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1NC Shell
1NC
Dollar hegemony stable now
Lloyd 6/4 (Colin Lloyd, macroeconomic commenters, writer and presenter,
contributor to several free market publications. 4 June 2019. "U.S. Dollar
Supremacy Could Quickly Fade". American Institute for Economic
Research.https://www.aier.org/article/us-dollar-supremacy-could-quickly-fade)
Being and remaining a reserve currency is closely tied to four broad factors: the amount of non-
domestic debt denominated in your currency, the value and volume of cross-border contractual
obligations which designate your currency as the medium of exchange, the amount of currency
reserves in issue, and perhaps an arcane proposition in a fiat currency world, the international
desirability of your currency as a store of value. The US dollar currently commands this privilege .
It was by no means the first reserve currency ; the Roman Denari was used throughout their empire in ancient
times, during the middle ages, the Venetian Ducato and Florentine Florin gained credence. The US dollar’s predecessor,
Sterling, achieved its time in office as a result the decline of French dominance after the
Napoleonic Wars. British trade flourished and with it the merchants’ needs finance. The discount
houses of Lombard Street, insurance brokers of Lloyd’s coffee house and even the stock jobbers’ of Change Alley swiftly responded,
creating the necessary financial instruments for Sterling to emerge as the preeminent currency
of international trade and finance. You will note that trade followed by finance, for that is how the relationship began,
with trade as the master and finance the servant. The passing of the baton from the UK to the US resulted from two disastrous and
expensive world wars and the subsequent demise of British Empire and influence. As part of the Bretton Woods agreement, under
the gold exchange standard, the US dollar became the instrument of conversion whilst it was pegged to gold at US$35/oz. By the
1960s, however, cracks were beginning to show. These economic conflicts between short-term, domestic and long-term,
international objectives, for the manager of the reserve currency, were first defined by Robert Triffin. In 1971 Triffin’s dilemma
became reality with the collapse of the Bretton Woods agreement. Oil,
notionally blamed for the collapse, was, by
this stage, no longer priced in Sterling but in US dollars. Gold was gone but the vast trade in oil
allowed the US dollar to retain its position through its sheer volume of transactions. A mixture of
inertia (what economists call a network externality), military might and relative value (when
compared with more inflation-bent regimes) rendered the US dollar still supreme. In a 2016 essay for
Brookings - The dollar’s international role: An “exorbitant privilege”? former Federal Reserve Chairman, Ben Bernanke, highlighted
the following factors
which have allowed the Dollar to maintain its position: Stability of value. Since
the mid-1980s, the Fed has done a good job keeping inflation low and stable. Liquidity. U.S.
financial markets, especially the U.S. Treasury market, are the deepest and most liquid in the
world… Safety. Despite Congressional shenanigans surrounding the debt limit, there is a large
supply of dollar assets considered to be very safe, including Treasury securities… Lender of last
resort. The Fed served as a backstop provider of dollars during the financial crisis by instituting
currency swaps with fourteen central banks, including four in emerging markets . Whilst many years of
research has been undertaken in an attempt to calculate the value of being the reserve currency, Barry Eichengreen description is
most succinct: "It costs only a few cents for the Bureau of Engraving and Printing to produce a $100 bill, but other countries had to
pony up $100 of actual goods in order to obtain one."
U.S. monetary hegemony requires support of the Saudi petrodollar - they will
only use it if we continue selling arms
Hedge ’18 (9/28/18, Power Hedge || Hedge is an independent stock research and analysis firm with a passion for macro- and
microeconomic analysis. Power Hedge focuses our research primarily on dividend-paying, international companies of all sizes with
sustainable competitive advantages. Power Hedge is neither a permabear nor a permabull. However, we believe that, given the
current structural problems in the United States, the best investment opportunities may lie elsewhere in the world. || The Dollar's
Days As Reserve Currency May Be Numbered, Seeking Alpha || https://seekingalpha.com/article/4208881-dollars-days-reserve-
currency-may-numbered)
I discussed much of the history of how the U.S. dollar became the de facto standard of trade in my previous articles on this topic. In
short, it began following the Nixon shock of the early 1970s when, after removing the direct convertibility between the U.S. dollar
and gold, the President Richard Nixon sent Henry Kissinger to Saudi Arabia to barter a deal meant to strengthen the U.S. dollar,
a deal was reached in which the Kingdom
which was falling quickly against other currencies at the time. Eventually,
would require all transactions for its oil to be conducted in U.S. dollars and the United States
would supply it with weapons and protection. As Saudi Arabia was the largest exporter of oil in
the world at the time, other oil producers followed suit for convenience. This forced oil-
importing countries to buy dollars on the foreign exchange market in order to pay for the oil
that they import. It also resulted in oil-exporting nations accumulating stockpiles of U.S. dollars,
which were then used to purchase U.S. Treasury securities. This system thus had the desired
effect of boosting the value of the U.S. dollar above where it would otherwise be based on
fundamentals and lowering interest rates in the United States. Thus, the artificial demand for U.S. dollars and
Treasury assets has bestowed a unique privilege on the nation's economy.
Dollar collapse decks global trade and retrenches the US – that leads to a
laundry list of impact; food wars, unemployment, democratic collapse, ending
US primacy
Eric Hammer ’11 (Eric Hammer is a FTMDaily Contributing Writer for Follow the Money, and
investment and gold trading agency based in the US. https://followthemoney.com/7-economic-
consequences-of-a-dollar-collapse/) //AFu
Since World War II, the United States Dollar has been considered the world’s reserve currency,
i.e. the money held by foreign banks to back up their own currency. However, a number of recent events have caused some analysts
to begin questioning whether that dominance will continue for foreseeable future. These events include murmurings from the
Chinese government that they want a new reserve currency to be created based on a basket of currencies and whispers from some
Middle Eastern oil barons that they would like to start pricing oil in Euros instead of dollars. While no one can say for certain what
the future will bring and how governments of the world will treat the dollar going forward, there are a number of precedents that
can be instructive in helping us understand what could happen if the worst happens and the dollar is suddenly uncoupled from the
world economy as the world reserve currency. Note that this would be a worst case scenario where there was a sudden change
rather than a gradual one. Given the Federal Reserve’s penchant for simply printing more moneywhenever there is a need to borrow
additional cash, the value of the dollar once it has been removed as the world’s reserve currency would plummet dramatically
against other world currencies. This would have a number of effects on the American economy and way of life. 7 Economic
Consequences of a Dollar Collapse 1) Bank run. The first thing that is likely to happen in such an event is that
there will be a
bank run, as there was after the stock market crash in 1929. With dollars suddenly falling rapidly in value,
people will try to withdraw their money and change it to something else quickly before it
becomes worthless. 2) Capital controls. Next, the government would pass laws to restrict the ability
of private citizens to convert their dollars into foreign currencies. This would be done in order to “protect” the
dollar so that it doesn’t fall any further. 3) Rising unemployment. Unfortunately, because we live in a globalized economy,
protecting the dollar in this way could lead to severe problems at home. Unemployment could rise dramatically
as manufacturers find it impossible to purchase needed parts from other parts of the world, which
would be prohibitively expensive . 4) Soaring consumer prices. Similarly, retail sales would suffer
as imported goods become pricier. 5) Food scarcity. Scarce food supplie s could set in as well because the cost of
purchasing food is tied in large part to the price of oil , which would now have to be
purchased with expensive foreign currency . 6) Public riots. In extreme cases, rioting could ensue and
martial law could be imposed in order to restore order.
Retrenchment leads to U.S. wars with NoKo, China, Russia, and Iran -- goes
nuclear
Hal BRANDS AND Eric S. EDELMAN 17. **Henry A. Kissinger Distinguished Professor of
Global Affairs, Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies. **Counselor,
CSBA; Undersecretary of Defense (2005-9). “Avoiding a Strategy of Bluff: The Crisis of American
Military Primacy.” Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. March 20.
http://csbaonline.org/research/publications/avoiding-a-strategy-of-bluff-the-crisis-of-american-
military-primacy.
If strategy is the calculated relation of means to ends, then today America is careening toward strategic
insolvency. Following the Cold War, the United States possessed unrivaled military primacy, both globally and in all the world’s
key strategic theaters. Yet today, Washington faces military challenges that are both more severe and
more numerous than at any time in decades, precisely as its own defense cutbacks have significantly reduced U.S.
military capabilities. The United States confronts challenges from revisionist great powers such as
China and Russia , aggressive rogue states such as Iran and North Korea , and international
terrorist organizations such as al-Qaeda and the I slamic S tate. At the same time, constant-dollar
defense spending fell from $768 billion in 2010 to $595 billion in 2015 , the fastest drawdown—in
percentage terms—since the Korean War. The result has been a creeping crisis of American military
primacy, as the margin of superiority to which the United States has become accustomed has
diminished, and a growing gap between U.S. commitments and capabilities has emerged .
This state of strategic insolvency poses numerous dangers to both the United States and the broader
international order that American grand strategy has traditionally supported . It will
undermine U.S. alliances , by creating new doubts regarding the credibility of Washington’s
guarantees. It will undercut deterrence , by tempting adversaries such as Russia , China , and
Iran to calculate that the United States may be unwilling—or unable—to oppose aggression. It
will make for far harder fights should conflict erupt in key areas from Europe to the Middle
East to East Asia, and it may ultimately result in a situation in which the United States simply
cannot defend countries it has pledged to defend . The United States would currently face grave difficulties
defending the Baltic states from a Russian assault, for instance; the military balance around Taiwan and elsewhere
in East Asia has also eroded dramatically. Finally, as U.S. military power becomes less imposing,
U.S. diplomacy is likely to encounter greater difficulties as well. American officials continually aver that
the U.S. military is the finest fighting force in the history of the world, but today, U.S. military power has become
dangerously insufficient relative to the grand strategy and international order it has
traditionally supported.
Great powers facing strategic insolvency have three basic strategic options. First, the United States could decrease its
global commitments, thereby bringing its strategic obligations back into alignment with a diminished military resource base.
In practice, this might mean dispensing with U.S. security commitments to the most geographically exposed allies and partners—
such as Taiwan and the Baltic states—in hopes of reconsolidating a more defensible strategic perimeter. Yet
the appeal of
this option is largely illusory , for even reducing defense spending will not come close to
balancing the U.S. federal budget absent major changes in tax and entitlement policies , and
U.S. retrenchment from East Asia, the Middle East, or Eastern Europe is likely to generate
profound geopolitical instability . Aggressive revisionist powers may well be emboldened by
U.S. retreat; remaining U.S. allies may lose confidence in the credibility of American defense
pledges. Retrenchment may somewhat narrow the gap between U.S. capabilities and
commitments in the short run, but only at the likely price of a further erosion of the global
order that U.S. strategy has been meant to defend.
A second option is living with greater risk. In practice, this would mean either
gambling that enemies will not test
increasingly precarious commitments or employing riskier approaches—such as relying on
nuclear weapons or other escalatory strategies—to sustain those commitments . This approach has a
certain intuitive appeal—it substitutes deterrence by punishment for deterrence by denial—and the United States indeed relied on
such approaches during the Cold War. Yet it also entails profound liabilities. Simply hoping that exposed commitments will not be
challenged could work for a time, but this approach carries enormous risk that those guarantees will
eventually be tested and found wanting, with devastating effects . Likewise, more escalatory
approaches to deterrence may lack credibility—if America is not willing to bear the fiscal costs
associated with making its defense commitments credible through conventional means,
would it really risk the astronomically higher costs associated with nuclear escalation in a
conflict over Taiwan or the Baltic states? This approach thus risks leading the United States into a
trap where, if its interests are challenged, it is confronted with a choice between pursuing
escalatory options that carry a prohibitive price or simply acquiescing to aggression.
NEG - Impact Modules
**Laundry Lists**
Dollar collapse leads to a laundry list of impacts – global economic collapse,
stock panic, social upheaval, governmental collapse
Nwogu ’19 (Meziechi Nwogu analyzes geopolitics, the global economy, and the military affairs
that impact our world. He works for the Medium. https://medium.com/@meziechinwogu1/the-
coming-collapse-of-the-u-s-economic-system-blame-the-u-s-dollar-b4c4238741a4) //AFu
In my own opinion, the greatest threat the United States faces in the 21st century is not Russia,
China, Iran, or Climate Change; but rather, the reckless monetary and fiscal policies of the
United States. Should the U.S. Dollar collapses, it will be the single most substantial affair in
human history . No money in human account has ever had an extraordinary impact globally
as the U.S. Dollar. All other currency crises have been regional in nature, and there were
other currencies for people to use. A U.S. Dollar collapse would be global, and it will bring
down all other fiat currencies. History is filled with sudden currency collapses. Venezuela, Zimbabwe, Argentina, and
Weimar Republic-Germany have each experienced awful currency crises since the 1900s. The cause any currency collapse is usually
the lack of faith in the stability of the currency for trade and exchange. As soon as users stop believing that a currency is useful, due
to inflation and low growth, that currency is in serious trouble. The Strength of the U.S. Dollar Since the Bretton Woods Agreement
in 1944, governments and central banks have relied heavily on the U.S. dollar to support the
value of their currencies. As a reserve currency status, the U.S. dollar receives extraordinary acceptability in international
trade. However, the U.S. Dollar is not the only reserve currency in the world. The British pound sterling, Euro, Japanese yen and
Chinese yuan are also members of the reserve currency club. The rationale for the U.S Dollar to have competitors is to it create
alternatives in the event the U.S. Dollar collapses, and for the global economy to continue humming along. The Weakness of the U.S.
Dollar The weakness of the US dollar is primarily that it is a fiat currency just like every other
major global currencies . Without the discipline of the gold standard, governments print too much money for political
purposes. If the US Federal Reserve prints too much Dollars, the value of the currency will fall. Fortunately, apart from the United
States, nearly all the reserve currency implement similar monetary policies like the United States. Will the U.S. Dollar Collapse? The
question isn’t if the U.S. Dollar will collapse… but rather, when. What would cause a U.S. economic
collapse? The United States cannot sustain the national debt that it got at $22 trillion. As the national debt continues to increase,
interest rates must go up as well. If America’s debt is soo massive, why hasn’t it collapsed yet? The answer is simple: Major
economies like Japan, China, and the European Union still invest in the US economy. Also, the U.S.
accurately pays off its bonds worth trillions of dollars a year. Events that could trigger the U.S. Dollar
collapse First of all, the Federal Reserve starts to print too much paper money to pay for politicians’ spending program (Social
security, Medicare, defense spending, debt servicing) creating hyperinflation in the United States. Next, China implements its
nuclear option to dump its U.S. Treasuries holdings. China is the world’s biggest U.S. Treasury investor, owning over $1.12 trillion. By
continuously purchasing U.S treasuries, it keeps borrowing costs very low for U.S. companies and government. By dumping its
treasury holdings, bond yields would increase, and interest rates will rise, making it very expensive for the U.S. government and
companies to borrow fund their operations, budget deficits, and savings shortfalls. To avoid this problem, the Federal Reserve has
been stepping in to buy U.S. Treasury bonds. It may not be in China’s interest to dump its U.S treasuries; but it definitely has the
power to do it. If China does, other US debt holding countries could also dump their U.S. debt holdings, causing panic. Another
possible scenario is that OPEC oil producers suddenly decline to sell its oil in US Dollars . This could
result in an absolute loss of confidence in the US dollar , causing the Petrodollar system to
collapse . The Petrodollar system is an exchange of crude oil for U.S. dollars between
exporters and Importers. All leading indices and futures like the West Texas Intermediate
(WTI), North Sea Brent (Brent), and Canadian Crude Index are denominated in U.S. Dollars.
Faced with stag inflation, massive debt from the Vietnam War, massive balance of payments deficit, and excessive domestic
the U.S., in 1971, ended the Gold standard for the U.S. dollars. By 1974, the U.S.
spending habits;
was able to influence Saudi Arabia to encourage other OPEC members to normalize their oil
sales in U.S. Dollars. In return, Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states secured U.S. military
assistance & protection during an increasingly volatile political climate in the region that
saw the Iran-Iraq War, and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. As such, the Petrodollar
system was born. The petrodollar helped lift the U.S. Dollar to the world’s leading currency. Every country that wishes to
import crude oil needs the U.S. Dollars to purchase the commodity. This means that foreign countries have to hold large amounts of
U.S dollars. However, they have been recent challenges to the Petrodollar system. With the decline in purchasing power of the U.S.
Dollar, China, in March 2018, launched Yuan-denominated crude oil futures denominated in CNY (Petro-Yuan) for oil marketing for
the Far East. As the world’s biggest importer of crude oil, Beijing has long felt that pricing all its millions of barrels of imports should
be priced in Yuan. As the world’s largest importer of crude oil, China saw it as a reasonable change to price the world’s most vital
commodity. What Would Happen in an Economic Collapse Modern
economies are built mostly on faith. People
have confidence in the U.S. Dollar because the U.S. economy is the biggest and most
significant economy in the world. Also, the U.S. economy frequently outperforms the
economies of Europe and Japan. The US dollar is backed up by the output of American
workers. When people do lose faith in the U.S Dollar, its value will plunge, the stock market
will crash, and the U.S economy will collapse. The U.S. National Debt is over $22 Trillion. However, the total the
US total debt (debt owed by state & local governments, Household, businesses, financial institution, and the Federal Government) is
a staggering $74 Trillion. The point I’m making is that this charade cannot continue much longer. China, the European Union, India,
Brazil, Russia, and other major economies are very aware of this coming crisis. It’s hard to imagine the U.S Dollar being replaced by
another currency as the world’s economic standard, but it could very well happen. It is possible to wake up one morning and see the
U.S dollar slide into a death spiral, stocks in a free fall, and hyperinflation. If the U.S. Dollar and the economy
collapses , the result will be the most significant stock market crash ever in the New York
Stock Exchange, probably 1000–2000 points in the first day . Thus, the major stock exchange
in London, Frankfurt, Tokyo, and Hong Kong will have to suspend trading. Of course, this
suspension will significantly increase the panic among the general population. Once people all over
the world realize that they are a significant stock market crash happening, there will be a run on banks similar to the 1930s. In
response, major financial institutions will put a freeze on most or all banking transactions, including credit card transactions. This will
significantly increase panic. Due to the bank freeze, employers
will be unable to make bank transactions to
pay their employees. With employers unable to access frozen bank accounts, people won’t be paid, bills won’t get paid, etc.
Consequently, most businesses will be forced to either go out of business or significantly reduce their workforce;
unemployment will become rampant. With millions out of a job, the number of unemployment claims will
skyrocket, bankrupting unemployment insurance programs in the major countries. When people
realize that the value of their hard earned wealth is about to evaporate, they will take drastic
measures to prevent it. Those who own stores and businesses will increase their prices for goods and services drastically to
survive the crisis. Panic hoarding of food, medical supplies, gasoline, heating oil, and other
commodities will erupt. Runaway inflation, gas lines, and rationing will begin. Widespread
violence will explode across America. That could range from inner-city riots or gang wars . The
breakdown of law and order will be the ultimate effect of rioting and looting, as they lose all
their sense of right and wrong and are increasingly empowered in their sense of anger, panic,
and greed. Major social upheaval will occur in America, and the fear of the unknown will set in amongst the
populace. The U.S. will be hardest hit because it has the largest economy , an enormous
national debt , an economy based on credit , and a population greatly divided by race,
ethnic origin, gender, color, religious beliefs, cultural differences, and financial status.
Dollar collapse decks global trade and retrenches the US – that leads to a
laundry list of impact; food wars, unemployment, democratic collapse, ending
US primacy
Eric Hammer ’11 (Eric Hammer is a FTMDaily Contributing Writer for Follow the Money, and
investment and gold trading agency based in the US. https://followthemoney.com/7-economic-
consequences-of-a-dollar-collapse/) //AFu
Since World War II, the United States Dollar has been considered the world’s reserve currency,
i.e. the money held by foreign banks to back up their own currency. However, a number of recent events have caused some analysts
to begin questioning whether that dominance will continue for foreseeable future. These events include murmurings from the
Chinese government that they want a new reserve currency to be created based on a basket of currencies and whispers from some
Middle Eastern oil barons that they would like to start pricing oil in Euros instead of dollars. While no one can say for certain what
the future will bring and how governments of the world will treat the dollar going forward, there are a number of precedents that
can be instructive in helping us understand what could happen if the worst happens and the dollar is suddenly uncoupled from the
world economy as the world reserve currency. Note that this would be a worst case scenario where there was a sudden change
rather than a gradual one. Given the Federal Reserve’s penchant for simply printing more moneywhenever there is a need to borrow
additional cash, the value of the dollar once it has been removed as the world’s reserve currency would plummet dramatically
against other world currencies. This would have a number of effects on the American economy and way of life. 7 Economic
Consequences of a Dollar Collapse 1) Bank run. The first thing that is likely to happen in such an event is that
there will be a
bank run, as there was after the stock market crash in 1929. With dollars suddenly falling rapidly in value,
people will try to withdraw their money and change it to something else quickly before it
becomes worthless. 2) Capital controls. Next, the government would pass laws to restrict the ability
of private citizens to convert their dollars into foreign currencies. This would be done in order to “protect” the
dollar so that it doesn’t fall any further. 3) Rising unemployment. Unfortunately, because we live in a globalized economy,
protecting the dollar in this way could lead to severe problems at home. Unemployment could rise dramatically
as manufacturers find it impossible to purchase needed parts from other parts of the world, which
would be prohibitively expensive . 4) Soaring consumer prices. Similarly, retail sales would suffer
as imported goods become pricier. 5) Food scarcity. Scarce food supplie s could set in as well because the cost of
purchasing food is tied in large part to the price of oil , which would now have to be
purchased with expensive foreign currency . 6) Public riots. In extreme cases, rioting could ensue and
martial law could be imposed in order to restore order.
China Overtake
1NC - Version 1
Erosion of the dollar allows China to expand its influence—triggers Uighur
terrorism.
Skylar DRENNEN 17. Policy Analyst, Securing America’s Energy Future; Graduate Student,
Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. “What Does China’s Status as Largest
Oil Importer Mean for U.S. Interests?” The Fuse. August 23. http://energyfuse.org/what-does-
china-status-as-largest-oil-importer-mean-for-us-interests/.
With the rise of one power, inevitably comes the relative weakening of another. Losing its position as the world’s undisputed long-
time oil importer does have downsides. Principally, the
factors shifting global power from a unipolar to a
multi-polar model may threaten the U.S.’ sole-superpower position. The dollar has stood as
the dominant global currency since the launch of the Bretton Woods system, and the
transition from a gold-backed dollar to the petrodollar maintained American monetary
dominance. Now, as oil-producing countries hold fewer U.S. treasuries , and as the dollar’s
influence is chipped away , the U.S.’ longstanding monetary advantage could be at risk. Merely
promoting the yuan through oil payments will not create the multi-polar power structure that China wants, but it is a strategically
palatable move in a longer-term power-play.
There will be other implications of a stronger China that will receive mixed reactions in the U.S. The U.S. will lose some of
its clout in major oil-producing regions, for better or for worse. China’s closer diplomatic relationships
with countries that the U.S. has traditionally been the main powerful trading partner (most
notably Saudi Arabia ) will reduce Washington’s influence and grant Beijing a growing role in
global issues. This is not fully a bad outcome for the world or for the U.S., given that it could dial back on military engagements
overseas. But it does mark a major change for the U.S—which would have to adjust to no longer
being the biggest name at the table in international diplomacy . In such a case, conflicts in oil-producing
countries where the U.S. has interests will gain an additional dimension of complexity.
