EPI NewsFlash: Benefits of dollar’s rebalancing begin to emerge
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NewsFlash: March 26, 2008
Benefits of dollar's rebalancing begin to
emerge
Between 1995 and 2002, the U.S. dollar seemed to be riding a
permanent updraft, as its value against other currencies soared.
While U.S. consumers enjoyed the lower-priced imports that were one
side effect of the superheated dollar, U.S. workers and businesses
paid full price as the higher cost of U.S. goods made them harder
to sell—here and abroad—and more jobs were threatened or lost.
Meanwhile, the nation’s trade deficit exploded, reaching levels
that most economists agreed were unsustainable, raising fears of a
sudden and catastrophic dollar free-fall.
Now that the dollar’s value has started down the path to more
sustainable levels, beginning with the euro and the Canadian
dollar, there are some early signs that the trade deficit, too, may
be starting to come back to earth. Last week the Bureau of Economic
Analysis reported that the nation’s current account deficit, the
broadest measure of foreign trade, fell 9% last year, from $811.5
billion in 2006 to $738.6 billion in 2007. This good news is
reflected in a steady rise in U.S. exports, which offset the
effects of higher fuel prices on U.S. imports.
In two new analyses published today, the Economic Policy
Institute’s senior international economist, Robert Scott, parses
the latest data and explains why, for further progress on taming
our trade debt, all eyes are now turning to Asia. Today’s International
Picture shows that the combination of progress on revaluing the
dollar and growth abroad has begun to level international playing
fields. Today’s Economic
Snapshot, which compares the dollar’s value against the
currencies of its trading partners, shows that further gains on the
trade deficit will depend on convincing Asian nations, especially
China, to end policies that are continuing keep the dollar
artificially high against their currencies.
Click here for today’s Snapshot
and International
Picture.
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