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Re: [econmod] The Single Global Currency - Common Cents for the World
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Agreed, it will be difficult to achieve worldwide agreement. Actually, what will likely happen is that the "tipping point" will be achieved when one common currency is serving about 40-50% of the world's GDP. That would happen, for example, if the U.S. dollar and the euro joined together, or the euro + yen + yuan + rupee. Once the tipping point is achieved, then there will be a rush to join as the benefits will become more obvious. At present, we have some cross-region monetary cooperation, but not as a monetary union. It may be minor, but there are French islands off the east coast of Canada which use the euro. El Salvador, Ecuador and Panama are ized to the U.S. dollar. That means that the dollar is not just used, as it is around the world, for commerce, but it can be used to pay local taxes and debts. In those countries, the U.S. dollar IS the legal tender. The West African CFA monetary unions are closely tied to the euro, as the successor to the previous ties to the French franc. These arrangements are working because the people of the world, and sometimes their leaders, want stable money. They don't want money that goes up and down in value unpredictably, and they certainly don't want currency crashes, and they don't want currency speculation. Gradually, as the alternative of the Single Global Currency becomes more widely known to people, the movement in that direction will accelerate.
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mbonpasse
Teller
May 17, 2007, 6:10 PM
Post #9 of 27
(2790 views)
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