Word: dollarized
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...Europe cannot be the area of the world's economy to bear the consequences of others' inaction," Juncker told Reuters just hours after the dollar set yet another all-time record low against the euro of $1.43 late Monday. Juncker fears continued depreciation of the dollar will make exports from the euro zone too expensive for outside buyers. Such exports have played a major role in the E.U.'s recent economic recovery. "I will no longer accept that one considers it normal for Europe to accept at its own cost to manage the consequences of the existing global imbalances...
...Juncker's grumblings were preceded by similar criticism across Europe in recent weeks as the dollar dropped, including concerns voiced by German business leaders and economists who had long viewed a strong euro as a symbol of monetary rectitude. That crescendo of protest led France's Economy Minister Christine Lagarde to remind French economic daily Les Echos that Paris had long "sounded the alarm at the risk of irritating" more relaxed euro partners. She applauded signs that they had become "worried about the euro's level, and voiced their wishes to see concerted action" in response. Before...
...Even if it doesn't, however, there's little chance U.S. officials will respond to the dollar's decline any time soon. David Naudé, euro-zone economist for Deutsche Bank in Paris, says there's absolutely no sign American authorities are ready to forsake the short-term trade benefits of what he calls "the policy of benign ignorance" toward the dollar...
...absence of a reversal from within the U.S itself, Naudé says about the only thing the European Central Bank can do to undercut the dollar's slump is lower its own interest rates to create a degree of inflation to counterbalance any further rise in the euro's value. But that does nothing to undercut its appreciation outside the euro zone...
...Along with many other economists around the globe, however, Naudé adds that letting the dollar's value decay in the medium and longer term will send a terrible message to foreign investors about the U.S. economy as a whole. "In wider terms, the dollar reflects the richness of the American economy, and a cheapened, sliding dollar will eventually send the same economic image out abroad," Naudé says. That could influence the foreign banks and give investors injecting $3 billion worth of capital required every day to keep the U.S. economy growing second thoughts about where they place their...