
International Issues | |
Ecuador Turns To The Dollar |
Ecuadorian President Jamil Mahuad was deposed shortly after announcing on January 9 a radical plan to staunch his country's hyperinflation by adopting the U.S. dollar as the nation's currency; however, his successor, Vice President Gustavo Noboa Beharano has pledged to continue the process. Some U.S. economists say "dollarization" is Ecuador's best hope for monetary stabilization, and that other countries are moving in that direction.
"Full dollarization, if credible, eliminates devaluation risk, and, consequently, will likely result in interest rates which are both lower and less sensitive to crisis in other countries," testified Guillermo Calvo, director of the Center for International Economics at the University of Maryland, in recent congressional hearings. The risk to the U.S. is that it might feel compelled to serve as other countries' lender of last resort and set monetary policy to accommodate their needs. The Fraser Institute of Canada has even proposed a common currency for the U.S., Mexico and Canada. Observers say common currencies may be the wave of the future, but dollarization is a readier option. Source: Editorial, "To Dollarize? Despite Ecuadoran Coup, It's a Good Option," Dallas Morning News, January 24, 2000; Steve H. Hanke, "Ignore Markets' 'Vote' at Your Peril," Letters to the Editor, Wall Street Journal, January 18, 2000; Larry Rohter, "Using the Dollar To Hold the Line," New York Times, January 18, 2000. For more on Currency Issues http://www.ncpa.org/pi/internat/intdex2.html |
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