A Precarious Position
The most challenging aspect of increased reliance on imported oil is the political and investment risk that comes with closer ties with
oil-producing countries. The
Chinese strategy is complex and relies heavily on regional organizations
to solve problems. However in the case of the Middle East, in the era of renewed Sunni and
Shi’ite conflict , the regional powers often have diametrically opposed agendas . A growing
footprint in conflict-prone places may only heighten the potential for instability, forcing China
to act to protect its citizens and economic interests . In 2015, China deployed its first ever peacekeeping troops
to South Sudan, and this year it opened a military base near the strategically important Bab al-Mandab Strait in Djibouti. Reports
from multiple sources also suggest that Chinese patrols are operating in Afghanistan in an effort to maintain
border stability in the event that the United States pulls out.
If China’s economy becomes more dependent on foreign oil, then the CCP’s legitimacy will , in
many respects, be tied to the whims of the oil market . As reported by Bloomberg this year, although China’s
major oil investments have been constrained to mostly Iraq and Iran, Saudi Arabia is moving
to win Chinese loyalty and investments. Saudi Aramco is currently in talks to buy a $2 billion
and 30 percent stake in a refinery owned by China National Petroleum Corporation . This
agreement comes with hopes that the Chinese will buy major stakes in Aramco when it commences an IPO. China’s oil
acquisition strategy has thus far avoided areas where the U.S. has a strong presence .
Nevertheless, as China grows more reliant on oil from Iran, Russia, Saudi Arabia, and Iraq, the task of
managing a neutral position among trading partners will become increasingly more complex .
Tighter relationships with these producers will bring about an increased probability of
international interventions to protect China’s interests. To that end, China risks exposing itself to
the same types of long-term risks that the U.S. has seen from dependence on imported oil .
One Belt One Road and China’s future
China must grapple with these issues as it takes the not-so coveted position as the world’s top oil importer. Although one of the
main policy goals of the Chinese One Belt One Road (OBOR) policy is to increase energy security by diversifying supply and transport
routes, buying more foreign oil means higher vulnerability to supply and price shocks . The OBOR
policy is a massive investment undertaking of the Chinese government to create supply chains, build infrastructure, develop
markets, and diversify energy sources across Asia and reaching into Africa and Europe. One such approach involves constructing a
pipeline through Myanmar that bypasses the maritime chokepoint at the Straits of Malacca. The
OBOR initiative has
garnered significant attention for being—as one New York Times piece commented—a “more
audacious Marshall plan,” aiming to build global commerce “on China’s terms.” The same article
notes that this investment plan helps spur economic growth as a means of quelling the spread of
radical Islam across China’s shared border with Pakistan. With estimates of its Muslim
inhabitants ranging between 20 and 50 million, China has a larger Islamic population than
Syria. For this reason, the Chinese government has become increasingly anxious about its Uighur
population in the far west province of Xinjiang. It is possible that by increasing its presence in
the Middle East to secure oil supply, China will find partners that are ideologically outraged
by the way it treats its own Islamic citizens. There could be a time where China becomes both the
lead purchaser of the oil and the main target of state sponsored extremism , a position not unfamiliar to the
United States.
So 2015 will be marked by preparations for widespread destabilization in Central Asia and the
transformation of AfPak into an Islamic State subsidiary on the borders of Russia, India, China, and Iran . The
full-scale war , which will inevitably follow once chaos engulfs the region, will lead to a
start of
bloodbath in the “Eurasian Balkans,” automatically involving more than a third of the world’s
population and almost all the United States’ geopolitical rivals. It’s an opportunity Washington
will find too good to miss.
Russia’s response to this challenge has to be multifaceted: involving the region in the process of Eurasian integration, providing military, economic, and political assistance,
working closely with its allies in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and the BRICS, strengthening the Pakistani army, and of course assisting with the capture of the bearded
servants of the Caliphate.
But the most important response should be the accelerated modernization of its armed forces as well as those of its allies and efforts to strengthen the Collective Security Treaty
Organization and give it the right to circumvent the highly inefficient United Nations.
The region is extremely important: if Ukraine is a fuse of war, then Central Asia is a munitions
depot . If it blows up, half the continent will be hit .
1NC - Version 2
Collapse of US dollar hegemony paves the road for China—allies will follow suit
Moore ’18 (3/1/18, Jeffrey Moore II || journalist for the OZY || Can Emperor Yuan Dethrone King Dollar As the World's
Currency?, OZY || https://www.ozy.com/acumen/can-emperor-yuan-dethrone-king-dollar-as-the-worlds-currency/83877)
China’s meteoric rise over the past half-century is one of the most striking examples of the impact of opening up an economy to
global markets that the world has ever seen. Over that period, the country has shifted from a largely agrarian society to an industrial
powerhouse, lifting nearly a billion people out of poverty and reshaping the world’s economic landscape. In the process, it has seen
sharp increases in productivity and wages that have allowed China to become the world’s second-largest economy.
A key obstacle preventing
But for President Xi Jinping, second place is not good enough to achieve the “Chinese Dream.”
the People’s Republic from reaching the summit of the economic mountain is King Dollar — the
world’s dominant global currency. In 2018, China could seek to dethrone King Dollar by forcing yuan-denomination of
specific commodities, marking a cataclysmic shift in the world financial order that’s been in place since World War II. For example:
As the world’s No. 1 oil importer, China may have the leverage to demand such a dollar-to-yuan switch, which would directly
And China changing to
influence nearly 40 percent of global oil production and create a massive oversupply of U.S. dollars.
yuan-denominated oil contracts is significant because it could begin to unravel the U.S. dollar’s
dominance worldwide and, in turn, lessen the United States’ ability to wield the soft power
associated with currency leverage.
The saying “the bigger they are, the harder they fall” is relevant here because the U.S. dollar is immense — it makes
up 64 percent of known central bank foreign exchange reserves; more than 85 percent of world forex trading (the decentralized
over-the-counter trading in foreign currencies); and 39 percent of all debt issued in the world. In addition, more than one-third of
world GDP comes from countries whose currencies are pegged to the dollar. The sudden fall of King Dollar would be very hard
indeed. It would lead to massive inflation in the U.S., threatening the smooth function of debt markets that make the financial world
go round.
And what are the black swans — low-probability, high-impact events — that could trigger such a global disruption? Key
developments over the course of 2018 could accelerate the onset of a previously dismissed yuan-denominated future, especially in
South Korea and Japan
Asia. If the U.S. decides not to respond to belligerent threats of a nuclear North Korea, for example,
could conclude China would be a better security guarantor and demonstrate their new
allegiance by dumping dollars and adopting more yuan.
Or could a gray rhino — an unforeseen event that’s less stealthy than a black swan but still camouflaged — overturn the old order?
China is already making moves to dethrone the dollar. In late July, China proposed pricing
After all,
oil in yuan to Saudi Arabia. China has been reducing Saudi Arabia’s share of its total imports, which fell from 25 percent in
2008 to 15 percent in 2016. Chinese oil imports rose 13.8 percent year-on-year during the first half of 2017, but supplies from Saudi
Arabia inched up just 1 percent year-on-year. With the U.S. increasingly becoming energy independent, Saudi Arabia may have no
other option than to yield to yuan-denominated oil in order to keep its biggest customer.
If that happens, the threat to the dollar’s hegemony would not be well-received in Washington, D.C., and the U.S. government could
suspend weapons sales to the kingdom. The knock-on political risks of switching from petro-dollar to petro-yuan are alarming.
Despite globalwide skepticism, Chinese media report that the plan for yuan-oil contracts is moving swiftly.
And that’s just oil, of which China consumes approximately 12 percent globally, according to the World Economic Forum. While oil is
the lifeblood of any industrial economy, the share of global consumption by China in other commodities is even higher, including
more than half of all aluminum and nearly half of all steel and copper.
Some experts believe that changing the world’s working currency would occur at a glacial pace. In fact, it could happen overnight in
response to geopolitical conflagrations. Like pressure building, undetected beneath fault lines, an unexpected and sudden release
could send King Dollar hurtling off its throne, with Emperor Yuan ready and waiting to take its spot. Such is the nature of black
swans.
Chinese economy continues to grow and more countries continue to sign agreements in currency trades. Chinese currency manipulation and the
clandestine gold purchases by China (and now Russia) is likely to aggravate the currency war
looming on the horizon. In closing, I reiterate that Chinese currency manipulation and the clandestine gold purchases by China (and now Russia) are likely to
aggravate the currency war looming on the horizon. This will certainly lead to the decay of the US economic and political
Nuclear escalation.
FDI 12. A Research Institute providing strategic analysis of Australia’s global interests; citing
Lindsay Falvery, PhD in Agricultural Science and former Professor, University of Melbourne.
“Food and Water Insecurity: International Conflict Triggers & Potential Conflict Points.” May 25.
http://www.futuredirections.org.au/workshop-papers/537-international-conflict-triggers-and-
potential-conflict-points-resulting-from-food-and-water-insecurity.html.
There is a growing appreciation that the conflicts in the next century will most likely be fought
over a lack of resources. ¶ Yet, in a sense, this is not new. Researchers point to the French and
Russian revolutions as conflicts induced by a lack of food. More recently, Germany’s World War
Two efforts are said to have been inspired, at least in part, by its perceived need to gain access to
more food. Yet the general sense among those that attended FDI’s recent workshops, was that the scale of the
problem in the future could be significantly greater as a result of population pressures, changing weather,
urbanisation, migration, loss of arable land and other farm inputs , and increased affluence in the developing world.
In his book, Small Farmers Secure Food, Lindsay Falvey, a participant in FDI’s March 2012 workshop on the issue of food and conflict,
clearly expresses the problem and why countries across the globe are starting to take note.
He writes (p.36), “…if people are hungry, especially in cities, the state is not stable – riots,
violence, breakdown of law and order and migration result.” ¶ “Hunger feeds anarchy.”
This view is also shared by Julian Cribb, who in his book, The Coming Famine, writes that if “large regions of the
world run short of food, land or water in the decades that lie ahead, then wholesale, bloody wars are liable
to follow .”
He continues: “ A n increasingly credible scenario for World War 3 is not so much a confrontation of super
powers and their allies, as a festering, self-perpetuating chain of resource conflicts .” He also says: “The wars
of the 21st Century are less likely to be global conflicts with sharply defined sides and huge armies, than a scrappy mass of failed
states, rebellions, civil strife, insurgencies, terrorism and genocides, sparked by bloody competition over dwindling resources.”
As another workshop participant put it, people do not go to war to kill; they go to war over resources ,
either to protect or to gain the resources for themselves. ¶ Another observed that hunger results in passivity not conflict. Conflict is
over resources, not because people are going hungry.
A study by the I nternational P eace R esearch I nstitute indicates that where food security is an issue, it
is more likely to result in some form of conflict. Darfur, Rwanda, Eritrea and the Balkans
experienced such wars. Governments, especially in developed countries, are increasingly aware of this
phenomenon. The UK Ministry of Defence, the CIA, the US C enter for S trategic and I nternational S tudies
and the Oslo Peace Research Institute, all identify famine as a potential trigger for conflicts and
possibly even nuclear war .
EX - Great Power Draw In
Great power draw-in—US strategic interests.
Cullen HENDRIX 16. Associate Professor, Josef Korbel School of International Studies. “When
Hunger Strikes: How Food Security Abroad Matters for National Security at Home.” The Chicago
Council on Global Affairs. April.
https://www.thechicagocouncil.org/sites/default/files/Report_When_Hunger_Strikes_1604.pdf.
High food prices exacerbate food insecurity, leading to political instability Recent events demonstrate how high the stakes
remain. Following a 20-year period of relative stability in world food markets, extreme price volatility marked the 2000s, particularly the period
from 2007 to the present (see Figure 1, “Food prices and food-related protests, 1990–2015”). From 2007 to 2011, high food prices
swelled the ranks of the world’s food insecure , with women and children most acutely affected. Since then, the
number of food-insecure people has trended downward—thanks in large part to lower prices and
increased agriculture investment by governments, the private sector, and nonprofits. However, we can ill afford to
be complacent about prospects going forward, as food insecurity is expected to deepen in key regions if the
current trajectory holds.
The social and economic costs of these food price spikes were considerable , however the
political fallout—as well as the relationship between food and political stability it highlights—
was just as damaging. Food price–related protests, also in Figure 1, toppled governments in Haiti and
Madagascar in 2007–08.
[Begin Box 2] Hunger is not a necessary precondition for instability Countries
affected by food price–related riots are not just
those with poor governance or where hunger and food insecurity are prevalent. According to the
widely followed Fragile States Index, Egypt, Libya, and Syria were at less risk prior to the
2010–11 food price spike than countries like Colombia and Nigeria—and yet all three were
destabilized.8 That high food and fuel prices were the catalyst for destabilizing riots in
regimes thought to be relatively safe implies that our risk-assessment tools underestimated
the potential for food price–related instability . [End Box 2]
And in 2010–11, food prices and food insecurity were again implicated in the political turmoil
and mass uprisings of the Arab Spring. These movements did not all begin violently, but once protesters were
mobilized, heavy-handed government responses often led otherwise peaceful protests to
become violent and destabilizing .
In both periods, countries of high strategic significance to the United States were affected (see Figure
2, “Food riots 2007–11 and current oil exports”). The unrest in the Middle East and North Africa roiled energy
markets: more than 20 percent of world crude and petroleum exports pass through either the
Suez Canal or the Strait of Hormuz, and both were ringed by countries experiencing unrest .9¶
Though oil flows through those channels were not disrupted, unrest in Libya and concern that the Arab Spring would
spread to major Gulf oil exporters (Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates) pushed already high oil prices up by 15
percent in late February and early March 2011.10
The resulting instability strained Egyptian relations with Israel and necessitated a NATO
intervention in Libya. The ongoing civil war in Syria—which can be linked to drought, food
insecurity , rapid urbanization, and exclusionary rule (see Box 1, “Important terms”)—is exacting a massive
toll and contributing to growing tensions with Russia , dissention over refugee resettlement
among NATO partners in Europe, and the escalation of a serious threat to the Iraqi government. Closer to US
borders, soaring prices for staples like rice and beans in Haiti led to a week of rioting in 2008 during which five people were killed, with the violence
involving both Haitian police and UN Peacekeepers. Moreover, rising
food prices and deteriorating economic
prospects there fueled attempts to immigrate to the United States. As food prices shot up almost 20
percent in 2007, US Coast Guard interdictions of Haitians rose 34 percent, straining US Coast
Guard resources.11¶ Thus the food riots of 2007–11 offer very clear examples of how food
insecurity and grievances over high prices abroad affect US national security at home and
stress national security resources.
EX - Famine Additional Impact
Famines kill millions.
UN 11. This report is prepared on a biennial basis by the Division for Social Policy and
Development. “The global food crises.” 2011 Report on the World Social Situation. 62-6.
http://www.un.org/esa/socdev/rwss/docs/2011/chapter4.pdf.
However, the rapid and simultaneous rise in prices globally for all basic food crops—corn, wheat,
soybeans and rice—long with other food items such as cooking oil has had a devastating effect on poor people
all over the world (ACF International / Action Against Hunger, 2009; Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations, 2009b; Swan, Hadley and Cichon, 2010). Almost everybody’s standard of living has been reduced as people in the middle
class become increasingly careful about their food purchases, the
near poor descend into poverty and those
already poor suffer even greater deprivations than before.
With the increase in hunger and malnutrition, the risk of premature deaths is likely to
increase among the young, old, infirm and other vulnerable people and this will continue unless
conditions improve. The survivors are harmed in other ways as well. The impact of the food crisis is likely
to be much more severe among women and children. Because of gender discrimination and
various cultural practices that influence intrahousehold resource allocation, these groups tend
to be more vulnerable to chronic and transitory food insecurity. Furthermore, the crisis may undermine
efforts to reduce maternal and infant deaths as the food and nutrition deficits facing pregnant and
lactating women worsen in already adversely affected regions . Lack of social protection for female workers in the
informal sector compounds their vulnerability to such external shocks.
In the majority of countries, the recent increases in food prices have significantly raised the number of
people suffering from hunger and living in poverty both in urban and rural areas irrespective of the
poverty line used (de Hoyos and Medvedev, 2009; Dessus, Herrera and Hoyos, 2008; Ivanic and Martin, 2008). The World
Bank estimates that the food crisis pushed 130 million to 155 million people into poverty in 2008, while the
poverty challenges posed by higher food prices have returned (World Bank, 2010c). Food prices in lowincome countries continue to
rise; by the end of May 2009, food prices in these countries rose 8 per cent faster than non-food prices, when compared with
January 2003 (see figure IV.1). Thus, the World Bank (2010d, p. 36) concluded that the poor in low-income countries “may not be
benefiting from lower international food prices … and … a significant portion of the 130 million [that were] pushed into extreme
poverty during the food-price spike … may not have exited poverty as might have been expected given the fall in international food
prices”.
A study of nine low-income countries also revealed that in the short term higher food prices
increased national poverty rates by 4.5 percentage points even though these effects differed substantially
across countries and by commodity (Ivanic and Martin, 2008). The Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean
estimated that the
food price crisis added 10 million people each to the ranks of the extremely
poor and the moderately poor. Another study of 19 Latin American countries found that
poverty had increased by 4.3 percentage points, or by 21 million additional poor people (Robles
and others, 2008).
In Asia, a 20 per cent increase in food prices probably increased the number of poor by 5.7
million and 14.7 million in the Philippines and Pakistan, respectively (Asian Development Bank, 2008).
Revenga, Wodon and Zaman (2008) found that in Africa the share of the population in poverty could have
jumped by as much as 4.4 percentage points with an increase in the price of cereals by 50 per cent. This negative
welfare effect, caused by a decline in purchasing power, particularly among urban consumers, was further exacerbated by
reductions in average household incomes as a result of the global financial and economic crisis. Tiwari and Zaman (2010) also
estimated that the slowdown in the global economy may have led to an increase of 41.3 million in the number of undernourished
people in 2009, that is 4.4 per cent more people than would have been the case if the global economic crisis had not occurred. This
is in addition to the estimated 923 million undernourished people in 2007 as estimated by FAO.
Higher food prices have forced households to spend more on food . In Mexico, the food price
shock caused the average poor household to effectively lose 18 per cent of its food budget
(Wood, Nelson and Nogueira, 2009). The result was that households with limited or no substitution options
have been pushed below their normal caloric or micronutrient intake, a situation that threatens their
long-term health and ability to escape poverty. A survey of food consumption patterns in the Central African
Republic, Ethiopia, Liberia and Sierra Leone found substantial evidence of restricted dietary diversity and reductions, of both the size
of food portions and the frequency of meals, among poor households which are increasing the risk of micronutrient deficiencies
among children as well as adults (Swan, Hadley and Cichon, 2010). Evenwhere households have been able to
maintain their levels of daily caloric intake, by substituting more expensive foods with
cheaper alternatives, this practice is causing micronutrient deficiencies where the substitutes
are less nutritious.
The global food price crisis has also induced reduced household spending on health care and
children’s education. In the capital and largest city in Sierra Leone, Freetown, children have been withdrawn from school
and forced into the labour market to contribute to family welfare (Swan, Hadley and Cichon, 2010). Similar coping mechanisms have
been adopted in other parts of the developing world as well.
Although much global attention has been focused on the impact of the food and the energy crises on developing countries, these
impacts also hit more developed countries (van der Ploeg, 2010). While starvation seldom occurs in
industrialized economies, declines in food expenditures by middle- and lowincome
households have forced families to eat less frequently and to consume less diverse and
nutrient-rich foods (Nord, 2009). Several developed countries saw spikes in chronic mild undernutrition among the poor and
other social groups, primarily due to job losses due to the global financial and economic crisis. People who are out of work, have
exhausted their savings, or are nearing the end of their unemployment benefits increasingly find themselves having to rely on local
food banks and other not-for-profit charitable organizations. For many of the “new poor”, this is the first time they have had to rely
on public assistance programmes for food and other benefits. In the United States, the number of people living in food-insecure
households jumped from 36.2 million in 2007 to 49.1 million in 2008 (Nord, 2009).
Econ Collapse
1NC
US dollar collapse causes Russian fiscal independence and massive inflation –
that leads to economic collapse
Henderson ’14 (Andrew Henderson is a financial consultant for offshoring for the Nomad
Capitlist. He’s written for Money, Bloomberg, BBC, The Washington Post, Yahoo, Marketwatch,
Elite, Huffpost, Unilad, Zero Hedge, The blaze, and the IBT.
https://nomadcapitalist.com/2014/04/13/top-5-us-dollar-collapse-predictions/) //A.F.
The US dollar is in bad shape. Having lost 97% of its purchasing power in one hundred years, it’s
easy to argue that the dollar has suffered a slow but steady collapse. And many financial experts claim this is only
the beginning . In an era when central banks are printing money to infinity and racking up debts like never before, something
has to give. For those in the know, the question isn’t if the dollar will collapse… but rather, when. As the United States
plays a less and less significant role in the world economy and countries like Russia and China
threaten to replace the dollar as the global reserve currency , here are five of the most chilling predictions
about the future of the dollar. 5. Harvard economist starts a “bank run” over dollar collapse fears Classical economist and Harvard
professor Terry Burnham told the world that he was withdrawing $1 million from his Bank of America checking account because of
the negative consequences Ben Bernanke and Janet Yellen have had on the US dollar, and is trying to start a bank run by getting
others to do the same. He claimed a dollar collapse is also underway because the Fed’s manipulations had two adverse effects on
the currency: decreasing overall wealth by distorting markets, and redistributing wealth from unsophisticated investors to the
political elite through the currency. Burnham said he couldn’t stand getting paid zero interest by Bank of America anymore, and
didn’t trust them to keep his money safe. At zero interest, he was losing tens of thousands of dollars in purchasing power every year
due to inflation, while his well-connected bank benefitted. 4. The US dollar
collapse will be worse than the
situation in Spain or Greece Billionaire Donald Trump says the dollar is on the edge of economic ruin, and an economic
collapse is the only remedy. He painted an ugly picture of the US economy during an appearance on Fox News. In fact, he issued a
warning to Americans to prepare for “financial ruin”. Trump claims the United States is no longer a rich country because rich
countries don’t borrow money. In the interview, Trump claimed that the US is becoming a third world nation forced to borrow
money and issue debt. Trump also suggested an answer to the question “When will the us dollar collapse?”, saying that when US
debt hits the $21 to $22 trillion mark, things will get much, much worse. 3. Even the US government will stop using the dollar Jeff
Berwick, editor of The Dollar Vigilante, predicts that things will get so bad that even the American government will view
their own dollar as toxic waste . He says the average American is in “la la land” obsessing over TV shows or the next
Presidential race. He says what just happened in Ukraine could easily happen in the United States. And while Ukraine saw their
currency crisis coming for some time, the US dollar collapse could happen overnight, he says. Berwick says the US is “turning a
corner” and headed for total financial ruin as early as “this year”, and quotes Jim Rogers who says “there is no paper money in 2014
and 2015 that’s going to be worth much of anything.” Berwick often predicts the “end of the monetary system as we know it” and
claims that, once all of the capital controls have been implemented and the US government starts confiscating assets to pay
creditors like China, it will not even accept the tainted US dollar. 2. Federal
Reserve insolvency will cause a 90%
drop in the dollar Financial expert and author of Currency Wars Jim Rickards believes the “international monetary system is
headed for a collapse.” Rickards sets the record straight on what an “economic collapse” is, saying it doesn’t mean we all go live in
caves. In fact, he says, we’ve seen three economic collapses in the last one hundred years. In his new book, Rickards suggests the
dollar will see the worst of the next economic collapse as part of the “death of money”, lamenting that “we are on a global dollar
standard”. He says a fiat currency standard can work, but only if countries inject confidence into
the system and welcome business with open arms . Of course, neither of those factors exist in the United
States. Among Rickards’ chief reasons for predicting a dollar collapse: quantative easing, a “lousy business environment”, high taxes,
and low growth. He says that dollar-euro swaps from the Fed will make the next collapse much bigger than the last one. 1. Russia
will ban the US dollar Russian legislator Mikhail Degtyarev has likened the US dollar to a “ worldwide
Ponzi scheme“… one he has claimed will end with the collapse of the dollar in 2017. He
submitted a bill to protect Russians against the “collapsing US debt pyramid” , saying growing rates of
US debt would cause a US dollar collapse if spending isn’t remedied. Degtyarev’s bill would ban US dollars from
circulating in Russia and forbid private citizens from holding Russian bank accounts in US dollars. Those with dollar-
denominated accounts would have to convert their accounts to other foreign currencies (his bill would not ban the euro, pound,
yen, or renmibi). However, Degtyarev has proposed some wacky bills before, such as offering “menstruation leave” for women in
the workplace.
