Bush's Dollar Drop Maps Loss of U.S. Clout at Final G-8 Summit
By James G. Neuger
July 3 (Bloomberg) -- When President George W. Bush went to
his first Group of Eight summit in 2001, a dominant issue was
the dollar -- the strong dollar, that is. The U.S. currency was
on a record-setting streak, and the free-marketeering president
wasn't going to stand in the way.
On the eve of Bush's last G-8 appearance, the dollar's
gyrations are again in the crossfire. This time, it is a weak
currency, upended by slumping growth, a housing recession and
record gas prices, that is gnawing away at the world economy.
The dollar's 41 percent drop against the euro during Bush's
term writes the economic epitaph of an administration that set
out to restore American preeminence. Instead, Bush heads to
Japan next week for his final international summit with
diminished leverage as Russian and Chinese influence grows.
``Between the economic duress facing the United States and
the global community at large and the fact that the clock is
running out on the Bush administration, Bush does not hold a
good hand,'' said Charles Kupchan, an international-relations
professor at Georgetown University in Washington. He called the
summit a ``damage-limitation'' exercise to show the world that
governments are trying to contain food and oil prices.
Global economic-confidence building crowds the agenda at
the three-day summit starting July 7 in Toyako, on the northern
Japanese island of Hokkaido, that was meant to tackle climate
change, recommit the rich world to development aid for Africa
and strengthen nuclear non-proliferation controls.
Growth Lags
Bush represents the worst-performing economy in the G-8
after Italy, with growth of 0.5 percent this year set to lag
behind 1.6 percent in the U.K., 1.4 percent in the euro area,
1.4 percent in Japan and 1.3 percent in Canada, according to
International Monetary Fund forecasts.
Russia, brought into the G-8 by Bill Clinton in 1998, will
eclipse the rest of the club with growth of 6.8 percent this
year, the IMF says. Russia's oil and commodity wealth puts it at
odds with the western goal of cutting reliance on fossil fuels.
China, seen expanding 9.3 percent, has also frustrated the fight
against global warming by locking up energy deals in Africa to
slake its economic thirst. China will be among eight non-G-8
members that take part on the summit's last day.
America's economic woes with $4-a-gallon gasoline prices
will stiffen Bush's opposition to European and Japanese calls
for binding, quantifiable targets for cutting greenhouse-gas
emissions, blamed by scientists for pushing up global
temperatures.
Global Warming
Bush took a baby step at last year's G-8 by acknowledging
the need to do something about global warming, edging the U.S.
away from the laissez-faire approach that he championed after
pulling the U.S. out of the Kyoto climate-protection protocol in
a move that met international condemnation in 2001.
With the countdown under way to the presidency of Barack
Obama or John McCain, the most the summit can do is set up a
framework for pollution-cutting agreements that replace Kyoto
when it expires in 2012, said Reginald Dale, a senior fellow at
the Center for Strategic and International Studies in
Washington.
``Most of Bush's partners are looking to the next
president,'' Dale said. European leaders will ``be trying to pin
Bush further down on the nature of commitments that the United
States might undertake to reduce emissions in the shorter
term.''
Europe's Bind
Europe is caught in a bind of its own. Soaring fuel prices
and a chorus of protests put pressure on leaders to offer relief
instead of weaning consumers away from fossil fuels. French
President Nicolas Sarkozy, holder of the 27-nation European
Union's six-month presidency, is pressing for fuel-tax cuts.
Oil prices continued climbing after pressure by European
leaders including Britain's Gordon Brown led Saudi Arabia, the
world's biggest oil exporter, to announce for July the third
straight monthly increase in production.
``There's no hope for new achievements or concrete results
regarding crude-oil prices or the shortage of food or global
warming,'' said Koichi Kato, a senior member of Japan's ruling
Liberal Democratic Party.
Spiraling food and fuel costs are hitting poorer countries
the hardest, increasing the pressure on the G-8 to make good on
a 2005 pledge to double development aid to Africa to $50 billion
annually by 2010 and to implement last year's promise to invest
$60 billion worldwide to combat deadly diseases.
Price Surge
G-8 finance ministers last month identified surging
commodities prices as a bigger threat than the credit squeeze to
the world economy. Prices for 19 commodities in the
Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index rose 29 percent in the first half,
the most since 1973. Rice, corn and wheat futures have all
touched records this year.
Sagging faith in the dollar -- it now makes up 63 percent
of global currency reserves, down from 71 percent when Bush took
office -- complicates efforts to tame commodity prices because
they are primarily denominated in the U.S. currency.
America's dependence on imported capital to finance a $9.5
trillion debt -- up from $5.7 trillion when Bush took office --
has driven down the currency. The decline was accelerated by the
subprime crisis that plunged the U.S. into an economic tailspin.
``If Bush could get others at the G-8 summit to demand a
stronger dollar he'd have done a final good after a lot of
negatives over the years,'' said Uwe von Parpart, chief Asia
strategist at Cantor Fitzgerald LP in Hong Kong. ``Dollar
strengthening appears to be the only thing capable of containing
or pushing back oil prices.''
Speaking at the White House yesterday, Bush tried to give
the markets a nudge: ``We're strong dollar people in this
administration and have always been for the strong dollar.''
To contact the reporter on this story:
James G. Neuger in Brussels at
jneuger@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: July 2, 2008 18:01 EDT