All Glory is Fleeting
U.C. Berkely
economics professor Barry Eichengreen opens his history of global currencies
with the “Nixon Shock” of 1971 which broke the dollar’s link to gold. (See my
previous review of this event at Shulmaven: My Amazon
Review of Jeffrey Garten's "Three Days at Camp David..........." ) I also reviewed a
much lighter version of what Eichengreen discusses here earlier this year. (
See: https://shulmaven.blogspot.com/2026/01/my-review-of-david-mcwilliams-history.html )
Professor
Eichengreen, the author of “Golden Fetters,” on the workings of the interwar
gold standard, is a serious scholar of international monetary affairs. Here he
is writing against the backdrop of a weakening U.S. dollar where the role of
the U.S. dollar’s pivotal role in in the global monetary system is being called
into question. This is far from the first time a preeminent international
currency has been called into question. Eichengreen goes back in time to
Athenian silver coins, the Roman denarius, the Florentine florin, the Dutch
guilder, the Spanish “pieces of eight,” and the British pound sterling. All had
their day in the sun and then faded away.
Although there were
many idiosyncratic reasons for their demise, there were several common factors
involved. The currencies lost their panache because of either internal or
external political weakness and the willingness to engage in a debasement
policy. Furthermore, as we moved closer to the modern era, Eichengreen notes
that there has to be a credible lender of last resort. For example, as trade
moved from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic the florin became less relevant
and as British power outstripped that of the Netherlands, the guilder lost its
relevance.
In discussing the
rise and fall of currencies Eichengreen goes into great detail about the
trading arrangements of the Florentine bankers who had correspondents across
Europe at a time when communication was based on the speed of a horse. He also
discusses the critical role of the Spanish Potosi silver mine in Bolivia that
made Spain wealthy and it flooded Europe with liquidity. He also discusses how
Britain’s Baring Brothers and Hope and Company of the Netherlands funded Thomas
Jefferson’s Louisiana Purchase.
Now getting back to
the fate of the dollar the question is how long will its “exorbitant
privilege,” in the words of French finance minister Valerie Giscard d’Estaing,
last? The privilege enables the U.S. to borrow in its own currency all the
while remaining a safe asset for both private and public sector institutions.
In 1971 the world said no more, but after a devaluation the dollar became even
more prominent in the global monetary system. So, if the “Nixon Shock” didn’t
break it, what would? To Eichengreen, even with all of the U.S.’s current
domestic and international troubles there remains no alternative. I am sure the
British and the Dutch had similar thoughts, but someone whispering in the ear
of Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent, should tell him that all glory is
fleeting.