Economic decline causes protectionism and war – their defense doesn’t assume
accompanying shifts in global power.
Royal 10 – Jedediah Royal, Director of Cooperative Threat Reduction at the U.S. Department of
Defense, 2010, “Economic Integration, Economic Signaling and the Problem of Economic Crises,”
in Economics of War and Peace: Economic, Legal and Political Perspectives, ed. Goldsmith and
Brauer, p. 213-215
Less intuitive is how periods of economic decline may increase the likelihood of external conflict . Political
science literature has contributed a moderate degree of attention to the impact of economic decline and the security and defense
behavior of interdependent states. Research in this vein has been considered at systemic, dyadic and national levels. Several notable
contributions follow. First, on the systemic level, Pollins (2008) advances Modelski and Thompson’s (1996) work on leadership cycle
theory, finding that rhythms
in the global economy are associated with the rise and fall of a pre-
eminent power and the often bloody transition from one pre-eminent leader to the next. As such, exogenous shocks such
as economic crisis could usher in a redistribution of relative power (see also Gilpin, 1981) that leads to
uncertainty about power balances, increasing the risk of miscalculation (Fearon, 1995).
Alternatively, even a relatively certain redistribution of power could lead to a permissive environment for conflict as a rising power
may seek to challenge a declining power (Werner, 1999). Seperately, Pollins (1996) also shows that global economic cycles combined
with parallel leadership cycles impact the likelihood of conflict among major, medium and small powers, although he suggests that
the causes and connections between global economic conditions and security conditions remain unknown. Second, on a dyadic
level, Copeland’s (1996, 2000) theory of trade expectations suggests that ‘future expectation of trade’
is a significant variable in understanding economic conditions and security behavious of
states. He argues that interdependent states are likely to gain pacific benefits from trade so
long as they have an optimistic view of future trade relations , However, if the expectations of future
trade decline, particularly for difficult to replace items such as energy resources, the likelihood for conflict
increases, as states will be inclined to use force to gain access to those resources. Crisis could potentially be the trigger
for decreased trade expectations either on its own or because it triggers protectionist moves by interdependent
states. Third, others have considered the link between economic decline and external armed
conflict at a national level. Blomberg and Hess (2002) find a strong correlation between internal
conflict and external conflict, particularly during periods of economic downturn. They write, The linkages
between internal and external conflict and prosperity are strong and mutually reinforcing. Economic conflict tends to spawn internal
conflict, which in turn returns the favor. Moreover, the presence of a recession tends to amplify the extent to which international
and external conflict self-reinforce each other. (Blomberg & Hess, 2002. P. 89) Economic decline has been linked with an increase in
the likelihood of terrorism (Blomberg, Hess, & Weerapana, 2004), which has the capacity to spill across borders and lead to external
tensions. Furthermore, crises generally reduce the popularity of a sitting government. ‘Diversionary
theory’ suggests
that, when facing unpopularity arising from economic decline, sitting governments have
increase incentives to fabricate external military conflicts to create a ‘rally around the flag’
effect. Wang (1996), DeRouen (1995), and Blomberg, Hess, and Thacker (2006) find supporting evidence showing that economic
decline and use of force are at least indirectly correlated. Gelpi (1997), Miller (1999), and Kisangani and Pickering (2009) suggest
that thetendency towards diversionary tactics are greater for democratic states than autocratic
states, due to the fact that democratic leaders are generally more susceptible to being removed from office due to lack of
domestic support. DeRouen (2000) has provided evidence showing that periods of weak economic performance in the United States,
and thus weak Presidential popularity, are statistically linked to an increase in the use of force. In summary, recent economic
scholarship positively correlated economic integration with an increase in the frequency of economic crises, whereas political
science scholarship links economic decline with external conflict at systemic, dyadic and national levels. This implied connection
between integration, crisis and armed conflict has not featured prominently in the economic-security debate and deserves more
attention.
EX - I/Ls - Gen Econ
Dollar collapse leads to hyperinflation that decreases the value of the dollar by
up to 100 trillion times – that collapses the global economy
Merritt '14 ( Cam merritt is a reporter for Sapling, and investing firm dedicated to reducing the
impacts of debt on US society. https://www.sapling.com/8257496/happens-debt-dollar-
collapses)
A collapse of the dollar would not be a good thing for the U.S. economy, or the world's , but there
might be a bit of a silver lining for people who owe money. Debt wouldn't be eliminated by a dollar collapse, but repaying it would
get easier. That's because when a dollar loses nearly all its value, then $100 or $1,000 or $100,000 isn't worth much either. When
economists talk about a currency such as the dollar "collapsing," they're referring to a sudden, steep decline in the
value of that currency, to the point where it's worth only a tiny fraction of its previous value .
For people using the currency, the collapse manifests itself in hyperinflation -- extreme price increases.
Whereas today an apple might cost $1, next week it might cost $10, and the week after that,
$20. It's not that the apple has gotten more valuable; it's that the dollar got less valuable. Today, $1 pays for a whole apple; next
week, maybe a couple bites' worth. Currency collapses have produced astounding images of people using stacks of money for the
smallest purchases and of governments printing banknotes in ridiculously high denominations, such as the 100-trillion-
dollar bill that Zimbabwe printed in the 2000s (and which, according to "The Wall Street Journal," still
wouldn't even pay for local bus fare). During a currency collapse, hyperinflation locks an economy into a "wage-price
spiral," in which higher prices force employers to pay higher wages, which they pass on to customers as higher prices, and the cycle
continues. Meanwhile, the government cranks out currency to meet demand, making inflation even worse. This spiral can make it
impossible for anyone to keep up with inflation, but it does have one benefit for debtors -- it makes it easier to pay off debt. Imagine
you had a mortgage with $100,000 left on it, and your income was $50,000 a year. Now the dollar collapses, hyperinflation results
and the wage-price spiral pushes your income to, say, $1 million a year. (This represents roughly 2,000 percent inflation, relatively
modest as far as currency collapses go; in Zimbabwe, the annual inflation rate in 2008 was 231 million percent.) But your mortgage is
still $100,000, because hyperinflation doesn't change debt balances. Before the collapse, it would have taken two years' worth of
wages to pay off your mortgage; now it takes less than a month. In general, inflation is good for debtors, since it reduces the real
value of what they owe, and bad for savers, since it reduces the real value of their savings. The hyperinflation from a collapse of the
dollar would intensify these effects. If the dollar collapses and runaway inflation results, it may get easier to pay off existing debt, but
it's also going to be extremely difficult, and costly, to engage in any new borrowing. Inflation benefits borrowers at the expense of
lenders. In times of high inflation, lenders charge high interest rates to try to stay ahead of the dwindling value of the money they've
lent out. Amid hyperinflation, if they're willing to make loans at all, lenders would be expected to set astronomical interest rates.
And they might not be willing in any case. Amid
hyperinflation, money can lose value so fast that the only
rational thing to do is to spend it -- to turn it into something of value -- rather than lend it.
First, the study of diversionary war exists in both quantitative tests and in more fine-toothed
examinations of actual cases (Levy and Vakili 1992; Fravel 2010). Exploring the internal processes within states in such a fashion can
also produce a deeper understanding of the exact causal mechanisms through which prospect theory operates. Aggregation and levels of analysis
become a basic concern with applying prospect theory outside of the laboratory and to states and governments. After all, “prospect theory is
developed as a theory of individual decision making, the question is whether it is applicable to collective decision making” (Vis 2011, 337). Here a
unitary actor assumption is made from the outset, but it is also possible that the
observed effect is driven instead by
individual decision-makers themselves (for example, Fuhrmann and Early 2008, who keep the level of analysis only on President
Bush). A deeper case study of a few select cases with an eye towards process might reveal whether the increase in conflict initiation is due to a single
policy entrepreneur or leader, or if it is the result of collective behavior (as perhaps even aides, legislators, and bureaucrats seek to compensate for the
detrimental effects that accompany an economic crisis separately or in concert).
Examination of specific cases might also provide a more accurate picture for policymakers of the strategy that can accompany an economic crisis and
inducement of diversionary tendencies in another state. Smith (Smith 1998) hypothesizes diversionary actions as a strategic game, and finds
that potential target states should then adopt a policy of strategic avoidance – disengaging from any scenario that might make them a
target from a diversionary conflict initiated by an opposing state in dire straits. This question of strategic avoidance occurs most often in
the
study of the U nited S tates (Fordham 2005; Meernik 2005), with evidence that other states avoid and/or initiate fewer disputes with the
United States when the American economy is performing poorly. The empirical test here using a proportionbased dependent variable might already be
capturing some degree of a strategic avoidance effect, in that some of the variation in the proportion of initiation could be because the rate of other
states initiating disputes on the crisis-stricken state is decreasing. If
strategic avoidance is occurring, it actually
increases the strength of aspects of the diversionary war literature (in that other states are
actually behaving according to expectations of diversionary actions ), but much more work and nuance would
be needed to separate where then the logic in strategic avoiders is originating.
The final implication of the findings to be discussed here is the role of institutions in this analysis. As
stated above, the institutional controls that were included in the estimation demonstrated null
effects on the overall rate of militarized dispute initiation. This finding is interesting considering the enshrined role
that institutions and regime types tend to play within scholarly work on diversionary war. Similar to the mixed results of GDP indicators, mixed and
contradictory results can be found throughout the body of work on diversionary war: some
find that the diversionary effects
exist mainly in democratic settings (Gelpi 1997; Davies 2002; Brul´e and Williams 2009), while others find that
diversionary effects occur in autocratic settings (Miller 1999; Lai and Slater 2005; Pickering and Kisangani 2010).
One method of reconciling the conflicting conclusions of whether democratic or autocratic
leaders are more likely to engage in diversionary behavior is in direct tests comparing the two
regime types. Typically, these comparisons have either found the two regime types differ in the targets that are selected by each (Bueno De
Mesquita and Siverson 1995), or have found some fault with the way that the regime types themselves are defined, due to differing incentives for
differing subtypes of regimes (Pickering and Kisangani 2005). In order to examine the difference between democracies and autocracies, I split the
sample from Model 2 into either of the regime types, using a score of 6 in the Polity2 measure as a cut-point. Splitting the sample has
the effect of interacting regime type with all independent variables, giving regime specific
effects not only for economic crises, but also all control variables .1
The results of this regime split can be found in Table 2. As can be seen here, the effect of economic crises is positive and
significant in both institutional settings. Comparing the coefficients for economic crisis in Table 2 with those of the original
Model 2, the likely explanation for why the institutional variables in the original model did not have an impact on crisis initiation is because all
democracies and autocracies possess relatively similar incentives for increasing crisis initiation
following economic crises, so any variation across institutions was only averaged out. However, the
results presented in Table 2 also provide support for a difference existing in the process of how diversionary conflict might occur in either regime type,
due to the differences in control variable significance. This lends some credence to the separation of democracies and autocracies for study of
diversionary war, but provides no evidence that the effect should only exist in one or the other. The similarity in the main
independent variable of economic crises, though, furthers the assertion that the effect of
economic crises increasing dispute initiation can be viewed as a general behavior of all states
in the international system.
Conclusions
Altogether, there can be said to be a robust , positive relationship between the occurrence of
economic crises and the rate of dispute initiation by states . This effect is especially strong and
demonstrable when time ordering is preserved by examining how crises in the previous year
affect states in their current year. These findings can also be said to have a relatively high degree of substantive import as well. As
Figure 1 showed, the occurrence of each subsequent economic crisis increases the chances of a state initiating disputes by almost 3%. The nearly
20 percentage point increase in dispute initiation across the range of the lagged economic
crisis variable also represents a substantial impact , especially considering the rare event
nature of militarized disputes to begin with.
This generalizable finding can have far-reaching impact to both the study of diversionary war in academia, as well as directly for policymakers. In
academe settings, there
is good evidence to support the use of acute economic crises over those
variables based on the slowershifting trends of GDP or public opinion measurements.
Economic crises act as an explicit trigger that can mark a leader’s shift into a losses frame
and engage in riskier behavior consistent with both prospect theory and diversionary war
hypotheses. Meanwhile, applying this observed effect to the real world would seem to indicate that if a state goes through an economic crisis,
other states should have increased wariness in their dealings with the crisis-stricken state and/or be more prepared for the possibility of a new dispute
emerging in the wake of such an event.
Senior policymakers around President Trump reject the very idea of arms control. They are resuming the
wrecking rampage launched by President George W. Bush, who pulled the United States out of the Anti-Ballistic Missle treaty in
2001. That move left Russia and China free to develop a new generation of hypersonic missiles. All steps away from control of
nuclear arms have effects like that. They also, however, make a stark political point. By
renouncing arms control, the
United States declares its wish for a world without treaties; if that frees other countries to
build nuclear arsenals, so be it.
Giving up on arms control increases the possibility that governments with violently irredentist
ambitions could build or acquire nuclear weapons. That volatile mix — a local conflict plus
nuclear weapons — could one day produce the explosion humanity fears . Last month’s clash between
India and Pakistan was a warning. Cooler heads prevailed, but that won’t happen every time. By dismantling accords that limit
nuclear weapons, we bring the explosion steadily closer.
Riots
1NC
There would be a freezing of all monetary transactions and leads to riots writ
large
Nwogu 19' ( March 28 Analyzing geopolitics, the global economy, and the military affairs that
impact our world."The Coming Collapse of the U.S. Economic System — Blame the U.S.
Dollar"https://medium.com/@meziechinwogu1/the-coming-collapse-of-the-u-s-economic-
system-blame-the-u-s-dollar-b4c4238741a4 What Would Happen in an Economic Collapse
Modern economies are built mostly on faith. People have confidence in the U.S. Dollar because the U.S. economy is the
biggest and most significant economy in the world . Also, the U.S. economy frequently outperforms the economies of
Europe and Japan. The US dollar is backed up by the output of American workers. When people do lose faith in the U.S Dollar, its value will plunge, the
stock market will crash, and the U.S economy will collapse. The U.S. National Debt is over $22 Trillion. However, the total the US total debt (debt owed
by state & local governments, Household, businesses, financial institution, and the Federal Government) is
a staggering $74 Trillion. The point I’m making is that this charade cannot continue much longer.
China, the European Union, India, Brazil, Russia, and other major economies are very aware of this coming crisis. It’s hard to imagine the U.S Dollar
being replaced by another currency as the world’s economic standard, but it could very well happen. It is possible to wake up one
morning and see the U.S dollar slide into a death spiral, stocks in a free fall, and hyperinflation . If
the U.S. Dollar and the economy collapses, the result will be the most significant stock market crash ever in the New York Stock Exchange,
probably 1000–2000 points in the first day . Thus, the major stock exchange in London, Frankfurt, Tokyo, and
Hong Kong will have to suspend trading. Of course, this suspension will significantly increase the panic among the general
population. Once people all over the world realize that they are a significant stock market crash happening, there will be a run on banks similar to the
1930s. In
response, major financial institutions will put a freeze on most or all banking
transactions, including credit card transactions. This will significantly increase panic.
Due to the bank freeze, employers will be unable to make bank transactions to pay their employees. With employers unable to access frozen
bank accounts, people won’t be paid , bills won’t get paid, etc. Consequently, most businesses
will be forced to either go out of business or significantly reduce their workforce;
unemployment will become rampant. With millions out of a job, the number of unemployment claims will skyrocket, bankrupting
unemployment insurance programs in the major countries. When people realize that the value of their hard earned wealth is about to evaporate, they
will take drastic measures to prevent it. Those who own stores and businesses will increase their prices for goods and services drastically to survive the
crisis. Panic hoarding of food, medical supplies, gasoline, heating oil, and other commodities will erupt .
Runaway inflation, gas lines,
and rationing will begin. Widespread violence will explode across America. That could range
from inner-city riots or gang wars . The breakdown of law and order will be the ultimate effect of
rioting and looting, as they lose all their sense of right and wrong and are increasingly
empowered in their sense of anger, panic, and greed. Major social upheaval will occur in America, and the fear of the
unknown will set in amongst the populace. The U.S. will be hardest hit because it has the largest economy, an enormous national debt, an economy
based on credit, and a population greatly divided by race, ethnic origin, gender, color, religious beliefs, cultural differences, and financial status.
Riots kill millions and lead to coups, civil wars, and revolutions
PMC 12
US National Library of Medicine National Institutes of Health/ 2012 Oct 31/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3485346///dvb
Civil unrest is a powerful form of collective human dynamics, which has led to major
transitions of societies in modern history . The study of collective human dynamics, including collective
aggression , has been the focus of much discussion in the context of modeling and identification of universal patterns of
behavior. In contrast , the possibility that civil unrest activities, across countries and over long time
periods, are governed by universal mechanisms has not been explored . Here, records of civil unrest of
170 countries during the period 1919–2008 are analyzed. It is demonstrated that the distributions of the number of unrest events
per year are robustly reproduced by a nonlinear, spatially extended dynamical model, which reflects the spread of civil
disorder between geographic regions connected through social and communication
networks. The results also expose the similarity between global social instability and the dynamics of natural hazards and
epidemics.
Civil unrest contagion occurs when social, economic, and political stress accumulate slowly ,
and is released spontaneously in the form of social unrest on short time scales to nearest and
long-range neighboring regions that are susceptible to social, economic, and political
stress [1]–[5]. Unrest events have led to significant societal and cultural changes throughout history. Examples include the
spread of discontent in France in 1848 that proliferated to most of Europe and parts of Latin America; the wave of urban racial riots
in the United States in the 1960s; and the 1989 uprisings against communism in various central and eastern European countries,
symbolized by the fall of the Berlin Wall. More recently, social instability has spread rapidly in the Arab world – from nonviolent
protest movements in Tunisia and Egypt that toppled long-established authoritarian regimes, to a protest movement that evolved to
a full-blown civil war in Libya. These social unrest events span the full spectrum from civil wars,
revolutions, and coups d’état that have killed millions of people to relatively peaceful forms
of intra-state conflicts, such as anti-government demonstrations, riots, and general strikes [5]–
[10].
EX - I/Ls
There would be a crisis and the government wouldn’t be able to fix it
Ludwig 12' ( Olly, Olly Ludwig is the former managing editor of ETF.com. Previously, he was a
financial advisor at Morgan Stanley Smith Barney and an editor at Bloomberg News. Before that,
Ludwig was a journalist at the Reuters News Agency in New York.November 14, 2012, "peter
Schiff: Dollar Colllpase before Obama is Out" https://www.etf.com/sections/features-and-
news/4250-peter-schiff-dollar-collapse-before-obamas-out?)
Ludwig: So you think a major crisis is going to happen in the next four years?
Schiff: Will there be a crisis? Oh yes! We’re going to have a currency crisis and/or a sovereign debt crisis during his term and it’s "going to hit the
fan."
Ludwig: So you see Treasury auctions starting to go poorly? What are we talking about here?
Schiff: That, or the Federal Reserve is going to be the only buyer for Treasurys. But there will be a precipitous drop in the
value of the dollar; prices are going to skyrocket for pretty much everyth ing; and maybe the government
will impose price controls on food products and energy, and everybody is going to be standing in long lines just to get the basic
necessities of life.
Take a look at Greece today. Look at all the government employees protesting. It will look like that, except not as civil.
Ludwig: If the you-know-what hits the fan—as you say it will—do you think the government has any role in alleviating some of the
dislocations, the joblessness, the homelessness?
Schiff: The government can’t alleviate it; the government is the cause of it. The only thing the government can do to
alleviate it is to get out of the way. But the more it’s involved, the worse it’s going to be.
It’s not a good thing that our currency is going to implode in value and that
Americans are going to be
impoverished. That’s not a good thing, but it’s a consequence of all the bad policies that have been pursued. It’s time to pay
the piper.
1. Israel- This Anglo-American beach head into the Middle East was first conceived by the most powerful family in the world, the Rothschilds, in
1917. The Balfour Declaration said that there will be a Zionist Israel years before World War two and the eventual establishment of Israel. Israel has not
been a good neighbor to its Muslim nations and has always had the two biggest bullies on the block at it's back. When the dollar collapses, the
United States will have too much on its plate both domestically and internationally to worry
about such a non-strategic piece of land . This will leave Israel very weak at a time when tensions
will be high. This very thin strip of desert land will not be able to with stand the economic reality of importing its food and fuel or the political
reality of being surrounded by Muslims.
2. Southern California- The land of Fruits and Nuts turns into Battlefield Los Angeles. 20
million people packed into an area that
has no water and thus food is not good to say the least. Throw on top of the huge wealth disparities and the proximity
to a narco state and this does not bode well. We have seen riots for Rodney King, what will happen when the dollar is destroyed and food an fuel stop
coming into this area. People will get desperate and do crazy things, especially when a huge proportion of its citizens are on anti depressants. If food
and fuel cannot get in, what about Zoloft? At a time when people's world are falling apart they lack the ability to deal
with this new paradigm. If people come off of these drugs too fast they suffer psychotic breaks
and you will have thousands of shootings or suicides.
3. England- The Land of the Big Brother and former Empire of world wide slave and drug trade will
suffer heavily. The stiff upper lip that their the British Elite ingrained into their sheeple will not work anymore as the British population explodes.
The human character will sacrifice and unite for a foreign enemy,but not if the enemy has always been the Elite. The Anglo-American Empire may pull
off another false flag to distract it's population on another Emmanuel Goldstein like in 1984, but I feel this collapse will happen before they pull it off.
This will make all eyes point at the British Elite as solely responsible for this catastrophe. We have seen massive riots for soccer
matches with hooligans. What will happen when this island with very little food and fuel gets cut off?
4. New York City- Another large urban area living too high on the dollar hog. NYC is the area I moved out of in 2008. There is little doubt that all of the
wealth in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut is derivative off of Wall Street wealth. The savings and investments of the whole nation and much of
the world flows through this financial capital. As the world wakes up to the massive financial fraud, this will lead to the destruction of capital like we
have never seen before. This will have tremendous effects on the regional economy as people driving in Mercedes suddenly wonder where their next
meal is coming from.
