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- From: kevin@drogges.tti.com (Kevin Carothers)
- Subject: Re: Money Supply (Re: WELLLLL! IT'S DAY ONE)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan27.161823.16376@ttinews.tti.com>
- Sender: usenet@ttinews.tti.com (Usenet Admin)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: drogges.tti.com
- Organization: Citicorp TTI
- References: <1jq2fgINNrep@usenet.INS.CWRU.Edu> <1993Jan25.103542.7525@hemlock.cray.com> <1993Jan25.201022.18348@Princeton.EDU>
- Date: Wed, 27 Jan 1993 16:18:23 GMT
- Lines: 49
-
- In article <1993Jan25.201022.18348@Princeton.EDU> nfs@volkl (Norbert Schlenker) writes:
- %In article <1993Jan25.103542.7525@hemlock.cray.com> rja@mahogany126.cray.com (Russ Anderson) writes:
- %>
- %>In June 1992, M1 had grown 11% over the previous 12 months (Source:
- %>Federal Reserve Board). The 3 month average was 6% (indicating a
- %>slowdown in the rate).
- %
- %In December 1992, M1 had grown 15% over the previous 12 months (same
- %source). The actual increase was $125 billion and it was ALL currency.
- %Federal Reserve Notes. All of it. Currency outstanding increased by
- %50% in one year.
- %
- %Now I'm puzzled, because I simply do not understand what people are
- %doing with all this currency. Did we ship it all to Colombia? Does
- %half the country have a couple of thousand dollars stuffed (literally)
- %under the mattress? Are people that scared? (I am, but I certainly
- %don't get that impression from others while walking around.)
- %
- %Any economists care to guess? I've set followups to sci.econ in hopes
- %of some reasonable speculation.
-
- I am by NO means an economist, but I'll answer anyway :)
-
- EuroDollars and EastDollars.
- Believe it or not, one of the chief exports of the US is... dollars!
-
- When a Japanese businessman buys a Korean freighter, the transaction is
- (usually) undertaken in dollars. When a Dutch oil freighter loads
- a tanker full of oil in the mideast, the transaction is undertaken
- in dollars. Ther list goes on and on and on...
-
- Dollars are a "Key currency" - as such, there are probably much more dollars
- in circulation OUTSIDE the US than inside (I think it's like 140% more).
-
- And you know what? we (the US) make a PROFIT off of these "external"
- dollars. It's called "seignorage" (What a country). Although seignorage
- is not really what makes dollars so valuable, it's more accurately the
- "convertability" of the dollar that makes it so attractive for non-US
- trade transactions.
-
- A book that I often tout ("The competitive advantage of nations", by
- Michael Porter) talks quite a bit about the financial advantages of
- undertaking world trade in western currencies. For over 200 years,
- the British Pound Sterling was the chief international trade currency
- (it still is in many parts of Europe), but dollars have obviated it.
-
- Anyway, hope this helps.
- --
- Kevin Carothers {psivax,philabs,retix,quad1}!ttidca!kevin
-