Despite the title, the book does not predict an outright fall of the dollar, or at least not the inevitability of such a fall. What is rather the theme of the conclusion is a more multi-polar world of reserves, or the fall of the dollar being most likely self inflicted.
In all, a well researched, well chronicled, and highly comprehensive analysis of the current monetary system.