5. Washington D.C.- The political collapse of the Federal Government will wreck havoc on the hugely inflated local economy. As more and more states
find it necessary to assert their natural control, the Federal Government will suddenly loose power and importance as the whole world suffers from a
Global Hurricane Katrina. The money that they create and spend, will become worthless and the government minions pensions will evaporate.
Millions that once relied on the ability to force others to send their money to them,will learn that the real power has always been at the most local
level. Massive decentralization will be the answer to globalization gone mad. Local
families and communities will forgo
sending money and power out of their community, as they will care about their next meal and
keeping warm.
EX - SV Impact
Riots entrench massive structural violence
Fielding 11
Steven Fielding is an academic in the School of Politics at the University of Nottingham where he
is Professor of Political History and Director of the Centre for British Politics. September 5,
2011/nottspolitics.org/2011/09/05/the-impact-of-the-riots-people-feel-more-threatened-and-
prejudiced///dvb
Rather, following the riots people felt more threatened in specifically two ways. First, people were more likely to feel that
their safety was threatened, i.e. they were more fearful of increasing violence and vandalism in their neighbourhood. Second, they
were more likely to feel that wider British culture and society was under threat, i.e. they were more fearful that British culture is
threatened. Feelings of security threat increased by 10% and feelings of cultural threat increased by 5%. These were ‘statistically
significant’ effects. In short, citizens were more likely after the riots to feel that their security and wider society was under threat.
This has had important consequences. Although people did not associate the riots with specific minority
groups (whether Muslim/Black/East European communities), they were more prejudiced in their aftermath .
Those who felt afterwards that their security was under greater threat were more likely to express hostile attitudes toward Muslims.
Meanwhile, those who felt afterwards that wider British society and culture were under greater threat were more likely to express
hostility toward Muslims and also Black and East European communities. So, whereas the riots were not associated in the public
mindset with particular minority groups, they have nonetheless increased prejudice in British society.
Our findings suggest that the riots have lead citizens to feel more threatened , which in turn has intensified
intolerance toward minority groups . This indicates that beyond their immediate impact on property and criminal
convictions, the riots have had a broader impact by undermining social cohesion and entrenching negative
attitudes toward minority groups (even though the public did not associate the riots directly with these groups).
Sanctions Programs
1NC
That decks U.S. sanctions and leads to rampant military campaigns
Das 18 ‘ ( september 07, Satyajit Das is a former banker whose latest book is "A Banquet of
Consequences." He is also the author of "Extreme Money" and "Traders, Guns &
Money." https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/international/business/how-the-us-has-
made-a-weapon-of-the-dollar/articleshow/65715068.cms)
The dollar’s pivotal role — an “exorbitant privilege,” in the term coined by then French Finance Minister Valéry Giscard
d'Estaing in 1965 — allows the U.S. easily to finance its trade and budget deficits. The nation is protected against
balance-of-payments crises, because it imports and services borrowing in its own currency. American monetary
policies, such as quantitative easing, can influence the value of the dollar to gain a competitive advantage. But the
real power of the dollar is its relationship with sanctions programs. Legislation such as the International
Emergency Economic Powers Act, the Trading with the Enemy Act and the Patriot Act allow Washington to weaponize
payment flows. The proposed Defending Elections From Threats by Establishing Redlines Act and the Defending
American Security From Kremlin Aggression Act would extend that armory. When combined with access it gained to data
from Swift, the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication’s global messaging system, the U.S.
exerts unprecedented control over global economic activity.
Sanctions target persons, entities, organizations, a regime or an entire country. Secondary curbs restrict foreign
corporations, financial institutions and individuals from doing business with sanctioned entities. Any dollar payment flowing
through a U.S. bank or the American payments system provides the necessary nexus for the U.S. to prosecute the
offender or act against its American assets.
This gives the nation extraterritorial reach over non-Americans trading with or financing a sanctioned party.
The mere threat of prosecution can destabilize finances, trade and currency markets, effectively disrupting the activities of
non-Americans.
The risk is real. BNP Paribas SA paid $9 billion in fines and was suspended from dollar clearing for one year for
violating sanctions against Iran, Cuba and Sudan. HSBC Holdings Plc, Standard Chartered Plc, Commerzbank AG
and Clearstream Banking SA have paid large fines for similar breaches.
Secondary sanctions made it difficult for United Co. Rusal to refinance dollar borrowings when global businesses, banks
and exchanges were forced to stop dealing with the Russian company. Its bonds and shares plunged, even though
the company sells only 14 percent of its products in the U.S., does not use American banks, and is listed in
Moscow and Hong Kong. ZTE Corp., a Chinese electronics company, was hit hard by the inability to buy essential
components from suppliers because of sanctions for ..
China, Russia and increasingly Europe want an alternative reserve currency system. The problem is that immediate
replacement of the dollar is difficult. First, the euro, the yen, the yuan and the ruble are not realistic options. The
euro’s long-term future and stability isn’t assured, while Japan’s economy remains trapped in two decades of torpor. The
Chinese and Russian political and economic systems lack transparency, and the yuan isn’t fully convertible.
Second, the required change in infrastructure is daunting. Foreign-exchange markets where the dollar is the currency of
reference would have to be fundamentally restructured. Deep and liquid money markets to support a reserve
currency can’t be conjured up overnight.
Third, most candidates are reluctant to take on the role of a global reserve currency because of tensions between national
and global economy policy. The economist Robert Triffin pointed out that the country whose medium of exchange is the
global reserve currency must meet external demand for foreign exchange. This necessitates running large trade
deficits, requiring fundamental changes in the mercantilist policies of Germany, Japan and China. This means
that the U.S. can continue to use the dollar to help further its trade, financial and geopolitical aims, largely outside the
strictures of international laws and institutions and without the need for messy, unpredictable military campaigns. As
John Connally Jr., Richard Nixon’s Treasury secretary, put it in 1971: The dollar is “our currency, but your problem.”
The bank of a
continuing to do business with a designated entity, or an intermediary of a designated entity under Section 311, risks exposure to liability.
primary money laundering concern, after all, is also a money launderer .25
Second, and consequent to the first, the choice between cutting ties with illicit actors , plus the banks that (allegedly) handle their
money, and losing access to the U.S. financial market is an easy one .26 No bank will choose the illicit
business of a single client (or even a country or set of clients) over access to dollar clearing services because
to do so would kill the rest of their busine ss.27 Consequently, dollar sanctions against a foreign financial institution under
domestic law will often result in the isolation of the targeted institution not only by U.S. banks but by foreign banks who are concerned with
maintaining their dollar market access.
The importance of U.S. financial market access for foreign banks means that U.S. unilateral financial sanctions often become de facto secondary
sanctions. Indeed, the United States has encouraged this behavior by reaching out to foreign banks through nonbinding, diplomatic channels to
“educate” them about the risks of continuing to do business with targeted entities.28 More often than not, it seems to work.
Third, and most critically for the success of dollar outcasting, illicit actors are heavily
reliant on the dollar financing system
for the same reasons as everyone else: there is no alternative. Criminals and rogue states need banks to conduct
business and deposit their assets, and banks need dollars.29 But because (at least, most) banks need dollars more than they
need illicit business, dollar outcasting effectively compels banks to cut off these actors and
starve them of the financing they need. So long as the world relies on dollar-based finance, rogue actors will find it difficult to
escape targeted dollar sanctions.
Extinction
Hayes & Hamel-Green, 10 – *Executive Director of the Nautilus Institute for Security and
Sustainable Development, AND ** Executive Dean of the Faculty of Arts, Education and Human
Development act Victoria University (1/5/10, Executive Dean at Victoria, “The Path Not Taken,
the Way Still Open: Denuclearizing the Korean Peninsula and Northeast Asia,”
http://www.nautilus.org/fora/security/10001HayesHamalGreen.pdf)
The international community is increasingly aware that cooperative diplomacy is the most productive way to tackle the multiple,
interconnected global challenges facing humanity, not least of which is the increasing proliferation of nuclear and other weapons of
mass destruction. Korea
and Northeast Asia are instances where risks of nuclear proliferation and
actual nuclear use arguably have increased in recent years. This negative trend is a product of continued US
nuclear threat projection against the DPRK as part of a general program of coercive diplomacy in this region, North Korea’s nuclear
weapons programme, the breakdown in the Chinese-hosted Six Party Talks towards the end of the Bush Administration, regional
concerns over China’s increasing military power, and concerns within some quarters in regional states (Japan, South Korea, Taiwan)
about whether US extended deterrence (“nuclear umbrella”) afforded under bilateral security treaties can be relied upon for
protection. The consequences of failing to address the proliferation threat posed by the North
Korea developments, and related political and economic issues, are serious , not only for the Northeast
Asian region but for the whole international community. At worst, there is the possibility of nuclear
attack1, whether by intention, miscalculation, or merely accident , leading to the resumption of
Korean War hostilities. On the Korean Peninsula itself, key population centres are well within short or medium range
missiles. The whole of Japan is likely to come within North Korean missile range. Pyongyang has a population of over 2 million, Seoul
(close to the North Korean border) 11 million, and Tokyo over 20 million. Even
a limited nuclear exchange would
result in a holocaust of unprecedented proportions. But the catastrophe within the region would not be the
only outcome. New research indicates that even a limited nuclear war in the region would rearrange our global climate far more
quickly than global warming. Westberg draws attention to new studies modelling the effects of even a limited nuclear exchange
involving approximately 100 Hiroshima-sized 15 kt bombs2 (by comparison it should be noted that the United States currently
deploys warheads in the range 100 to 477 kt, that is, individual warheads equivalent in yield to a range of 6 to 32 Hiroshimas). The
studies indicate that the soot from the fires produced would lead to a decrease in global
temperature by 1.25 degrees Celsius for a period of 6-8 years.3 In Westberg’s view: That is not global winter, but the
nuclear darkness will cause a deeper drop in temperature than at any time during the last 1000
years. The temperature over the continents would decrease substantially more than the global average. A decrease in rainfall over
the continents would also follow…The period of nuclear darkness will cause much greater decrease in
grain production than 5% and it will continue for many years... hundreds of millions of people
will die from hunger…To make matters even worse, such amounts of smoke injected into the
stratosphere would cause a huge reduction in the Earth’s protective ozone. 4 These, of course, are not
the only consequences. Reactors might also be targeted, causing further mayhem and downwind
radiation effects, superimposed on a smoking, radiating ruin left by nuclear next-use . Millions of
refugees would flee the affected regions. The direct impacts, and the follow-on impacts on the global
economy via ecological and food insecurity , could make the present global financial crisis pale
by comparison. How the great powers, especially the nuclear weapons states respond to such a crisis, and in particular,
whether nuclear weapons are used in response to nuclear first-use, could make or break the global non proliferation and
disarmament regimes. There
could be many unanticipated impacts on regional and global security
relationships5, with subsequent nuclear breakout and geopolitical turbulence, including possible
loss-of-control over fissile material or warheads in the chaos of nuclear war, and aftermath
chain-reaction affects involving other potential proliferant states. The Korean nuclear proliferation issue is
not just a regional threat but a global one that warrants priority consideration from the international community.
EX - Impact - Generic
Sanctions prevent terrorism, drug trafficking, and unchecked state actors
Durkin 19' ( Andrea Durkin is the Editor-in-Chief of TradeVistas and Founder of Sparkplug, LLC.
She is a nonresident Senior Fellow at the Chicago Council on Global Affairs and an adjunct fellow
with CSIS. Ms. Durkin previously served as a U.S. Government trade negotiator and has proudly
taught International Trade for the last fourteen years as an Adjunct Associate Professor at
Georgetown University’s Master of Science in Foreign Service program., "U.S. DOLLAR PROVIDES
THE MUSCLE FOR ECONOMIC SANCTIONS"https://www.globaltrademag.com/global-trade-
daily/u-s-dollar-provides-the-muscle-for-economic-sanctions/
From drug kingpins to terrorists and from human traffickers to money launderer s, the United States
has nearly 8,000 economic sanctions in place, and the list is growing. Particularly in the post-9/11 era, the U.S.
government has leveraged the global preeminence of the U.S. dollar to turn off spigots of
funding for sinister activities and unwanted behaviors by state actors.
Among additional sanctions against Iran, Russia and Venezuela , The Trump administration earlier this month tightened travel
restrictions to Cuba stating, “Cuba continues to play a destabilizing role in the Western Hemisphere…these actions will help to keep U.S. dollars out of
the hands of Cuban military, intelligence, and security services.”
The muscle behind an array of U.S. financial sanctions derives from the reach and power of the U.S. dollar as the “lead
currency” in the global economy. This status makes it possible to not only prevent U.S. individuals and companies from doing business directly with a
sanctioned entity, it makes it risky to do business with third-country companies that do business with
sanctioned entities. Acutely aware of their vulnerability, non-U.S. companies also frequently take
steps to minimize their exposure to possible violations of U.S. sanctions lest they jeopardize their access to the U.S.
financial system.
EX -- Impact -- NoKo War
Sanctions maintain NoKo peace
Martinez 19' ( Feb.28, 2019 , Luis Martinez is a producer for ABC News based in the
Washington, D.C. bureau. Martinez covers military and national security issues for ABC News at
the Pentagon, "Why are US and UN sanctions on North Korea critical to denuclearization
talks?"https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/us-sanctions-north-korea-critical-denuclearization-
talks/story?id=61389541
In the last dozen years, the United Nations and the United States have increasingly used sanctions to further isolate
the rogue nation of North Korea and U.S. officials have said the Trump administration’s “maximum
pressure” to enforce existing sanctions was key in pushing North Korea towards denuclearization talks with the
United States.
Earlier Thursday, President Donald Trump attributed
the collapse of the summit with North Korea’s leader
to Kim Jong Un's demand that the U.S. lift all sanctions before Pyongyang would begin any
denuclearization.
"Basically, they wanted the sanctions lifted in their entirety, and we couldn’t do that," Trump said at a news conference after the
talks fell apart.
(MORE: US-North Korea summit with President Donald Trump and Kim Jong Un cut short in Vietnam)
Trump explained that North Korea requested a total lifting of sanctions in return for the closure of the Yongbyon nuclear processing facility. But Trump
said the U.S. wanted the closure of additional nuclear production facilities that North Korea has used to develop its arsenal of several dozen nuclear
weapons.
North Korea disputed Trump's account.
“What we proposed was not the removal of all sanctions, but the partial removal,” said North Korea's Foreign Minister Ri Yong-ho at a late-night news
conference in Hanoi, Vietnam.
“We proposed to remove sanctions from five of 11 U.N. sanctions resolutions, specifically ones that impede livelihood of our people.”
Ever since North Korea tested its first nuclear device in 2006, the United Nations has authorized
nearly a dozen international sanctions targeting North Korea’s access to any equipment that could be
used for the development of its nuclear and ballistic missile programs.
Finally, should
one or more of the long-simmering conflicts in the post-Soviet
region again explode, the chances that Russia and the United States would act
together to contain the violence seem close to zero. Instead, were Nagorno-Karabakh,
in Azerbaijan, or Transnistria, in Moldova, to blow up, Moscow and Washington would both be
far more likely to focus on counteracting what they each saw as the malevolent role of the
other.
EX - Russia Ukraine Attack
Ukraine civil war leads to Russia lashout
Amadeo 6/25/19 Kimberly Amadeo has 20 years senior-level corporate experience in economic analysis and business strategy.
She received an M.S. in Management from the Sloan School of Business at M.I.T.Kimberly is the U.S. Economy expert for The
Balance, and has been writing for Dotdash/About.com since 2006. She covers economic and business news, and explains how the
economy affects you "Ukraine Crisis, Summary And Explanantion" https://www.thebalance.com/ukraine-crisis-summary-and-
explanation-3970462
The Ukraine crisis is a power struggle between factions within Ukraine. One wants to align with the European Union and the other with Russia. Ukraine had been an important contributor to the Soviet Union's economy between 1920 and 1991. The current crisis
erupted on June 7, 2014, pro-West president Petro Poroshenko replaced pro-Russia president Viktor Yanukovych. On September 12, 2014, Ukraine approved a trade deal with the EU that removed export tariffs. It agreed to delay its implementation a year to avoid
Russian energy sanctions and even attacks. Ukraine President Poroshenko wanted to maintain the cease-fire. The current crisis erupted in March 2014, when Russian special forces occupied Ukraine's Crimean peninsula. Russia claimed it was protecting its port access
to the Black Sea. Russian President Vladimir Putin Ukraine had planned to develop Crimea's natural gas reserves in two years in a partnership with U.S. companies. If Ukraine had accomplished this, Russia would have lost one of its largest customers. Between 2014
and 2018, a military conflict between Ukrainian soldiers and Russian-backed separatists has continued in eastern Ukraine. More than 10,000 people have been killed. On November 25, 2018, Russian ships attacked and boarded three Ukrainian vessels in the Crimean
port of Azov near the Black Sea. It placed a freighter to block the port. It said Ukraine has violated Russian waters. The two sides signed an agreement in 2003 to guarantee free passage through the strait. In recent months, they've been harassing each other’s ships.
Critics at the United Nations Security Council meeting said Russia's attack was a violation under international law. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization increased its military presence in the area. Putin's attack responded to the February 23 overthrow of his ally
Viktor Yanukovych. The pro-West faction of Ukraine's Parliament took over the government. The crisis occurred because Yanukovych mismanaged the budget. He forced Ukraine to ask for financial help. It appealed to the EU, then Russia. The political unrest occurred
at this point. Those who wanted to be closer to the EU objected when that solution was abandoned. Russia's military strike supported Yanukovych's return to Kiev and closer ties to Russia. In April 2014, Russia supported local rebels who took over city halls and
police stations throughout eastern Ukraine. That area is home to ethnic Russians who don't want to be part of the EU. Those Russians were moved there 50 years ago by Joseph Stalin, who intended to strengthen the Soviet Republic's hold on the area. Earlier that
month, NATO revealed satellite photos showing Russia's invasion of Ukraine's eastern border. An EU emergency meeting added further sanctions on Russia's oil and banking sectors. That occurred shortly after Russia sent a convoy of trucks over the border. They
were bearing aid to Ukraine's eastern cities, held by pro-Russian rebels. Several of those trucks entered without approval. Ukraine had also destroyed a convoy of Russian military vehicles. They were bringing arms to the rebels. It was the first time that Ukraine
attacked Russian forces directly. A few days later, Ukraine reported that several military vehicles were near the Russian border at the Crimean port of Azov. It claimed that Russia was creating a second front for the rebels. Russia also wanted land access through
southern Ukraine. It wanted a shorter route to Crimea. In July, Russia built up its military force on the border. There were 19,000 to 21,000 troops, 14 advanced surface-to-air missile units, and 30 artillery batteries. It was a battle-ready force that could
launch an attack into eastern Ukraine at a moment's notice. Russiahad already launched rockets across the
border in support of Ukrainian rebels. Putin's standoff over Ukraine boosted his popularity rating
in Russia to 80 percent. To maintain this popularity, he will continue to hold onto Ukraine
despite the cost. For example, it would cost Russia more than $20 billion through 2020 to integrate Crimea. Putin knows that
NATO won't protect Ukraine since it is not a member. That emboldens him to continue to attack. Ukraine had been the
second-most important contributor to the former Soviet Union's economy . It provided one-fourth of Soviet agricultural output.
It supplied heavy industrial equipment and raw materials to industrial sites throughout the former USSR. On July 29, 2014, the United States and the EU extended economic sanctions against Russia. They wanted to convince Putin to stop supporting those in eastern
Ukraine who want to break up the country. The United States had proof that Russia supplied separatists that shot down a Malaysia Airlines commercial jet over eastern Ukraine on July 17, killing 298 people. The sanctions severely limit five out of the six major
Russian banks' ability to obtain medium and long-term financing from Europe. The United States also restricted technology exports to Russia's deep-water Arctic offshore or shale oil production. Russia had already been ousted from the Group of Eight. As a result of
U.S. sanctions, British Petroleum was worried about its profits. Bank of America cut its exposure to Russia by 40 percent. Boeing and United Technologies started hoarding titanium. Russia's VSMPO is the world's largest producer of this rare metal. In response, Russia
banned imports of U.S. and European foods for one year. This included $300 million of U.S. poultry products. After the sanctions, foreign direct investment in Russia dropped by $75 billion. That's roughly 4 percent of the country's gross domestic product. Its stock
market plummeted 20 percent. Its currency, the ruble, fell 50 percent. To head off inflation, Russia's central bank raised interest rates. The sanctions created a recession in Russia. The International Monetary Fund cut its 2014 growth forecast for Russia from 3.8
percent to 0.2 percent. Even though Putin continues to be popular at home, these sanctions are hurting the country's economy. Russia is one of the emerging markets that suffered a currency meltdown in 2014. Forex traders abandoned these markets when the
Federal Reserve began tapering its quantitative easing program. That reduced credit around the world. Russia waged wars in Chechnya in the early 2000s. Putin annexed Ossetia in Georgia in 2008, and the Western world didn't really intervene. He also successfully
launched a cyber-attack on Estonia. But Ukraine is larger and borders the EU directly. Many small countries bordering Russia worried that if Ukraine falls, they would be next. The EU is unlikely to defend them since it depends on Russia for half of its gas. Many
European businesses have profitable operations in Russia. Others sympathize with Putin, who is defending Russia's borders from encroachment by NATO. Annexation of Crimea worries 260,000 Muslim Tatars. They were subjected to ethnic cleansing during the
Soviet rule. They were forced to move to Central Asia, where half of them died. Crimean Tatars peacefully supported Ukraine's Orange Revolution.
AT No Russia War
Russia is ready to fight a nuclear war and will
Goble 3/9/19 Paul Goble is a longtime specialist on ethnic and religious questions in Eurasia. He has served as director of
research and publications at the Azerbaijan Diplomatic Academy, vice dean for the social sciences and humanities at Audentes
University in Tallinn, and a senior research associate at the EuroCollege of the University of Tartu in Estonia. "Putin Is Preparing To
Fight And Win A Limited Nuclear WAr Against The West, Skobov Says"euromaidanpress.com/2019/03/09/putin-is-preparing-to-
fight-and-win-a-limited-nuclear-war-against-the-west-skobov-says/
Putin is preparing to fight and win a limited nuclear war, convinced that “the effete West will refuse to
escalate” in response lest that lead to a nuclear Armageddon that will destroy both the Russian Federation and the West, according to
Moscow commentator Aleksandr Skobov. The Cold War doctrine was based on the assumption that neither super power would ever
use nuclear weapons for offense but only in defense and that both would be prepared to escalate if the other acted first, an assumption
that provided less certainty that war could be avoided than many now believe, Skobov says. On the one hand, each side had developed
plans for using tactical and then strategic weapons if the other side used them. And on the other, the commentator continues, both had
to continue to invest in ever more apocalyptic weapons as the last line of defense of what each viewed as its civilizational model.
According to Skobov, “both sides were certain of the superiority of their own social system and in the eventual collapse of the social
system of their opponent in a global defeat in the historical competition.” In essence, “both sides considered a global military clash
with their historical opponents as practically inevitable.” Moreover, both sides concluded that they might be pushed to the use of
nuclear weapons if the use of conventional ones was not allowing them to win out .
