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Exorbitant Privilege
Book

Exorbitant Privilege

The Rise and Fall of the Dollar

Oxford UP, 2011 more...

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Editorial Rating

8

Qualities

  • Innovative

Recommendation

Professor Barry Eichengreen’s exploration of the dollar’s reserve currency role could be merely an interesting history of currencies and repositories of value – from wampum and whelk shells to credit default swaps – all mapped out from Bretton Woods to the Maastricht Treaty to China’s looming role and beyond. But Eichengreen accounts for more than history as he expertly guides readers through the maze of the international monetary system. getAbstract finds that unresolved issues in world markets give this exposition considerable contemporary bite. Eichengreen argues solidly that the threats to the dollar’s international reserve status are real enough, but says all signs are that the dollar will endure as the first among rivals, even if other regional kingpins arise. He seems to believe that, despite its various crises and challenges, the dollar will remain dominant – but, in the end, he ducks a definitive judgment and concludes that its fate is in American hands and not in those of the Chinese or other international competitors.

Take-Aways

  • The dollar’s world reserve currency status is an “exorbitant privilege” for the US.
  • Everything could change. The 2008 financial crash damaged America’s reputation for rectitude, economic stability and safe investment.
  • Rivals who would like to take over the dollar’s international reserve role are becoming more plausible as their growth rates outpace that of the US.

About the Author

Barry Eichengreen is a professor of economics and political science at the University of California, Berkeley, and the author of Financial Crises and What To Do About Them and The European Economy Since 1945.


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