2
0

Petrodollar Nonsense Explained


               
2022 Mar 21, 2:20pm   5,505 views  50 comments

by null   follow (4)  

I copied the original tweets here for those who don't want to go to Twitter (https://twitter.com/coloradotravis/status/1504981560537231362)

Tiny brains throwing around ‘petrodollar’ like it’s a thing are my favorite.

It’s not the ‘petrodollar’ it’s the ‘everything dollar.’

You see, only a tiny fraction (10%) of America’s GDP relies on exporting stuff.

Compare that to the EU at 45%
1/


The US has the largest GDP in the world but it’s also the most self-reliant — and therefore resilient — GDP in the world.

And because of that, everyone wants access to the American consumer: it’s the most resilient source of aggregate demand.
2/

That’s why when we have economic or financial crises, everyone else gets dragged down.

And it’s why other countries’ economic crises don’t necessarily drag us down: because trade with them is a garnish on an 32oz dry-aged economic porterhouse that’s all ours.
3/

There is some fever dream hallucination that the value of the dollar relies on energy trade.

Horse puckey.

The value of the dollar is that accepting it as payment gets you access to the best market on the planet.

Because that’s how America pays for stuff.
4/

Now: if you, as a sovereign nation, don’t want access to that demand then uh… I guess that’s fine.

Have fun enjoying drastically reduced economic potential.
/5

Consider this: in a world where all global trade were to simply cease, everyone’s quality of life would go down.

But on an relative basis, America would be even more ahead economically.

Comments 1 - 2 of 50       Last »     Search these comments

1   richwicks   2022 Mar 21, 2:28pm  

The dollar's value is entirely contingent up people's willingness to accept it as worthwhile commodity.

If China, Russia, and India continued to trade in the dollar, but then immediately converted it to a commodity asset, it would destroy the dollar in short order.

Hyperinflation is an political event, not an economic one.
2   richwicks   2022 Mar 21, 2:38pm  

HunterTits says
No countries that rely on a lot of exports relative to their GDP wants demand for their own currency to drive up the value of their own currency. Then they couldn't export as much.


Why would they want to export so much?

Why exactly are they eager to trade goods and products from some toilet paper that the Federal Reserve can make in unlimited quantities for nothing?

People keep crowing about GDP. GDP is just a measure of how much churn there is an economy. It isn't a measure of the health of a nation.

Comments 1 - 2 of 50       Last »     Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   users   suggestions   gaiste