NATO doctrine held that in the
event of a Soviet tank thrust into Europe, the western alliance would have to use tactical
nuclear weapons. “In the USSR,” Skobov continues, “the doctrine of ‘a responsive nuclear strike’ was adopted
officially, but in fact, the General Staff considered a sufficient basis for a [Soviet] nuclear strike only the possibility that the
first strike might be inflicted by [the USSR’s] opponents.” And because neither side could be certain what might happen, each was
prepared to escalate in response, something that both sides recognized and that was ultimately the reason that neither side used those
weapons against the other lest its civilizational model be destroyed along with the world. “Until Gorbachev’s perestroika,” Skobov
says, “all attempts not only to begin the process of disarmament or even to freeze the number of weapons at a certain level turned out
to be hopeless” as a result. “All ‘pre-perestroika’ Soviet-American treaties were only agreements about reducing the tempo of the
building of arms.” The world was thus drifting toward a nuclear war, a horrific outcome that was prevented only by the decision of the
Soviet leadership under Gorbachev to reject its global political goals, its ideology, its faith in the supremacy of its social system, and
its efforts to impose that system on others by defeating its opponent. By refusing to view the West as an inevitable enemy, the Soviet
leadership made possible arms control deals that reduced the number of nuclear weapons of the two sides by 80 percent. “Russian
imperialists call this a geopolitical capitulation, but the alternative to it was nuclear war,” Skobov argues. But now what Gorbachev
did is being reversed. Putin’s “organized criminal group” even though it has not articulated an ideology views itself as “’the
elect of history,’ called upon to send into the trash heap all this ‘Western project’ with its ‘false democracy,’ ‘false’ humanism,
and ‘false’ human rights.” This is not “a return to Soviet ideology,” Skobov insists. “The Soviet empire claimed that namely it was
the true legal heir of the Renaissance-Enlightenment project and the heir of 1789 which proclaimed ‘freedom, equality, and
brotherhood.’” The Putinists, in contrast, “are convinced that there are no ‘true’ human rights and that democracy doesn’t exist in
nature.” For Putin and his acolytes, “there is only loot and crude force and the eternal universal laws of criminal groups.” It “doesn’t
seek to be the heir of 1789: it rejects that inheritance just as Hitler did.” And that points up something else: “the ideological gap
separating the Putin empire and the West is much deeper than the one which divided the West and the Soviet empire.” Putin’s
“organized criminal group” may not believe that Western elites have any moral limitations, “but it cannot but understand that NATO
does not have a single reason in the event of a military conflict to use nuclear weapons first.” That is because today, NATO has
superiority over Russia “in other kinds of arms.” Equally, the Putin people “cannot but know” that neither side has an effective
defense against strategic nuclear missiles “and in the coming decades won’t” either. To ensure that the principles of mutually assured
destruction continue to work as a constraint, Skobov says, “no new “super weapons” are needed. Then, why is Putin talking about
them? In fact,
he isn’t talking about strategic weapons that could be used to bring on
Armageddon but rather precisely targeted ones that could serve as the weapon of choice
for “a limited nuclear strike, including a first strike” rather than in response to the actions of the West. Putin
is “certainly not preparing for complete mutual destruction,” Skobov says. “He is preparing for a limited nuclear war which he
hopes to win.” His hopes rest on his conviction that the West now will not respond to a Russian use of tactical nuclear weapons
by escalating but by doing everything possible to de-escalate. As in the first Cold War, the commentator continues, “the world’s
slide toward a nuclear catastrophe can be stopped only by Russia turning away from its confrontation with the West” based on
Moscow’s belief that its system is superior and the West’s is rotting from within because it is not. But tragically, “today there are no
forces within the country capable of turning Russia” in a different direction. And the world is rapidly running out of time. “Therefore,”
Skobov says, “the first order of business is the formation of a broad international anti-Putin coalition, which recognizes the threat
coming from the Kremlin and is ready to respond to Putin’s strike.”
U.S. Heg
1NC
Maintaining the dollar’s status is key to overall hegemony—foreign policy
leverage and military spending.
Thomas COSTIGAN ET AL. 17. **Instructor, Department of Finance, University of Akron.
**Drew Cottle, Senior Lecturer, Western City University. **Angela Keys, Thomas University.
“The US Dollar as the Global Reserve Currency: Implications for US Hegemony.” World Review of
Political Economy 8(1): 104-22. Emory Libraries.
US hegemony has been the subject of study from many varied perspectives in different historical contexts. Anderson (2013), for
example, has argued that US hegemony rose to cover the planet from the earliest years of US history. He contends that the US
imperium had a long prehistory stretching back to its founding. In the post-Cold War era, Johnson (2004, 151) has argued that a new
form of US hegemony has emerged where US military bases constitute an "empire of bases." In this article, we argue that the
role
of the US dollar as the global reserve currency should be seen as central to the functioning
of US hegemony . The benefits the United States has derived from the dollar's reserve currency
status are crucial , for instance, to the maintenance of military bases and other aspects of US
hegemonic power. Robert Keohane, for example, has done considerable work on how US hegemony is
structurally comprised . In After Hegemony (2005), first published in 1984, Keohane argued that cooperation among
capitalist powers would continue even without a single hegemon. Keohane's study lacks significant explanation of the role of reserve
currencies or financial markets in how cooperation occurs between state actors. Susan Strange (1987) critiques hegemonic stability
theory. Strange argues that a critical reason for hegemonic change "in the great game of states" "is primarily economic, not political"
(Strange 1987, 553). While Strange does consider the role of the US dollar and its reserve status, it is relegated to third position in a
list of structural reasons for the conditions that give rise to US hegemony. In contrast, we argue that the
dollar and its
reserve status is the most fundamental reason that the United States is a hegemonic power .
Emmanuel Wallerstein's (1991) study focuses on the changing worlds system in the 1980s. The collapse of the Soviet Union and the
evolution of the world system in the context of a declining US hegemony are seen as major changes to the capitalist world economy.
Absent from Wallerstein's (1991) study is any analysis of the dollar and its reserve function in how hegemony is constructed.
Critical contributions have been made by Michael Hudson and Henry C.K. Liu to scholarship on the US dollar with regard to US
hegemony. Hudson (2003) has presented a critical history of the US dollar and how the political power attained
through the selection of the dollar as the global reserve currency has served the interests of
the United States. However, this study was published prior to the financial crash of 2008. The global financial crisis (GFC) has had a
large impact on the debates surrounding whether the dollar can be maintained in the face of this disruption (Overholt et al. 2015).
Furthermore, since Hudson's (2003) study was published, there have been several major developments in the realm of political
economy that concern the dollar and its continued reserve status. First, the increasing use of the Yuan in bilateral
trade between Russian and China, particularly for hydrocarbon payments, has the potential to undermine US
hegemony by creating a system outside the control of the US banking system, the China International Payments System (CIPS)
(Koneig 2015). Another critical feature which occurred after Hudson (2003) was the
creation of the Asian
Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB). Officially the bank is intended to meet the infrastructure investment needs of the
Asian region and will be used to fund "The New Silk Road" project for example. However, this institution will be under the direction
of the Chinese in concert with multilateral partners. These developments indicate
a challenge to a US-centric world
system and raise the possibility of a regional sphere of influence dominated by Russia and
China in East and particularly Central Asia. This evolution of Russian Chinese cooperation is a direct threat to the
hegemony of the United States in Central Asia as Zbigniew Brzezinski in The Grand Chessboard (1997) theorised could happen. Liu
(2002) has analysed the role of the dollar in the operations of US hegemony. Liu contends that since Nixon abandoned the gold
standard in 1971, the US dollar has become a "global monetary instrument that only the United States can produce by fiat."
According to Liu, the rest of the world produces goods, and the United States produces dollars that are required to purchase these
goods, particularly oil. As
US dollars are needed to facilitate global trade , this consequently
positions the United States at the centre of a global trading system in which it is the dominant
power. Liu (2002) asserts the contention that the unique role the dollar occupies allows the United States to
manipulate the currency at will and that China must live with the consequences (349). Liu and
Deng's (2012) study identifies a more recent contention between the US dollar and the Chinese RMB centred on the sensitive issue
of currency devaluation. However, little theoretical interpretation is given to how this is made possible. Here we fill this gap by
positing that a world systems analysis is the best way of understanding the interconnected relationship between the dollar and
other currencies.
Prasad (2014) has argued that despite the difficulties that the US dollar and the US economy confront, the role of the US dollar in
international finance through its reserve function will endure for the foreseeable future. Prasad emphasises the strengthening of the
dollar since the GFC and asserts that the existing superiority of Western legal and financial institutions make the role of the dollar
secure. Prasad notes that it has long been a source of contention that holders
of US Treasury bonds are, in effect,
subsidising US deficit spending and the standard of living of Americans through their purchase
of US debt. This phenomenon has been come to be known as the "exorbitant privilege" (Canzoneri et al. 2013). Nonetheless, as
the United States' NIC has suggested,
Despite recent inflows into dollar assets and the appreciation of the dollar, the dollar could
lose its status as an unparalleled global reserve currency by 2025 , and become a first among
equals in a market basket of currencies. This may force the US to consider more carefully how the conduct of its
foreign policy affects the dollar. Without a steady source of external demand for dollars, US foreign policy actions might
bring exposure to currency shock and higher interest rates for Americans . (NIC 2008, 12)
The dollar and its position as the global reserve currency are fundamental to the US economy
and are, as a consequence, critical to the funding of both US domestic and foreign policies . As financial
transactions can be conducted instantly across the globe, it has been suggested that "a nation's currency security is
even more critical than energy security" (Engdahl 2014, 10). Rickards (2011) has examined the geo-strategic and
defence posture that the United States maintains in relation to the dollar, exploring the impact future financial
attacks may have on the United States' geo-strategic rivalry with other nations. Rickards (2011, 6)
highlights the staging of simulated games on this subject, which were held at the Applied Physics laboratory near Washington in
conjunction with the Department of Defence in September 2008. The purpose of the games was to "examine the impact of global
financial activities on national security issues" (Rickards 2011, 6). Rickards (2011, 11) argues that such an attack on the
United States would undermine confidence in the dollar and emphasises the existence of US presidential powers
which permit the freezing of accounts that attempt to disrupt markets in this way.
Eichengreen (2011) has offered a different view on the dollar's status globally, reasoning that in the future it is likely that there will
be a basket of currencies in operation within the world economy. Noting that there is an historical precedent for multiple reserve
currencies, Eichengreen (2011) contends, nonetheless, that reports of the dollar's imminent demise as the global reserve currency
are premature, if not entirely unfounded. However, a question must be raised as to whether the United States would allow the
world economy to abandon the dollar as the global reserve, given the potential ramifications such a move would have for the US
economy and for US hegemony globally.
5.The Dollar and US Hegemony: A World-Systems Analysis Perspective
Immanuel Wallerstein's conception of World-Systems Analysis has provided a theoretical perspective that is key to the investigation
of the US dollar's significance as the global reserve currency. Wallerstein (2011) has asserted that the world system is divided into
core, semi-peripheral and peripheral states. We contend that the
US dollar as the global reserve currency is an
instrument that has been critical to the establishment of the U nited States as the ultimate
metropole power at the core of this world system.
The strategizing undertaken by planners from the CFR and the US State Department at the beginning of World War II was
fundamental to the installation of the United States at the core of the post-war world system. The economic consequences of the
war for European nations, particularly Britain, provided a context for the United States to assume a pivotal role in the post-war era.
Beeson and Higgott (2005) have argued that, after World War II, the United States became the pre-eminent global power by
positioning itself, "at the centre of a dense web of 'hub and spokes' security relationships." As Beeson and Higgott (2005) have
explained, the United States also created
an international political and economic framework
conducive to its interests, with the multilateral institutions necessary to maintain them .
Nonetheless, it was the selection of the United States' currency as the global reserve which ensured
that the United States was at the centre of the world economy in the post-war period. The US dollar
became the essential means of international trade between core, semi-periphery and
periphery states following the end of World War II.
Wallerstein (2006) has provided an analysis of US hegemony from the end of World War II to the beginning of the twenty-first
century. He contends that an 80-year battle was waged between the United States and Germany to determine who would succeed
Britain as the new world hegemon. Wallerstein's analysis of US power in relation to the world system identified three distinct
periods, the first of which commenced when Allied victory in World War II established a period of US global hegemony that endured
until 1970. The second period, from 1970 to 2001, was when US hegemony entered into decline. The third phase began with the
unilateralist policies of President George W. Bush. These policies were devised to slow down and reverse the decline in US
hegemony. In practice, Wallerstein asserts, they accelerated US hegemonic decline. Like Wallerstein, Golub (2004) has emphasised
that the unilateralist approach adopted by the Bush administration has led to a serious decline in the international influence of the
United States.
From the end of World War II until the present, the United States has encountered challenges to its position as the global hegemonic
power. The United States has undergone a transformation economically and industrially, and, as a manufacturer and exporter of
goods, the United States has certainly declined. Although
other aspects of US hegemonic influence have
changed, the status of the US dollar as the global reserve currency has not yet been
successfully challenged. The power and influence of the US dollar as the global reserve is often
overlooked as a hegemonic instrument, particularly as there are more obvious expressions of
US hegemonic power, such as the presence of US military bases on every continent except Antarctica. As an enduring
feature of US hegemony that continues to link the world economy, the US dollar as the global
reserve currency can be viewed, potentially, as the most vital element of US hegemony.
6.Conclusion: Future Challenges to the Dollar's Status as the Global Reserve Currency
One potential challenge to the US dollar's future as the global reserve currency, identified by economist Robert Triffin, has come to
be known as the "Triffin Dilemma" or the "Triffin Paradox." Triffin (1960) argued that the selection of a nation's currency as the
global reserve currency would create problems for that nation in the form of conflicting economic demands. Such a nation would
eventually experience a critical balance of payments problem, particularly in its current account deficit. Triffin criticised the Bretton
Woods monetary system adopted at the end of World War II which established what he interpreted as an irreconcilable economic
paradox for the United States. Whether
the United States will experience a future economic crisis cannot
be known; however, US debt has certainly grown enormously since the end of World War II. The
unrelenting demand for US dollars created by the currency's establishment as the global reserve has enabled the United States to
continue to accrue debt, largely without consequence. As
the current system compels nations to trade in US
dollars, the United States has been free to run large budget deficits and balance of payments
deficits without any apparent impact on the United States (Hudson 2003, xii). However, if the US dollar
was to lose its position as the global reserve currency, the United States would likely experience a
major economic crisis . A critical problem may yet emerge as the US issues more and more of its currency while trying to
maintain the value of the currency (Zhou 2009).
There is a continuing debate among scholars about the potential decline of both the US dollar and US global hegemony, as well as
the implications of the ascendancy of China and cooperation between the BRICS: Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (Cox
2012). This debate is broadly divided on the key issue of whether US hegemony is in decline. The declinist view asserts that the rise
of China and other rival powers, in conjunction with the United States' surging national debt, budget deficits and over-extension of
the US military, have placed the United States in an economic position that cannot be sustained, one which will ultimately affect the
US dollar (Layne 2012; Ruppert 2004). That outlook is contested by those who assert that, despite the contemporary problems for
US finances, there is at present neither a single currency nor a basket of currencies that could be readily substituted for the US dollar
as the global reserve currency (Stokes 2014; Prasad 2014; Eichengreen 2011).
The United States has been subjected to international political pressure regarding the US dollar's
global reserve status. The Governor of the Peoples Bank of China, Zhou Xiaochuan, appealed in 2009 for a new
global reserve currency, disassociated from any specific nation, arguing that stronger economic growth would be fostered
and the world economy would be stabilised (Anderlini 2009). The former Russian President, Dmitry Medvedev, and the former
Chinese President, Hu Jintao, have made similar demands (Capella 2014). However, without a majority of
nations demanding a new reserve currency, it appears unlikely that this political rhetoric will
affect the dollar-centric world economy .
The establishment of the AIIB has been interpreted by some as a critical challenge to US hegemony, and the US dollar as the global
reserve, from an increasingly powerful China. The AIIB will initially be capitalised with $50 billion, rising eventually to $100 billion,
and will be critical to China's New Silk Road project (Donnan 2015). Strategically, the New Silk Road project will draw into China's
economic orbit the countries of Central and South Asia. Through massive civil engineering projects, the region will be incorporated
into China's expanding economic and security infrastructure (Escobar 2015). However, as Chossudovsky (2015) has explained,
While the creation of BRICS has significant geopolitical implications, both the AIIB as
well as the proposed BRICS Development Bank (NDB) and its Contingency Reserve
Arrangement (CRA) are dollar denominated entities . Unless they are coupled with a
multi-currency system of trade and credit, they do not threaten dollar hegemony .
Quite the opposite, they tend to sustain and extend dollar denominated lending.
(Chossudovsky 2015)
Despite these facts, the United States strongly opposed the formation of the AIIB, and lobbied other nations against joining. Robert
Kahn (2015) of the CFR has argued that the founding of the AIIB reflects China's displeasure at existing institutional arrangements in
Asia, such as the Asian Development Bank led by Japan, as well as the lack of reform at the IMF. While the creation of the AIIB is an
important development, it is not an institution of the same magnitude or influence as, nor is it a rival to, the IMF or the World Bank.
International trading arrangements that avoid using the US currency have emerged as a potential, albeit limited, challenge to the
status of the US dollar as the global reserve currency. The invasion of Iraq, according to W.R. Clark, was motivated by the neo-
conservatives in the Bush administration to stop Saddam Hussain from trading oil in Euros (Clark 2005, 29). Similarly, Swanson
calculates that military action was taken against Col Gaddafi's government in 2011 under the pretext of "humanitarian intervention."
However, it is noted that the Gaddafi government was also preparing to move Libya's oil settlements away from the dollar to a gold-
backed currency (Swanson 2011). Several other Middle Eastern states, including Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Qatar, have attempted to
avoid the US dollar in oil trading, a move that could have an impact upon the demand for US dollars and US Treasury bonds, as well
as long-standing financial and security agreements with the United States (Fisk 2009). Russia,
China and Iran have
sought to substitute their own currencies, in place of the US dollar, in some bilateral and
multilateral trade arrangements, in part to mitigate the imposition of sanctions (Durden 2014).
In September 2015, the Russian government began drafting a bill that would eliminate the US dollar from trade between the
Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). This plan emerged in the context of continuing political tensions between the United
States and Russia in relation to the Ukraine crisis. By avoiding the US dollar in regional trade, President Vladimir Putin believed
that Russia would be less susceptible to sanctions imposed by the United States (Russia Today 2015).
President Putin ordered an alternate payment system to be created, one which does not use the US dollar (Pascali 2014).
Although not a direct challenge to the US dollar's global reserve currency status, the
substitution of other currencies
for the dollar in international trade could have an impact upon the US economy . Bilateral trade
between Russia and China may be increasingly important within the world economy of the future. Major energy deals, such as the
new China-Russia gas pipeline which will supply Russian gas to China for the next 30 years, will not be traded in US dollars (Pizzi
2014). This
expanding bilateral energy trade between China and Russia has the capacity to affect
US financial deficits; a potential decreased demand for dollars could impact US Treasury
securities (Koenig 2015). Recently, Russia and China have been cooperating to develop the CIPS. The
purpose of this system is to avoid the Western-operated Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT), a
privately owned international payments system used by over 10,000 financial institutions. Koenig (2016) argues, " It
would be a
formidable alternative to the western dollar based monetary Ponzi scheme ." The payment
system will be used by Brazil India Russian and China (BRIC) nations as well as Shanghai
Cooperation (SCO) nations and has the potential to be a powerful alternative to a vital US
hegemonic system.
The continuation of the dollar's position as the global reserve currency is imperative for the
United States and has been acknowledged as such in reports by the National Intelligence Council (NIC). A
2012 NIC report stated that, historically, "US dominance has been buttressed by the dollar's role as the
global reserve currency" (NIC 2012, 105). If the dollar was abandoned as the global reserve
currency, the NIC has stated that it "would be one of the sharpest indications of a loss of US
global economic position, strongly undermining Washington's political influence too" (NIC 2012, xii).
The NIC has speculated that the mere downgrading of the US dollar's reserve status "may force the
US to consider more carefully how the conduct of its foreign policy affects the dollar" (NIC 2008,
12). As these reports from the NIC indicate, the retention of the dollar's global reserve status is vital to
the future of the United States' economy , foreign policy and its hegemonic power globally .
Unipolarity is key to deter Russia and China wars, beat terrorists, and contain
North Korea—retrenchment fails.
Hal BRANDS AND Eric S. EDELMAN 17. **Henry A. Kissinger Distinguished Professor of
Global Affairs, Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies. **Counselor,
CSBA; Undersecretary of Defense (2005-9). “Avoiding a Strategy of Bluff: The Crisis of American
Military Primacy.” Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments. March 20.
http://csbaonline.org/research/publications/avoiding-a-strategy-of-bluff-the-crisis-of-american-
military-primacy.
If strategy is the calculated relation of means to ends, then today America is careening toward strategic
insolvency. Following the Cold War, the United States possessed unrivaled military primacy, both globally and in all the world’s
key strategic theaters. Yet today, Washington faces military challenges that are both more severe and
more numerous than at any time in decades, precisely as its own defense cutbacks have significantly reduced U.S.
military capabilities. The United States confronts challenges from revisionist great powers such as
China and Russia , aggressive rogue states such as Iran and North Korea , and international
terrorist organizations such as al-Qaeda and the I slamic S tate. At the same time, constant-dollar
defense spending fell from $768 billion in 2010 to $595 billion in 2015 , the fastest drawdown—in
percentage terms—since the Korean War. The result has been a creeping crisis of American military
primacy, as the margin of superiority to which the United States has become accustomed has
diminished, and a growing gap between U.S. commitments and capabilities has emerged .
This state of strategic insolvency poses numerous dangers to both the United States and the broader
international order that American grand strategy has traditionally supported . It will
undermine U.S. alliances , by creating new doubts regarding the credibility of Washington’s
guarantees. It will undercut deterrence , by tempting adversaries such as Russia , China , and
Iran to calculate that the United States may be unwilling—or unable—to oppose aggression. It
will make for far harder fights should conflict erupt in key areas from Europe to the Middle
East to East Asia, and it may ultimately result in a situation in which the United States simply
cannot defend countries it has pledged to defend . The United States would currently face grave difficulties
defending the Baltic states from a Russian assault, for instance; the military balance around Taiwan and elsewhere
in East Asia has also eroded dramatically. Finally, as U.S. military power becomes less imposing,
U.S. diplomacy is likely to encounter greater difficulties as well. American officials continually aver that
the U.S. military is the finest fighting force in the history of the world, but today, U.S. military power has become
dangerously insufficient relative to the grand strategy and international order it has
traditionally supported.
Great powers facing strategic insolvency have three basic strategic options. First, the United States could decrease its
global commitments, thereby bringing its strategic obligations back into alignment with a diminished military resource base.
In practice, this might mean dispensing with U.S. security commitments to the most geographically exposed allies and partners—
such as Taiwan and the Baltic states—in hopes of reconsolidating a more defensible strategic perimeter. Yet
the appeal of
this option is largely illusory , for even reducing defense spending will not come close to
balancing the U.S. federal budget absent major changes in tax and entitlement policies , and
U.S. retrenchment from East Asia, the Middle East, or Eastern Europe is likely to generate
profound geopolitical instability . Aggressive revisionist powers may well be emboldened by
U.S. retreat; remaining U.S. allies may lose confidence in the credibility of American defense
pledges. Retrenchment may somewhat narrow the gap between U.S. capabilities and
commitments in the short run, but only at the likely price of a further erosion of the global
order that U.S. strategy has been meant to defend.
A second option is living with greater risk. In practice, this would mean either
gambling that enemies will not test
increasingly precarious commitments or employing riskier approaches—such as relying on
nuclear weapons or other escalatory strategies—to sustain those commitments . This approach has a
certain intuitive appeal—it substitutes deterrence by punishment for deterrence by denial—and the United States indeed relied on
such approaches during the Cold War. Yet it also entails profound liabilities. Simply hoping that exposed commitments will not be
challenged could work for a time, but this approach carries enormous risk that those guarantees will
eventually be tested and found wanting, with devastating effects . Likewise, more escalatory
approaches to deterrence may lack credibility—if America is not willing to bear the fiscal costs
associated with making its defense commitments credible through conventional means,
would it really risk the astronomically higher costs associated with nuclear escalation in a
conflict over Taiwan or the Baltic states? This approach thus risks leading the United States into a
trap where, if its interests are challenged, it is confronted with a choice between pursuing
escalatory options that carry a prohibitive price or simply acquiescing to aggression.
EX - I/Ls
Dollar heg is key for American hegemony
Luft 18 (Gal Luft, co-director of the Institute for the Analysis of Global Security, "The anti-dollar
awakening could be ruder and sooner than most economists predict" 8/27/18,
https://www.cnbc.com/2018/08/27/the-anti-dollar-awakening-could-be-ruder-and-sooner-
than-most-economists-predict.html)
America's global supremacy has been made possible not only thanks to its military power and its
alliance system but also due to its control over the plumbing of global finance and particularly the
broad acceptance of the dollar as the world's reserve currency . The unique status of the U.S.
currency has anchored the global financial system since World War II.
Any transaction done in U.S. dollars or using a U.S. bank automatically brings the trading parties under American legal jurisdiction.
When the U.S. decides to impose unilateral
sanctions, as in the case of Iran, it essentially tells the world's
governments, corporations and individuals they must choose between halting business with the
sanctioned country or be shut off from the world's number one economy . This is a powerful
stick.
Not many companies or banks can afford to give up on the U.S. market or be denied access to
U.S. financial institutions
US dollar collapse ends its status as the hegemon and causes China rise
Off The Grid '14 (Off the Grid is a news site dedicated to reporting on the economy and
current international state affairs https://www.offthegridnews.com/financial/how-the-coming-
dollar-collapse-will-leave-americans-destitute/)
An increasing number of financial experts are saying the United States dollar is no longer a reliable
and dependable currency – and that its downfall is inevitable. There are even some experts
who think the dollar is so unstable that the Chinese Yuan will soon become the world’s
reserve currency, or currency of choice. “Our addictions to debt and cheap money have finally caused our major
international creditors to call for an endto dollar hegemony and to push for a ‘de-Americanized’ world,” investment advisor and
financial strategist Micheal Pento wrote in an op-ed piece for CNBC. Others agree. “In my view the dollar is about to
become dethroned as the world’s defacto currency basically,” Canadian billionaire investor Ned Goodman said.
“We’re headed to a period of stagflation, maybe serious inflation, and the United States will be losing the privilege of being able to
print at its will the global reserve currency.” Goodman believes the US already is in another recession. The unemployment numbers
are understated and the “real” unemployment number likely is closer to 15 percent, he said. Over half of 200 international
institutional investors surveyed by the Economist think that the Yuan will eventually replace the dollar as the world’s reserve
currency. The reserve currency is the money most commonly accepted for international trade. Why Reserve Currencies Matter
Having money with a reserve currency status enables a nation to dominate and control the world’s financial markets, as their
currency is used for international trade and transactions. The US has the ability to maintain a $17 trillion national debt largely
because the dollar is the reserve currency. A
nation with a reserve currency can simply print money to pay
its debts. In past centuries nations such as Britain, France, Spain, the Netherlands, and Portugal lost their status
as super powers in part when their money lost reserve currency status. Reserve currencies collapse
because people no longer trust or believe in the governments that issue them. Goodman says that the US dollar became the reserve
currency in the 1970s because Saudi Arabia agreed to only accept only the dollar as payment for oil. Goodman noted that at least
one major producer, Russia, is now accepting Yuan in payment for oil. Goodman was referring to a deal that Chinese President Xi
Jinping and Russian leader Vladimir Putin made last May. Under the terms of deal, Russian companies can borrow
money directly from China in exchange for oil. The US dollar once was backed by gold and
silver, Goodman said, but now is “backed by nothing.” Australia Starts Using Yuan One of
America’s oldest and closest allies may have taken the first step to ending the dollar’s reign as the reserve currency. CNBC reported
that the Yuan will now be traded in Australia’s financial markets. Among other things that will let Chinese customers pay Australian
firms in Yuan. China is the biggest market for Australia’s exports such as iron and coal. Story continues below video The Australian
government has endorsed the deal because China is Australia’s biggest trading partner. Arthur Sinodinos, Australia’s Assistant
Treasurer (treasury secretary) even went on CNBC’s Asia Squawk Box show to endorse the deal. “It’s a big vote of
confidence by both countries in the future of the relationship,” Sinodinos said. Not even recent economic
problems in China seemed to dampen Sinodinos’ enthusiasm for the arrangement. “There’s no doubt that the Chinese
authorities are having to manage issues in the financial sector to make sure that growth is
sustained, but they’ve shown great skill at that in the past they were very adept at the fallout from the
global financial crisis,” Sinodinos said. In other words, Sinokinos believes the Chinese are doing a very good job of managing
their economy and their currency is reliable. How will the Dethroning of the Dollar Affect You? Observers disagree widely on how
the end of the dollar’s reign as reserve currency would affect the US economy and average
Americans. Retired neurosurgeon and pundit Dr. Ben Carson thinks it would turn the US into a third world
nation and lead to unrest that would lead to martial law, as Off The Grid News recently reported. Goodman
believes there will soon be a massive sell off of US dollars that will lead to inflation. He also suggested a way for people to protect
their assets. “The
Chinese have three and a half trillion US dollars and they’re spending these
dollars as quickly as they can, and it will not be long before the rest of the world and the US will be thinking likewise. I
do.” Goodman said. In the 1930s, everyone wanted US dollars, he said, but today they’re trying to get rid of them. He thinks that
many investors are trying to spend all of their dollars to buy hard assets in order to avoid losing money invested in dollars. That
means average people might be able to protect themselves by investing in hard assets such as gold, real estate or silver, Goodman
said.
Dollar collapse decks the hegemonic order, incentivizes Israeli aggression, and
collapses the UK
Shield '11 (Silver Shield, The Sons of Liberty Academy is the culmination of 6 years of research
and development to create a formalized awakening process to help Americans deal with a post-
dollar world. https://www.businessinsider.com/here-are-the-5-worst-places-to-be-when-the-
dollar-collapses-2011-6)
The dollar collapse will be the single largest event in human history. This will be the first event that will
touch every single living person in the world. All human activity is controlled by money. Our wealth, our work, our food,
our government, even our relationships are affected by money. No money in human history
has had as much reach in both breadth and depth as the dollar . It is the de facto world currency. All other
currency collapses will pale in comparison to this big one. All other currency crises have been regional and there were
other currencies for people to grasp on to. This collapse will be global and it will bring down not only the dollar but all other fiat
currencies, as they are fundamentally no different. The collapse of currencies will lead to the collapse of ALL
paper assets. The repercussions to this will have incredible results worldwide. (Read the Silver Bullet and the Silver Shield to
protect yourself from this collapse.) Thanks to the globalization and the giant vampire squids of the Anglo-American Empire, the
dollar is the world's reserve currency. It supports the global economy in settling foreign trade, most importantly the
Petro Dollar trade. This money is recycled through the City of London (not to be confused with London) and New York. This fuels our
corporate vampires that acquires and harvests the wealth of the world. The corporate powers suppress REAL assets like natural
resources and labor to provide themselves massive profits. This
Fascist, Statist, Collectivist model provides the
money into the economy to fund an ever increasing federal government. That government then grows
larger and larger enriching its minions with jobs to control their fellow citizens. Finally, to come full circle, the government then
controls other nations through the Military Industrial Complex. This
cycle will be cut when the mathematically
and inevitable collapse of the dollar occurs. In order for our debt based money to function we
MUST increase the debt every year in excess of the debt AND interest accrued the year before or we will
enter a deflationary death spiral. When debt is created, money is created. When debt is paid off, money is destroyed. There is never
enough to pay off the debt, because there would be not one dollar in existence. We are at a point where we either default on the
debt,willingly or unwillingly,or create more money/debt to keep the cycle moving. The problem is, if you understand anything about
compounding interest, we are reaching the hockey stick moment where the more debt that is incurred,the less effective it is and this
leads us to hyper inflation. There are only two actors needed for this hyper inflation, the Lender of Last Resort, the Fed, and the
Spender of Last Resort, the government. These two can and will blow up the system. I believe they will wait until the next crisis and
the whiff of deflationary depression before they fire up the printing presses. That crisis is coming very soon at the end of this
summer or fall. The money and emergency measures are worn out. The fact that NONE of the underlying problems that caused the
2008 crisis have been resolved. The only thing that has happened is that instead of corporate problems,we now have nation
problems. In this movie Greece will play the role of Lehman Brothers and the United States will play the role of AIG. The problem is
there is nowhere to kick the can down the road and there is no world government to absorb the debt,yet…
(Problem,Reaction,Solution.) So this leads me to the Top 5 Places Not To Be When the Dollar Collapses. 1.
Israel- This Anglo-
American beach head into the Middle East was first conceived by the most powerful family in
the world, the Rothschilds, in 1917. The Balfour Declaration said that there will be a Zionist Israel years before World
War two and the eventual establishment of Israel. Israel has not been a good neighbor to its Muslim nations and has always had the
two biggest bullies on the block at it's back. When
the dollar collapses, the United States will have too
much on its plate both domestically and internationally to worry about such a non-strategic
piece of land. This will leave Israel very weak at a time when tensions will be high. This very thin strip of desert land will not
be able to with stand the economic reality of importing its food and fuel or the political reality
of being surrounded by Muslims. 2. Southern California- The land of Fruits and Nuts turns into
Battlefield Los Angeles. 20 million people packed into an area that has no water and thus food
is not good to say the least. Throw on top of the huge wealth disparities and the proximity to a narco state and this does
not bode well. We have seen riots for Rodney King, what will happen when the dollar is destroyed
and food an fuel stop coming into this area . People will get desperate and do crazy things, especially when a huge
proportion of its citizens are on anti depressants. If food and fuel cannot get in, what about Zoloft? At a time when people's world
are falling apart they lack the ability to deal with this new paradigm. If people come off of these drugs too fast they suffer psychotic
breaks and you will have thousands of shootings or suicides. 3. England- The Land of the Big Brother and
former Empire of
world wide slave and drug trade will suffer heavily. The stiff upper lip that their the British Elite ingrained into
their sheeple will not work anymore as the British population explodes. The human character will sacrifice and
unite for a foreign enemy,but not if the enemy has always been the Elite . The Anglo-American Empire
may pull off another false flag to distract it's population on another Emmanuel Goldstein like in 1984, but I feel
this collapse will happen before they pull it off. This will make all eyes point at the British Elite as solely responsible for this
catastrophe. We have seen massive riots for soccer matches with hooligans. What will happen when this island with very little food
and fuel gets cut off? 4. New York City- Another large urban area living too high on the dollar hog. NYC is the area I moved out of in
2008. There is little doubt that all of the wealth in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut is
derivative off of Wall Street wealth. The savings and investments of the whole nation and much of the world flows
through this financial capital. As the world wakes up to the massive financial fraud, this will lead to the
destruction of capital like we have never seen before. This will have tremendous effects on the regional
economy as people driving in Mercedes suddenly wonder where their next meal is coming from. 5. Washington D.C.- The
political collapse of the Federal Government will wreck havoc on the hugely inflated local
economy. As more and more states find it necessary to assert their natural control, the
Federal Government will suddenly loose power and importance as the whole world suffers from a Global
Hurricane Katrina. The money that they create and spend, will become worthless and the
government minions pensions will evaporate. Millions that once relied on the ability to force others to send their
money to them,will learn that the real power has always been at the most local level. Massive decentralization will be the answer to
globalization gone mad. Local families and communities will forgo sending money and power out of their community, as they will
care about their next meal and keeping warm. "You can ignore reality, but you can't ignore the
consequences of ignoring reality." -Ayn Rand To sum up, those areas that have lived highest on
the hog in the dollar paradigm will most likely be the worst places to live when the dollar
collapses. Many of you will find this article with passing interest, but rest assured this dollar collapse is coming. It is a
mathematical inevitability. We will not be as fortunate to muddle through this collapse like we did in 2008 when it was a corporate
problem. This time around, it is a national and global problem. The global Ponzi scheme has run out of gas as the demographics
decline, as cheap abundant oil declines, as hegemonic power declines. This comes at a time when we reach the exponential or
collapse phase of our money. The Irresistible Force Paradox says, "What happens when an unstoppable force meets an immovable
object?" We are about to find out, when infinite money hits a very finite world.
default medium of exchange, we continue to disregard the many small cuts that are bleeding
the health of our economy.
Even if the dollar is strong now, the plan triggers a switch to alternate
currencies and decks US leadership
Tappe 7-12-19 (Anneken Tappe is a financial journalist based in New York, New York. She is a
markets reporter at MarketWatch. [1] [2] https://www.cnn.com/2019/07/12/investing/dollar-
big-mac-index/index.html)
New York (CNN Business) The US dollar's share of global reserves is falling, while the euro and
Chinese yuan are becoming more popular. Is the dollar's reign coming to an end ? Not so fast.
Although the United States' trade policies are part of the reason central banks around the globe looking to diversify their currency
holdings, the dollar remains the world's reserve currency for a reason: Everyone trades it, the American economy is strong, and it is
backed by the full faith and credit of the the US Treasury. Last year, the
dollar's share of global reserves dropped
to below 62%, according to a report by the European Central Bank reviewing the international role of currencies and the euro.
That's the lowest level since the start of the Economic and Monetary Union, which was in 1992. The dollar's share is now
more than seven percentage points lower than it was before the financial crisis. But the total
amount of dollars held in the world actually went up last year. "There have been some movements in
reserves, but dollar holdings have never been larger," because total reserves in the world have grown, said Marc Chandler, chief
market strategist at Bannockburn Global Forex. Central banks and similar institutions hold dollars, often in form of US Treasuries, as
backup funds in case of a crisis event -- and also to facilitate international payments. Other currencies like the euro and, more
recently, the Chinese yuan are used to diversify so not all central bank eggs are in one dollar-denominated basket. The share of yuan
reserves reached almost 2% last year, nearly double compared with early 2017. The euro is the second most popular reserve with a
global share just under 21%, notwithstanding today's drop in the currency after ECB President Mario Draghi hinted at a path for
more monetary stimulus in for the eurozone. Politics are likely playing are role in these movements, with ongoing trade spats
between the United States and its partners. Both politics and market volatility can be blamed for the dollar's loss of market share
last year. Some
central banks actively diversified their reserves to move away from the dominant
dollar because of actions by the United States. "One example is Russia, one of the world's largest
reserve holders, which sold about $100 billion worth of US dollar-denominated reserves in the
wake of new rounds of US sanctions, and purchased almost $90 billion worth of euro-denominated and renminbi [Chinese yuan]-
denominated assets in the second quarter of 2018," the ECB report said. China
also reduced its US Treasury
holdings "to the tune of about $60 billion" over the course of last year amid the escalating trade war, according to
the report. But one fundamental problem for central banks is choosing an alternative to the greenback that is similar in liquidity and
market depth, said Neil Mellor, chief currency strategist at BNY Mellon. That is to say, while it's a fine concept to want to diversify
from US holdings to a smaller country's government bonds, that market might not be sophisticated or large enough to make sense
for this kind of investment. Anotherreason the dollar's share got knocked last year is that emerging
markets, such as Turkey and Argentina, sold a lot of their foreign reserves to stabilize their own
currencies. As the Federal Reserve was raising interest rates at the time, the dollar strengthened, which caused pain for
emerging markets, many of which have dollar-denominated debt. Between March and September 2018, emerging markets central
banks sold some $200 billion in foreign exchange reserves, according to the ECB report. The dollar's share of global reserves might
well continue to decline going forward even as overall reserves increase. But so far, it doesn't look like the dollar will lose its status
as No. 1 anytime soon. "It's too early to tell if this is the beginning of the end of the dollar as the king reserve currency," said
Chandler, the Bannockburn market strategist. "If the dollar share is going down because people have lost
confidence [in the United States] due to repeated recessions and financial crisis, that's one
thing. But if it is about straight diversification, that is not in and of itself a bad thing."
their part of the deal much longer, namely selling their oil exclusively in US Dollars . The Saudis
suggests that they might not uphold
have even suggested a "major shift" is under way in their relationship with the US To date, though,
they haven't matched their words with action, so it may just be a temper tantrum or a bluff. The Saudis need an outside protector. So far, they haven't found any suitable
replacements for the US In any case, they're using truly unprecedented language. This situation may reach a turning point when US officials start expounding on the need to
transform the monarchy in Saudi Arabia into a "democracy." But don't count on that happening as long as Saudi oil sells exclusively for US Dollars. Regardless, the chances that
the Kingdom might implode on its own are growing. For the first time in decades, observers are calling into question the viability of the Saudi currency, the Riyal. The Saudi
central bank currently pegs the Riyal at a rate of 3.75 Riyals per US Dollar. The Saudi government spends a ton of money on welfare to keep its citizens sedated. Lower oil prices
plus the cost of their mischief in the region are cutting deep into government revenue. So there's less money to spend on welfare. There's a serious crunch in the Saudi budget.
They've only been able to stay afloat by draining their foreign exchange reserves. That threatens their currency peg. Recently, Saudi officials have begun telling the
media that the currency peg is fine and there's nothing to worry about. That's another clue that there's trouble.
Official government denial is almost always a sign of the opposite. It's like the old saying: "Believe nothing until it has been officially denied." If there were a convenient way to
short the Saudi Riyal, I would do it in a heartbeat. Long before Nixon ended the Bretton Woods system in 1971, it was clear that a paradigm shift in the global monetary system
was inevitable. Today, another paradigm shift seems inevitable. As Ron Paul explained, there's one sure way to know when that shift is imminent: We will know that day is
approaching when oil-producing countries demand gold, or its equivalent, for their oil rather than Dollars or Euros. It's very possible that, one day soon, Americans will wake up
government and many US citizens to live way beyond their means for decades. It also gives
the US unchecked geopolitical leverage. The US can exclude virtually any country from the US Dollar-based financial system...and, by
extension, from the vast majority of international trade. The US takes this unique position for granted. But it will disappear once the Dollar loses its premier status. This will likely
be the tipping point... Afterward, the US government will be desperate enough to implement capital controls, people controls, nationalization of retirement savings, and other
forms of wealth confiscation. I urge you to prepare for the economic and sociopolitical fallout while you still can. Expect bigger government, less freedom, shrinking
prosperity...and possibly worse. It's probably not going to happen tomorrow. But it's clear where the trend is headed. Once the Petro-Dollar system kicks the bucket and the
Dollar loses its status as the world's premier reserve currency, you will have few, if any, options to protect yourself. This is why it's essential to act before that happens. The sad
truth is, most people have no idea how bad things could get, let alone how to prepare.
Similarly, the
1970s analogy reminds us to take into account long-range U.S. strengths that no
adversary can match and to factor in emerging trends that may play to America’s advantage.
Washington’s unequaled collection of allies, its relatively healthy demographic profile, its culture of innovation, and its
repeated resilience in the face of macroeconomic shifts falls into the first category; an energy revolution that is giving America new
economic and geopolitical leverage is but one example of the second.
Moreover, the experience of the 1970s underscores that assertive challengers often overplay their hand, thereby risking overreach
and exposing vulnerabilities for the United States and its allies to exploit. An overconfident Moscow took on numerous Third World
commitments during the 1970s, allowing Carter and then Reagan to punish that overextension through support to anti-communist
guerrillas. Should Russia and China continue their revisionist behavior today, they are similarly likely to encourage geopolitical
blowback, if only by driving their rivals toward closer cooperation with one another and with the United States. Additionally, we
can learn from the 1970s that our current traumas are neither unprecedented nor particularly
severe by historical standards. In its effects on U.S. political stability and American power , the
Vietnam War was far worse than anything the country has experienced in Iraq or Afghanistan over
the past 15 years.
Finally, the experience of the 1970s also cautions us not to panic about the state of American
internationalism. Yes, the Trump phenomenon is deeply disturbing for those who wish to see a
globally engaged America contributing constructively on issues including international trade and
combating climate change. But we have lived through periods of American disillusion with the
world before, as the experience of the 1970s reminds us, and the logic of global engagement
and activism has generally reasserted itself after a fashion — usually in response to threatening
developments abroad. Indeed, the fact that public opinion polling on support for U.S. alliances
and honoring America’s overseas commitments actually looked much worse in the mid-1970s
than it does at present (after the U.S. withdrawal from Vietnam, for instance, only 36 percent of Americans felt that “it was
important for the United States to make and keep commitments to other nations”) provides some antidote to
pessimism today.
AT Warming Turn
AT I/L - Generic
Emissions of fossil fuels have nothing to do with global warming
Happer 09 (William Happer- the Cyrus Fogg Bracket Professor of Physics at Princeton
University, “Global warming not related to fossil fuel combustion”,
http://blogs.edf.org/climate411/2009/03/13/global-warming-normal-nothing-to-do-with-fossil-
fuels/)
The current warming period began about 1800 at the end of the little ice age, long before there was an appreciable increase of CO2.
There have been similar and even larger warmings several times in the 10,000 years since the end of the last ice age. These
earlier warmings clearly had nothing to do with the combustion of fossil fuels. The current
warming also seems to be due mostly to natural causes, not to increasing levels of carbon
dioxide. Over the past ten years there has been no global warming, and in fact a slight cooling.
This is not at all what was predicted by the IPCC models.
enormous increase. CO2, by contrast, has gone up by something like 30 percent. " More From This Series New
Anti-Smog Restrictions Could Warm Planet Jan. 25, 2010 Molecule for molecule, methane is much more effective than carbon
dioxide at trapping heat in the atmosphere . And that's just part of the trouble. "Methane is much more
complicated once it gets into the atmosphere than something like carbon dioxide is ," Shindell says, "and
that's because it reacts with a lot of different important chemicals." For example , methane in the atmosphere also creates ground-
level ozone. And ozone isn't only bad for human health; it also contributes to global warming. Shindell recently totaled up all the effects
of methane emissions and realized that the heating effect is more than 60 percent that of carbon dioxide's . "So that
tells you that methane is a pretty big player." Methane in the atmosphere leveled off in the 1990s, so it seemed that efforts to control industrial emissions were keeping this
problem gas in check. But since 2007, methane levels have been on the rise again.
No Impact - Models
Extinction claims inaccurately deviate from predictive modeling—adaptation
checks worst case scenarios
Willis, et. al, ‘10 [Kathy J. Willis, Keith D. Bennett, Shonil A. Bhagwat & H. John B. Birks
(2010): 4 °C and beyond: what did this mean for biodiversity in the past?, Systematics and
Biodiversity, 8:1, 3-9, http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/pdf/10.1080/14772000903495833, ]
Given that this temperature increase was greater in magnitude and rate to anything predicted for
the next century, it is an extremely useful time interval to examine possible biotic responses to 4 ◦ C and beyond. In order to assess
biotic responses, however, it is also important to have records with a good temporal resolution, ideally annual resolution. A review
of the vegetational responses recorded in 11 sedimentary sequences with a suitably high temporal resolution from around the North
Atlantic region (Williams et al., 2002), indicates that in North America and Europe, in less than 100 years, vegetation responded to
the rapid climate change 11 600 years ago. For tree populations, this change often occurred in less than two or three generations.
The nature of the response depended upon the former vegetation; in central Europe (e.g. Willis et al., 1997; Feurdean et al., 2007)
and parts of eastern North America, for example, there is evidence in many regions for a change from needle-leaved dominated to
broad-leaved dominated forest, often in less than 100 years. In comparison, closer to the ice-sheets, in western Norway, there was a
rapid expansion in the herbaceous and shrub flora and a later arrival of trees, probably due to a time lag for migration from refugial
areas (Birks & Birks, 2008). The increase in tree populations, however, even in these northerly regions was still rapid (Birks &
Ammann, 2000). A recent study from the East Baltic region, for example, indicates that those trees that survived in northerly refugial
populations (Betula, Pinus, Picea) established within a century, suggesting climatedriven ecosystem changes rather than gradual
plant succession on new deglaciated land (Heikkila¨ et al., 2009). Thus some species expanded very fast in
response to late-glacial warming. There is also evidence, however, for species that expanded slowly or largely failed to
expand from their refugia in response to this interval of rapid climate warming (Svenning & Skov, 2007) suggesting that persistence
and expansion is also dependent on being in a location that was continuously suitable during the glacial–interglacial ‘cycle’ (Bennett
et al., 1991). Biotic responses to this interval of rapid climate warming throughout Europe and North America therefore include
evidence for (i) rapid expansion of in situ populations, (ii) large-scale species range shifts (Birks & Willis, 2008), (iii) community
turnover (Birks & Birks, 2008) and (iv) the formation of novel community assemblages (Williams & Jackson, 2007). However, at
no
site yet studied, anywhere in the world, is there evidence in the fossil record for largescale climate-
driven extinction during this interval of rapid climate change (Botkin et al., 2007). In some regions there was
local or regional extinction, as is apparent throughout the cold-stages of the Quaternary when increasing numbers of tropical species
went locally or regionally extinct in Europe (Tallis, 1991; Svenning, 2003; Willis & Niklas, 2004). There is evidence in the fossil record
for the total extinction of only one species, the east North American spruce Picea critchfieldii (Jackson & Weng, 1999), but
evidence for widespread global extinction of plants in this interval of very rapid climate warming has yet to
be demonstrated. It had been argued previously that the large-scale megafaunal extinction that occurred at the end of the
Pleistocene was climatically driven, but a large number of studies now suggests that this was a predominantly human-driven
extinction event that spanned thousands of years (Koch & Barnosky, 2006; Johnson, 2009) rather than a rapid response to the large
temperature increase at the late-glacial/post-glacial transition.
hysterical
more The idea global temperatures could rise
than some United Nations reports. “ is absurd, and as much as 12 degrees in the next 80 years
not a shred of actual data supports that and observation global ,” Huelskamp said. “As noted in the Nongovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s report Climate Change Reconsidered,
temperatures have stayed largely the same for much of the last 20 years, and sea levels have
not been rising at an accelerated rate . President Trump was required by law to release this report, but he is not required to take it seriously—and he surely will not.”‘Blatantly Absurd Conclusions’
NCA4 is extremely inaccurate because it is based on flawed computer models, says Jay Lehr, Ph.D., science director at The Heartland Institute. “I have never seen such blatantly absurd conclusions drawn entirely from mathematical models that use only a limited
The physical evidence conclusively shows the frequency and strength of hurricanes,
number of variables,” said Lehr. “
floods, and wildfires has been declining for years , not increasing . “Of course, this shoddy science by Obama-era appointees serves its real purpose:
producing a preordained political outcome that puts more power and money in the hands of the United Nations,” Lehr said. The government agencies involved in the report are putting politics above the pursuit of truth, says University of Delaware climatology
professor David Legates, Ph.D. “The Obama administration demanded the use of the extreme scenarios so the predicted impact on the populace would be substantial,” Legates said. “This isn’t about the science. If it were, there would be discussions about the other
scenarios and about the uncertainties in the climate system and in the models that drive these scenarios. “They have taken the worst possible scenarios and packaged them as if they were the expected norm,” said Legates. “Climate science has all but died in this
country.”‘Completely Unbelievable’ NCA4 was written to incite drastic action to fight climate change, says Tom Harris, executive director of the International Climate Science Coalition. “The Fourth National Climate Assessment, released just over a week before the
24th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, seems designed to provide ammunition to those who want drastic action on climate change,” Harris said. “The problem is NCA4’s conclusions are so extreme as to be
completely unbelievable and easily dismissed by any thinking person.” The cost estimates of the harm from future climate changes are built on assumptions about carbon dioxide emissions well outside mainstream analyses, says Patrick J. Michaels, Ph.D., director of
the Center for the Study of Science at the Cato Institute.
“The ‘social cost’ of carbon dioxide emissions is highly dependent upon the assumptions made in its calculation,” said Michaels. “For example, using the historical 7 percent
discount rate and more modest equilibrium climate sensitivities calculated by John Christy and Nic Lewis, the cost actually becomes negative, meaning there is a net benefit of a
few dollars per emitted ton.
“By using lower discount rates and high emissions scenarios and sensitivities, holdovers from the Obama administration were able to calculate costs in excess of $50 per ton,”
Michaels said.
No Impact - Squo Solves
Tech solves—reject their alarmist impact claims
Gertner 6-7-19 (Jon, “Maybe We’re Not Doomed After
All,” https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/07/opinion/climate-change-hope-solutions.html?
emc=rss&partner=rss, ME)
As the effects of a warming climate intensify and a sense of impending catastrophe grows stronger, it’s becoming easier to give in to
environmental despair. Having spent the past five years studying the Arctic and traveling around Greenland, I feel the pull as well.
Glaciers and sea ice are melting at an alarming rate; temperatures are rising at a steady clip. To make matters worse, the Trump
administration’s recent efforts to ignore a fact-based, scientific approach — rejecting, for instance, the use of computer projections
to assess how a warming world might look after 2040 — leads me to worry that climate denialism is moving from the scientific
fringes to the institutional center. Still, it’s worth considering that things
may not be as bad as they appear. I say this
with a full understanding that most indicators are pointing in the wrong direction. Yet I also feel we’re in danger of losing sight
of two crucial and encouraging aspects of our predicament. The first is the extraordinary value
of the climate knowledge we’ve amassed over the past 100 years — a vast archive of data and wisdom that
gives us a fine-grained understanding of how the planet is warming and how we can change the
trajectory we’re on. The second is the emergence of potential solutions , the products of a half-century
of technological innovation, which may help us avert the worst impacts of the carbon dioxide and
other greenhouse gases we continue to release into the atmosphere . (Last year carbon dioxide emissions
were the highest ever recorded.) Almost certainly, these tools, if used wisely, could keep global average
temperatures from rising 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit, or 2 degrees Celsius, from a preindustrial
baseline. Even lesser levels of warming are probably hazardous, but that temperature is the point beyond which many scientists
believe the planet will suffer irreversible impacts from extreme and dangerous warming. Recently, the entrepreneur and
technologist Saul Griffith undertook a study of energy consumption for the Department of Energy and concluded that, using the
United States as an example, “decarbonization
is not an unattainable ideal.” In fact, he surmised it would
be far easier than one might think, given our wealth and technological know-how. We don’t
need to assume an attitude of fear and dread . Our scientific progress is a story of technological
optimism, defined by an extraordinary sense of capability. It shows what might be built and gained in the coming
decades, and not merely what could be lost. First, let’s consider this: For all the terror and gloom that global warming portends, its
discovery is one of the greatest achievements of modern science. Technology can now tell us everything from how
many tons of ice were shed by the glaciers in Greenland over the past few years to how many millimeters the oceans rose. Indeed,
almost every fact or idea that informs the climate debate, from the number of endangered species to the dangers of melting
permafrost, results from countless scientists and engineers , working in the field and in laboratories, over the
course of a century. This knowledge derives not only from heroic human expeditions to tropics, oceans, icecaps
and deserts, but also from exquisite orbiting satellites that constantly scrutinize natural systems and
human impacts on those systems. We know how much we have to fix on this planet, because we’ve figured out how to
measure just about everything. In the past few years, some commentators have warned that modern society’s faith in
technology has led to a mistaken belief that it will save the world. They embrace solutions that encourage
widespread behavioral changes, like consuming less, traveling infrequently and adopting a plant-based diet. We’re likely
to need both technological and personal transformations. But in the end, it’s technology that will save us, not only
because it can but also because it will have to. In many respects, technology is saving us already: by identifying the
magnitude of the threat, providing the extraordinary computing power required to run climate models to predict the
future, and enabling architects and engineers to design for resilience against tempestuous storms
and encroaching seas. Technology has made possible clean and efficient energy systems that
wouldn’t have been achievable a few decades ago, including cheap solar panels, LED lighting and batteries for electric cars. We now
have green buildings that reduce energy usage and an emerging class of solar cells known as perovskites that may greatly lower the
costs of renewable energy, and we are developing techniques to produce concrete that absorbs carbon dioxide rather than emitting
it. There is even room for techno-skeptics. A movement for “natural climate solutions,” like planting vast forests and using
agricultural methods that sequester carbon in the soil, will become increasingly important as technology in the form of “integrated
assessment” computer models tells us how much this approach can mitigate warming trends. In the coming years, moreover, our
ability to improve technology will determine the viability of carbon capture techniques to
reduce atmospheric carbon dioxide and the value (or danger) of injecting aerosols into the atmosphere to shade the
sun, cool the earth and provide more time for a clean-energy transition. The range of hypothetical geoengineering ideas for
the Arctic is equally audacious. One is to use wind power in winter to pump water from the depths of the Arctic Ocean to the
surface to thicken sea ice so that it is more resistant to melting. Sea ice is critical to cooling the planet, because it reflects sunlight
that would otherwise be absorbed by the ocean, heating it. (The downside of this idea, which underscores the scope of the problem,
is that 10 million windmills would be needed.)
Agroecology solves – it makes the environment resilient
Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy 6-20-19 (“Agroecology: Key to Agricultural Resilience
and Ecosystem Recovery,” https://www.resilience.org/stories/2019-06-20/agroecology-key-to-agricultural-
resilience-and-ecosystem-recovery/, ME)
The IPCC gives us 12 years to limit global warming to 1.5˚C. The IPBES Global Assessment has revealed that nearly a million species
are on the verge of disappearance at an unprecedented rate of extinction. Climate change has become a primary cause of
biodiversity loss, while land use change is a key factor in both the climate and biodiversity crises. Both
the IPCC and IPBES
call for “transformative” change that can still reverse these catastrophic trends. Agroecology is a
transformative approach that can galvanize a just transition away from a destructive
conventional agriculture and food system to one that builds agricultural resilience, rebuilds
ecosystems, supports localized, fair food systems and strengthens local communities. It is an
innovative process that seeks to produce significant amounts of food by maintaining and
enhancing biological and ecological processes through practices that minimize the use of external inputs, recycle
nutrients, build healthy, fertile soils and conserve moisture in the agroecosystem. Agroecology puts more power in
local farmers’ hands, in contexts where they have long been disempowered. It is built on traditional knowledge
and cultural practices, enhanced by scientific advances, and spread through farmer-to-farmer exchanges.
The Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) defines agroecology as a scientific discipline, a set of practices and a movement.
It is a dynamic concept that has evolved over decades to expand its scope from a focus on
agroecosystems—understanding field-level farming practices that rely on high agrobiodiversity— to include not only
ecological, but also socioeconomic, nutrition and even equity aspects of agriculture and food
systems. While there are many techniques intended to improve environmental sustainability and yields, agroecology is an
integrated approach to the entire agroecosystem (rather than individual plants, animals, humans or soil
organisms). Agroecologists recognize that technological advances are essential, but that they occur in specific socioeconomic
contexts that can either reinforce or challenge inequality and environmental sustainability. Key agroecological principles, based on
experiential learning from social movements and networks of small-scale farmers, landless farmers and farmworkers, include:
Building on indigenous practices and knowledge generation, as well as empowering local farmers Recognizing women’s central roles
as seed keepers, cultivators and workers Developing
new techniques through experimentation and sharing
among farmers and workers Respecting food sovereignty—the right of peoples to define their own food and agriculture
systems, allowing producers to play a lead role in innovation and placing those who produce,
distribute and consume food at the center of decisions on food systems and policies Despite
agroecology’s successes at withstanding droughts—and hurricanes—there is a lack of awareness among decision-makers of the
significant potential of agroecology to tackle challenges related to the climate and biodiversity crises. As governments at the
UNFCCC engage in the Koronivia Joint Work on Agriculture (KJWA) on adaptation, soils, nutrient use, manure management and
livestock systems (see points: 2.c, d, and e), it is critical that they take note of progress being made on agroecology in key U.N.
bodies and at national and sub-national levels to inform their discussions leading to an agriculture decision at COP 26 and integrate
them in KJWA. In addition, these developments in agroecology should also be a central component in
enhancing mitigation and adaptation within NDCs. Agroecology has been gaining ground in many
U.N. processes, especially those centered at the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). A recent decision by the FAO’s
Committee on Agriculture (FAO 2018 COAG/2018/5) to support agroecology as a key approach to promote sustainable agriculture
and food systems has given rise to FAO’s Scaling up Agroecology Initiative (SAI 2018), which aims to support national agroecology
transition processes through policy and technical capacity that builds synergies between countries. SAI endorses the 10 elements of
agroecology that are based on seminal scientific literature and inputs over a three year process of FAO regional and international
multi-stakeholder symposiums (2015-2018). The
Initiative will develop, implement and continuously
improve tools, instruments and guidance documents for leading national agroecological transitions through alliance
building, co-creation of knowledge and knowledge sharing. (See also five principles of agroecology and five levels of agroecological
transitions.) In addition, the U.N. Committee on World Food Security (CFS) (the foremost inclusive intergovernmental and
international mechanism on food security and nutrition) requested its High Level Panel of Experts (HLPE) in 2017 to elaborate on
agroecological approaches and other innovations for building sustainable food systems that enhance food and nutrition security.
This HLPE #14 report will be released in Rome in July 2019, and its recommendations will be taken up for consideration in October
2019 during the CFS annual meeting. A set of CFS decisions are expected in 2020. Decisions from the CFS would not only guide
national policies on food and agriculture and contribute to informed national debates on food sovereignty and the right to food, but
also help guide the three Rome-based U.N. food agencies in their regional and country level program development. The KJWA
process should in no way undermine the progress being made in these other fora on agroecology and should seek to incorporate the
benefits of agroecology in both international and national level climate policy on agriculture.
A review of scientific
literature examining social and economic indicators in 42 studies showed that adopting
agroecological practices increased yields (in 60% of comparisons), labor productivity (100% of
comparisons) and farm profitability (56% of comparisons), and decreased labor demand (75% of comparisons,
likely resulting from an increase in yield and labor productivity). Because of its emphasis on minimal external
inputs, instead recycling nutrients through a reliance on biological processes and
agrobiodiversity, agroecological practices can be labor intensive but not necessarily cash
intensive. This is an area for further research as the social and economic performance of agroecology and its indicators are not as
well-documented as its impacts on farming communities and other practitioners. Agroecology increases production in
ways that enhance biodiversity and nutritional diversity due to a reliance on integrated cropping
systems rather than unsustainable and intensive monocrop production. This diversified
approach also reduces vulnerability to biotic and abiotic stress from weather and disease . The
advantages of this approach were conclusively demonstrated in the 2008 International Assessment of
Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD), a multi-year study involving hundreds of experts and
several U.N. agencies. The findings were re-substantiated in a report submitted in 2010 to the U.N. Human Rights Council by the U.N.
Special Rapporteur on the right to food, Olivier De Schutter. It showed the additional value of agroecology, not only for fast progress
in the realization of the right to food for vulnerable groups in various environments, but also for economic development. The report
called for appropriate public policies to create an enabling environment. The KJWA should build upon these and
other international
processes that are well underway . A number of national and regional
governments are also moving forward with policy and funding support to institutionalize and
operationalize agroecology. Parties participating in the KJWA should take the time to understand what their own
governments are doing with regards to research and support for the expansion, operationalization and implementation of
agroecology. They can learn from and build upon current international, national and subnational processes. At a minimum, the
discussions and any actions taken through the KJWA must not undermine the enormous potential of agroecology to meet
international climate and food security goals.
Neg -- UQ
UQ -- DH High
UQ -- High Now
The U.S Dollar is unmatched - making up a majority of the world’s reserve
Velina 1/9
Janelle Velina Posted in Capital, Currency, Dollar, economy, Empire, Finance, Foreign Policy,
history, imperialism, International Relations, Trade, USA January 9, 2019/https://llco.org/the-
global-hegemony-of-the-u-s-dollar-a-brief-history///dvb
Since the United States entered into the Second World War considerably late, it did not suffer as much damage or casualties as other countries had. It
also helped that its geographical location kept its cities from suffering the infrastructural damage seen across cities in Europe and Asia. This, in part,
helped the American Empire to replace the British Empire (although Britain is still an imperial power) as the global hegemon, especially when the
American economy took less time to recover in comparison. And so began the all-conquering march of the U.S. Dollar,
undoubtedly the American Empire’s most powerful expression of its global domination and
global monopoly.
As per requirements during WWII, most of Europe under a war economy had to import its consumer goods. The United States,
which had yet to enter into the War, was readily available to trade consumer goods with Europe for gold; and it had done the same
in the First World War, to which it was also a latecomer. In other words, over the course of the two World Wars, it had been
accumulating these gold reserves so that by 1944 it acquired two-thirds of the world’s reserves , thus
overwhelming Europe’s markets with dollar loans . Having gained the economic and
monetary upper-hand, the U.S. sought to make the Dollar the world’s reserve currency . In that
same year, the Bretton Woods Conference — also known as the United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference — reached an
agreement on a series of new rules for the post-WWII international monetary system, leading to the creation of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) and the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD). In other words, almost every
currency in the world was required to be tied to the Dollar at a fixed rate , and the Dollar could only
be tied to gold. This catapulted the United States to global superpower status.
While its client states (such as South Korea, Saudi Arabia, and Colombia) and its support for proxy forces were the worldwide
economic and military fronts of its power projection platform, the Dollar was the international monetary facet. With Western
European powers indebted to the U.S. Dollar, the U nited S tates was free to spread its influence
throughout their states and their politics , helping them to crush many of the communist and labour movements
within their own countries. It also helped to seal the Western European states’ alliances with the United States with the shared goal
of destroying the Soviet Union, as well as uniting in attacking other countries in Eastern Europe and countries in the Global South
that refused to allow U.S. capital into their countries.
~ US dollar is 62% of FER, 90% of trading occurs in USD - Over one third of the
global GDP is accounted for by the nations that peg their currencies to the
dollar.
TK 6/25
Team Kalkine is a team of research analysts providing a high-end content covering industry
news, market commentaries, specific company announcements/ updates, result releases, and
stock price movements while also touching upon market catalysts at a global level relating to
demographics and key economic indicators. June 25 2019.
https://kalkinemedia.com/2019/06/25/europe-and-china-colluding-to-challenge-the-us-dollar-
hegemony///dvb
As of the third quarter of 2018 (Q3 2018), US dollar accounted for approximately 62% of all the known
central bank foreign exchange reserves . Euro is the second closest reserve currency and made up for 21% of
the known central bank foreign currency reserves in Q3 2018.
The Currency Composition of Official Foreign Exchange Reserves (COFER) is depicted in the
chart below .
The relative strength of the US economy fortifies the status of dollar as the de facto global
currency. It is accepted for trade and transactions throughout the world . US bills worth $ 580 billion
are used outside the country, which represents around 65% of all the dollars and most of these bills
may be found in Latin America and former countries of the Soviet Union .
Over one third of the global GDP is accounted for by the nations that peg their currencies to
dollar . As far as the foreign exchange market is concerned, around 90% of forex trading occurs in USD .
Besides, around 40% of the world’s debt is also issued in dollars which causes foreign banks to need sufficient
dollars to conduct businesses.
The significance of USD was also confirmed by the scenario during the 2008 financial crisis.
Even recently in 2017, the banks of Germany, Japan, France and the United Kingdom held more liabilities termed in dollars than in
their own currencies.
Dollar heg high and economists project it to stay that way – empirics prove
yuan and euro don’t stand a chance
Pritchard 16
Evans Pritchard 2016 [Ambrose Evans-Pritchard at the Telegraph, “AEP: Dollar hegemony
endures as share of global transactions keeps rising”, The Telegraph///dvb
The US dollar is tightening its grip on the global financial system at the expense of the euro,
entrenching American hegemony and rendering the US Federal Reserve more powerful than
at any time in history. Newly-released data from the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) show that the dollar’s share
of the $5.1 trillion in foreign exchange trades each day has continued rising to 87.6pc of all transactions. It is the latest evidence
confirming the extraordinary resilience of the dollar-based international order, confounding expectations of US financial decline a
decade ago. Roughly 60pc of the global economy is either in the dollar zone or closely tied to it through currency pegs or ‘dirty
floats’, and the level of debt issued in dollars outside US jurisdiction has soared to $9 trillion. This has profound implications for
monetary policy. The Fed has become the world’s central bank whether it likes it or not, setting
borrowing costs for much of the global system. The BIS data shows that the volume of transactions in which the
euro was on one side of the trade has slipped to 31.3pc from 37pc in 2007. The dollar share has ratcheted up to 87.6pc over the
same period. It is much the same picture for the foreign exchange reserves of central banks, a good barometer of global trust. The
dollar share has recovered to 63.6pc, roughly where it was a decade ago. The Fed has become the world’s central bank whether it
likes it or not, setting borrowing costs for much of the global system The euro share has tumbled over the last eight years from 28pc
to 20.4pc, and is barely above Deutsche Mark share in the early 1990s. “There are no foreseeable rivals to the
dollar as a viable reserve currency,” said Eswar Prasad from Cornell University, author of “The Dollar Trap: How the
US Dollar Tightened Its Grip on Global Finance”. “The US is hard to beat. The US has deep financial markets, a
powerful central bank and legal framework the rest of the world has a great deal of trust in ,”
he said. The eurozone is crippled by the lack of a unified EU treasury, joint bond issuance, and a genuine banking union to back up
the currency. It would require a change in the German constitution to open the way for fiscal union, an unthinkable prospect in the
current political climate . Neither the euro nor the yuan have succeeded in displacing the dollar. “There
are existential questions about the euro. The tensions pulling monetary union apart have not been resolved. It not going to
challenge the dollar even if it does get its economic act together, and that doesn’t look likely,” he said. Prof Prasad, former head of
the International Monetary Fund’s China desk, said the Chinese yuan is gaining global currency share steadily - at the cost of the
euro – but it would be decades before it comes of age. First China has to tame its $27 trillion credit bubble and break out of the
middle-income trap, weaning its economy from investment-led catch-up growth on steroids. He said the Communist system had
become even more rigid under president Xi Jinping, raising the risk that social and political order “might unravel suddenly and
dramatically,” in the event of an economic shock. With hindsight it is clear that the US was never as weak as it looked in the
aftermath of the Lehman crisis in 2008, when China seemed to be walking tall and much of the emerging world was in a secular
commodity boom. The pendulum has since swung back. Zero rates and quantitative easing by the Fed flooded emerging markets
with dollar liquidity, leading to credit booms that have mostly ended painfully over the last for years. The shale revolution in the US
and the revival of its energy intensive industries have eliminated much of America’s current account deficit. The US Treasury’s
draconian policies forced a quick clean-up of the US banking industry, in stark contrast to years of debilitating drift in Europe. The
20pc surge in the dollar index since mid-2014 has silenced any serious talk of a dollar crisis, and revealed just how painful this can be
for emerging markets. “ The world is more reliant on the dollar than ever before. I don’t think
people appreciate this enough,” said Stephen Jen from Eurizon SLJ Capital.
NEG -- AT Thumpers
**Top Level **
Generic
Their thumpers aren’t real disruptions of monetary hegemony – just examples
of new shifts in the same system, since large external imbalances threatening
global finance have existed since the late 90’s.
Brown 2016 [Stuart S. Brown is a Professor of Practice and Vice Chair, Public Administration
and International Affairshttps. Global Imbalanes, Currency Wars, and U.S. Monetary Hegemony.
September 2016. www.maxwell.syr.edu/uploadedFiles/parcc/news/S.%20Brown-%20Final
%20Paper.pdf]
Six years into the recovery from the Great Recession its underlying causes remain contentious. One candidate for core contributor
has been less prominently featured in the popular press - global financial imbalances between chronic current account surplus and
deficit countries. Moreover, macroeconomists have ascribed the recent crisis besetting the European
Monetary Union (EMU) to similarly outsized imbalances between surplus countries like
Germany, Finland and the Netherlands, on the one hand, and deficit countries such as Spain,
Portugal and Greece, on the other (Pettis, 2013; Wolf, 2014; King, 2016).
Seeking the fundamental cause for the Great Recession, and for the subsequent EMU crisis, in intercountry
trade and financial imbalances is understandable. Large external imbalances among key countries and
regions have persisted since the late-1990’s – for the Eurozone since the 2000’s – widening in the run-up to the
crisis. Yet, correlation is not causation and the argument linking the financial crisis to trade (financial) imbalances is
crisis in Europe illustrates why the euro is not a real contender for hegemony in the near
future.
Oil Retal Key
Dollar hegemony is contingent on OPEC oil – other considerations pale in
comparison – thumpers are tiny in relation to this cornerstone of the dollar-
denominated financial system
Springthorpe '13 [Luke Springthorpe is a Graduate from the University of Manchester with a
BA Hons in History & Politics. He currently works in Private Client Wealth Management for
Charles Stanley PLC and is the Editor of Crossbow magazine for the Bow Group. The Hegemony
of the US Dolar. April 8. 2013. https://www.e-ir.info/2013/04/08/the-hegemony-of-the-us-
dollar/.]
Over recent years, the debate surrounding dollar hegemony has faced a renewed revival in a manner that ties in with broader
speculation about the future of the USA’s global role. Not since Robert Keohane’s “After Hegemony” (1983) has the debate been
quite as lively academically.
Of late, the spotlight has increasingly focused on the continued role of the dollar in global finance. There are those, such as Barry
Eichengreen, who have speculated the dollar’s “reign is near an end”. The case for why this may actually be beneficial has gained
traction since a UN report which sought to make the case for an overhaul to the global reserve system.[1] They are by no means in a
minority. I argue, however, that there is reason to believe that there are important
considerations relating to both governance and the strength of US institutions - both
governmental and financial- that mean the end of the dollar’s crucial role in the global
financial system may not be as imminent as some are forecasting.
This is, of course, a discussion that is intertwined with considerations regarding the future of broader US influence. In this article, I
shall consider the key conditions that have maintained dollar hegemony , and criteria to be met by any
challengers who may seek for their own domestic currency to enjoy what is coined the “exorbitant privilege”[2] of reserve currency
status.
There is little doubt that the outcome of any transition from dollar dominance would be
significant, and would represent a wider shift in the balance of power. With international goods and
commodities priced in the dominant reserve currency, the US dollar, the movements of other currencies relative to the reserve
currency have a very real impact. The 2008 decline in sterling against the dollar[3] highlights exactly
this . A bout of inflation followed, putting upward pressure on a whole range of commodities,
the most important being food and petrol. If the value of the domestic currency isn’t what
concerns the majority of citizens, you can bet that the cost of a basket of commonly
purchased goods is.
So, what makes a currency ‘dominant’ as a reserve currency and what exactly is it used for? In the reserve sense, we only consider
how much of a given currency (or denominated assets) sits in the vaults of central banks. In a wider respect, however, it would also
include the currency which international companies predominantly use to price their exports, and the currency which the majority of
commodities are priced in. In each of the aforementioned, the US YNT dollar is still very much the most significant currency and
accounts for approximately 62% of official foreign exchange reserves- up from 59% in 1995.[4] What is also striking is that although
the US only accounts for approximately 15% of global trade[5], the dollar accounts for 84.9% of daily foreign exchange transactions.
[6]The reason being that almost all intra-state trade for goods be it oil from OPEC states , or
wine exports from Chile sold to Japanese buyers, the transaction is likely to be completed in
dollars. All this is despite over a decade of forecasts over its demise; it was previously
hypothesised the Euro would replace the dollar– or at least achieve equal status, for example.
The reasons for the dollar’s continued dominance, despite a financial crisis in 2008 and a ballooning deficit are a textbook case study
of political economy.
First and foremost, there are the economic factors that contribute to continued dollar hegemony. Perhaps most significant is the
fact that the USA has by far the largest and most liquid market for the assets denominated in its currency. The debt issuance by the
US Treasury is substantial, meaning there are plenty of Treasury Bills and other ‘risk free’ assets which can be held by foreign central
banks (thus solving the so-called Triffin Dilemma[7]). Whilst the Eurozone has a similarly large economy, it has no asset that is similar
in its nature to US Treasury stock; that is, mutually guaranteed by the entity as a whole, rather than just a single member state.
While Euro denominated assets are plentiful, their quality varies from one member state to
another.
The dollar is also complemented by the sheer size of the US economy. The USA remains the world’s
largest economy and imports vast quantities of goods. As such, those wishing to sell their goods to the USA will have to do so on the
terms of US companies, part of which is likely to mean invoicing in dollars. The US also has the benefit of better growth prospects
over most of Europe, and a more open economy than China in a number of important regards. Both of these factors combined
ensure the USA is still seen as the most attractive large economy for investors. It also means US
assets are easily tradable and have lower bid-ask price spreads.
Politically, the comparative stability of the USA is also a contributing factor. Even in the face of a
recent downgrade, US Treasury Stock still commands a large degree of confidence in the market given its long and unblemished
track record. Those investing in other dollar assets can also be assured that any US assets are unlikely to be unfairly seized by the
state or affected by uneven enforcement of the law.
AT BRICs
Top Level
BRICS hasn’t dismantled dollar hegemony – its countries are indebted and
highly reliant on dollar-dominated institutions. Those who claim it might
dethrone the U.S. dollar are utterly divorced from reality.
Chossudovsky '18 [Michel Chossudovsky is a Canadian economist and author who works for
the Centre for Research on Globalization. BRICS and the Fiction of “De-Dollarization”. July 24,
2018. https://www.globalresearch.ca/brics-and-the-fiction-of-de-dollarization-2/5441301.]
There has been a lot of media hype regarding BRICS.
While the creation of BRICS has significant geopolitical implications, both the AIIB as well as
the proposed BRICS Development Bank (NDB) and its Contingency Reserve Arrangement (CRA)
are dollar denominated entities . Unless they are coupled with a multi-currency system of trade and credit, they do not
threaten dollar hegemony. Quite the opposite, they tend to sustain and extend dollar
denominated lending . Moreover, they replicate several features the Bretton Woods framework.
Towards a Multi-Currency Arrangement?
What is significant, however, from a geopolitical standpoint is that China and Russia are developing a ruble-yuan YNT swap, negotiated between the
Russian Central Bank, and the People’s Bank of China,
The situation of the other three BRICS member states (Brazil, India, South Africa) with regard to the implementation of (real, rand rupiah) currency
swaps is markedly different. These three highly indebted countries
are in the straightjacket of IMF-World Bank
conditionalities. They do not decide on fundamental issues of monetary policy and macro-
economic reform without the green light from the Washington based international financial
institutions .
Currency swaps between the BRICS central banks was put forth by Russia to:
“facilitate trade financing while completely bypassing the dollar. “At the same time, the new system will also act as a de facto replacement of the IMF,
because it will allow the members of the alliance to direct resources to finance the weaker countries.” (Voice of Russia)
While Russia
has formally raised the issue of a multi-currency arrangement , the Development
Bank’s structure does not currently “officially” acknowledge such a framework :
“We are discussing with China and our BRICS parters the establishment of a system of multilateral swaps that will allow to transfer resources to one or
another country, if needed. A part of the currency reserves can be directed to [the new system]” (Governor of the Russian Central Bank, June 2014,
Prime news agency)
Currency Dictatorship. The Struggle to End US Dollar Hegemony
India, South Africa and Brazil have decided not to go along with a multiple currency
arrangement , which would have allowed for the development of bilateral trade and investment activities between BRICs countries, operating
outside the realm of dollar denominated credit. In fact they did not have the choice of making this decision in view of the strict loan conditionalities
imposed by the IMF.
Heavily indebted under the brunt of their external creditors, all three countries are faithful
pupils of the IMF-World Bank. The central bank of these countries is controlled by Wall
Street and the IMF . For them to enter into a “non-dollar” or an “anti-dollar” development
banking arrangement with multiple currencies, would have required prior approval of the
IMF.
The Contingency Reserve Arrangement
The CRA is defined as a “framework for provision of support through liquidity and precautionary instruments in response to actual or potential short-
term balance of payments pressures.” (Russia India Report April 7, 2015). In this context, the CRA fund does not constitute a “safety net” for BRICS
countries, it accepts the hegemony of the US dollar which is sustained by large scale speculative operations in the currency and commodity markets.
In essence the CRA operates in a similar fashion to an IMF precautionary loan arrangement (e.g. Brazil November 1998) with a view to enabling highly
indebted countries to maintain the parity of their exchange rate to the US dollar, by replenishing central bank reserves through borrowed money.
The CRA excludes the policy option of foreign exchange controls by BRICS member states. In the case of India, Brazil and South Africa, this option is
largely foreclosed as a result of their agreements with the IMF.
The dollar denominated $100 billion CRA fund is a “silver platter” for Western “institutional
speculators” including JP Morgan Chase, Deutsche Bank, HSBC, Goldman Sachs et al, which are involved in short selling operations on the Forex
market. Ultimately the CRA fund will finance the speculative onslaught in the currency market.
Neoliberalism firmly entrenched
An arrangement using national currencies instead of the US dollar requires sovereignty in central bank monetary policy. In many regards, India, Brazil
and South Africa are (from the monetary standpoint) US proxy states, firmly aligned with IMF-World Bank-WTO economic diktats.
It is worth recalling that since 1991, India’s macroeconomic policy was under under the control of the Bretton Woods institutions, with a former World
Bank official, Dr. Manmohan Singh, serving first as Finance Minister and subsequently as Prime Minister.
Moreover, while
India is an ally of China and Russia under BRICS, it has entered into a new
defense cooperation deal with the Pentagon which is (unofficially) directed against Russia and China. It is also cooperating with the
US in aerospace technology. India constitutes the largest market (after Saudi Arabia) for the sale of US weapons systems. And all these
China has never dethroned the dollar – doing so requires international treaties
and negotiations – not just a growing economy.
Cardozo '18 [Claudio Testoni Cardozo has a has a Master's degree in Business Management
from Vale dos Sinos University (UNISINOS), a Master's degree in Business Administration from
the University of Poitiers – Institut d'Administration des Entreprises, France, and an MBA in
Business Process Management from Vale dos Sinos University (UNISINOS). Why China's Yuan Is
Unlikely to Challenge the Dollar Anytime Soon. Novermber 17, 2018.
https://fee.org/articles/why-chinas-yuan-is-unlikely-to-challenge-the-dollar-anytime-soon/]
After the 2008 crisis, there was a decline in dollar preponderance in the international economy
compared to China’s rise, as the latter gradually attempted to reduce dependence on the American
currency and to discuss the possibility of the yuan becoming the main currency used in international market transactions in the
future.
But is this a threat to the dollar’s hegemony? According to several researchers, monetary
hegemony is achieved not
only through coercion but also through the consensus of all parties involved as a synthesis between
domination and direction, or as Perry Anderson says, as a “dynamic balance between force and consent.”
From An Historical Perspective
Let´s take a look at the history behind this American monetary hegemony. At the end of World War II, the Bretton-Woods
agreement confirmed the United States’ central position in the international market with the definition of the international dollar-
gold standard. Soon after, in 1971, Richard Nixon established the inconvertibility of the dollar versus gold relation.
This led the United States to establish “ strong dollar diplomacy” in 1979.
With this act, the dollar shifted to a floating exchange system, separating the relationship and allowing the dollar to float in a flexible
way. This act was called “Nixon Shock” because president Nixon made this decision without consulting the international monetary
system members or even his own State Department. YNT. The United States went on to issue the key currency of international trade
without any external restriction because there was no more need to maintain your local currency fixed compared to the official price
of gold.
This change made by Nixon meant the exit of gold from the international monetary system and kept the world economic market (as
it was before) dependent on the dollar—or, rather, the US banks. This scenario led to speculation in the 1970s that culminated in the
devaluation of the US dollar against other currencies. This led the United States to establish “strong dollar
diplomacy ” in 1979, raising its interest rates, reducing its international market currency in order to reduce their vulnerability,
and attracting investment capital from all over the world. This caused the appreciation of the US currency and consolidated
the American monetary standard .
This historical scenario makes it clear that the United States has been able to demonstrate a high capacity to coordinate the world
economy from its interests. Even after the 2008 crisis, which drew the world’s attention to the weaknesses of the American
economic system (the “Dollar Dilemma”), there is no break from this economic order. Investors turned to US
treasury
bonds , which have maintained their central position in the world economic system. This
brought an image of a reliable economy, representing a safe haven for investors, increasing and reinforcing the concept of universal
reserve of value exerted by the dollar due to the crucial role played by the American state.
More Recently
China's growth in recent years has raised questions about the dollar’s central role in the international economy.
According to the Bank for International Settlements (BIS), from 2010 to 2013, the dollar increased its share of total foreign exchange
transactions from 84.9 percent to 87 percent, ranking the first position followed by the euro, which fell from 39.1 percent to 33.4
percent. The Brazilian real went from 0.7 percent to 1.1 percent, and the yuan rose from 0.9 percent to 2.2 percent. According to the
International Monetary Fund (IMF), in 2014, 61 percent of the total international reserves identified were denominated in US
dollars.
China's growth in recent years, in conjunction with the 2008 crisis, has raised questions about the dollar’s central role in the
international economy. The IMF reviews the basket of currencies every five years. In 2010, the possibility of including the yuan in the
basket appeared but was not accepted. In 2015, there was a new revision, and this time its entry was established the following year.
In October 2016, the yuan became part of the basket of IMF reserve currencies, along with the US dollar, euro, pound sterling, and
the yen. You can see the proportions in the internationalization index of major world currencies below (data collected in 2014):
This fact represents the recognition of the global financial system to the progress made in China in recent years with the reform of
its monetary and financial system. Chinese researchers believe this addition to the IMF currency basket was a success, making the
yuan the fifth largest currency in the world, but despite having a growth rate of internationalization above 85 percent in
comparisons with other currencies like the dollar and the euro, there is still a long way to go:
[…] the process of RMB internationalization is still in the initial stage, and the degree of internationalization is far lower
than some international currencies such as dollar, euro and yen. Therefore, the process of RMB internationalization
China is far behind- the yuan can’t match the sheer dominance of the
greenback - the dollar makes up two thirds of Chinas exchange reserve
Lee 18
Beijing-based correspondent Amanda Lee covers markets and the economy for the Post, with an
interest in China's economic and social landscape. A graduate of the London School of
Economics, she joined the Post in 2017 and has previously worked for Thomson Reuters and
Forbes/28 September, 2018. .https://www.scmp.com/news/china/article/2166072/fed-rate-
rises-trade-war-and-us-dollar-dominance-add-big-headache-beijing///dvb
Countries from Argentina to Turkey have already been battered by higher interest rates in the US as US dollar-
denominated assets became more attractive, triggering capital flight from those countries
that have seen their currencies weaken against the greenback.
Weighed down with US trade tariffs and a domestic debt overhang, China is vulnerable to
capital outflow pressure and sell-offs. Already, Shanghai stocks have lost 15.6 per cent this year and the yuan
an unprecedented pace of depreciation.
has fallen by 9 per cent against the US dollar since April,
The strength and stability of the US dollar has made it the backbone of the world’s reserve
currency system, maintaining liquidity and a safe haven status during times of volatility.
Despite Beijing’s constant complaints about the dollar hegemony over the past decade, the greenback is still the
default choice for China’s trade settlement , and dollar-denominated assets account for about
two-thirds of China’s total foreign exchange reserves.
Economists said the dollar’s status was a source of power for the world’s largest economy.
But while China can temporarily shield its financial markets from fallout from the Fed, it
could lose an economic war if US dollar dominance continues.
“All America has to do to preserve its economic dominance is to grow 2 per cent a year for the next 20 or 30 years,” Huang said.
“[This is because] America’s gross domestic product per capita is seven times as large as China’s. The gap between China
and America just gets bigger and bigger.”
Yuan usage is low even at a key point during China’s drive to overtake dollar
hegemony—shows that it will never happen
Tan '18 2/2/18, Huileng Tan || Huileng covers China's global expansion as a reporter for CNBC || China's currency is still
nowhere near overtaking the dollar for global payments, CNBC || https://www.cnbc.com/2018/02/02/china-currency-yuan-the-
rmb-isnt-near-overtaking-the-us-dollar.html
China is on a drive to promote the use of its currency globally but this is still far from upsetting the greenback,
according to an important global metric.
Data released this week from Swift, the global interbank system that transfers trillions of dollars
worth of currency daily, showed that just 1.61 percent of domestic and cross-border payments
processed in December were denominated in yuan (also known as renminbi, or RMB.)
“The RMB has had a difficult year in 2017 and struggled to realize its potential for growth,” Michael Moon, Swift’s head of payments
markets for Asia Pacific, said in a news release.
Swift noted in its report that, despite
the growing importance of China in the global economy and
various strategic measures to support its currency, yuan usage remains low and “the pace of
adoption remains lower than expected,” Alain Raes, Swift’s chief executive for Asia Pacific and
Europe, the Middle East and Africa, wrote in a report about the Chinese currency.
It’s pretty much still a dollarized world, Swift noted in its report, with the U.S. currency accounting for just under 40 percent of cross-
border payments in December 2017. While that was lower than the same month in 2015 and 2016, it was not the yuan but the euro
that gained over the greenback.
The third and fourth most dominant currencies were the British pound and the Japanese yen, respectively.
In fact, the Chinese currency’s share as a total of global payments fell against the year-ago period. The yuan accounted for 1.68
percent of international payments in December 2016. The currency’s share was 2.31 percent in December 2015.
A major reason why the renminbi has not gained traction among international users is that the
government has instituted strong controls over its financial system, particularly regulatory
measures to stem the money moving overseas for property and other purchases.
Uncertainty about capital controls and regulation will likely persist this year, so the usage of the yuan isn’t poised to increase, Moon
suggested.
Slow start but there’s potential
Still, there are budding signs that international institutions are warming up to the Chinese currency — or just that they’re being
increasingly compelled to use it.
An early adopter of the Chinese yuan is Pakistan, the central bank of which said in January it will be replacing the dollar with the
RMB for bilateral trade and investment with Beijing.
In January, central banks in Europe revealed plans to hold the yuan as part of their foreign currency reserves.
A free float for the yuan is at least four or five years away
Among recent developments bolstering China’s financial clout on a global scale is MSCI finally giving its nod to the addition of
mainland shares into its emerging market index, as well as the launch of various so-called “connect” programs in Hong Kong that will
allow international investors to tap into mainland assets.
The world’s second-largest economy is also reportedly planning a yuan-denominated oil futures contract, which may be convertible
into gold. If that futures contract becomes a benchmark, the geopolitically important oil industry could see a shift in power.
The developments come as the U.S. is widely perceived to be turning inward under the administration of President Donald Trump
just as China is aggressively pursuing a greater leadership role globally.
But even though the building blocks for the internationalization of the renminbi are in place, getting private support
beyond governments can be tough, said DBS economist Chris Leung.
“It will take a longer time for the private sector to completely accept RMB as a settlement currency,” Leung wrote in a recent note.
The biggest issue is the convertibility of the Chinese currency, which is still being largely controlled by Beijing, he said.
How would a yuan-denominated crude futures contract impact the dollar?
There’s little doubt Beijing wants to internationalize the RMB to increase the domestic economy’s attractiveness for foreign
investors and bolster its political ambitions. Under the leadership of veteran central banker Zhou Xiaochuan, the country has
ushered in financial reforms and expanded the yuan’s global reach.
In October 2016, the International Monetary Fund included the Chinese currency in its Special Drawing Rights basket, which already
included the dollar, euro, British pound and Japanese yen.
The next major move that may nudge the world to use more of the yuan could be Chinese President Xi Jinping’s pet project, the Belt
and Road Initiative.
“The global economic landscape is shifting and China’s strategy, along with the RMB, has a role to play. Though the two are not fully
aligned yet, there is opportunity for China to use the RMB as a currency for upcoming infrastructure projects expected as part of the
Belt & Road Initiative,” said Swift’s Raes.
AT China/Russia
De-dollarization hasn’t happened in Russia and China and those shifts will be
extremely difficult. Specifically, OIL IMPORTS are significant to this shift!
Weir '18 [Fred Weir has been the Monitor's Moscow correspondent, covering Russia and the
former Soviet Union, since 1998. He's traveled over much of that vast territory, reporting on
stories ranging from Russia's financial crash to the war in Chechnya, creeping Islamization in
central Asia, Russia's demographic crisis, the rise of Vladimir Putin and his repeated returns to
the Kremlin, and the ups and downs of US-Russia relations. An end to the dollar's global
hegemony? The Kremlin sees an opportunity. October 12, 2018.
https://www.csmonitor.com/World/Europe/2018/1012/An-end-to-the-dollar-s-global-
hegemony-The-Kremlin-sees-an-opportunity.]
For average Russians, a small personal hoard of US dollars has always represented a place of safety amid the wild ups-and-downs
that continue to beset the country's national currency, the ruble.
So it triggered a touch of panic among them when the Russian government confirmed long-standing rumors that it is working on a
plan to insulate the economy from escalating US sanctions through “ de-dollarization .”
The Trump administration has increasingly worked to weaponize the US dollar, by using its hegemonic position as the world's
“reserve currency” to punish any entity or country that attempts to defy proliferating unilateral US sanctions against Russia, Iran,
and China. And the Kremlin is seizing what it sees as an opportunity to force the dollar out of its privileged position in global trade
and finance.
The idea might have sounded quixotic a decade or so ago, when Russia and China first started talking about it. For advocates, it has a
rousing rhetorical ring to it, but experts say it's
an extremely difficult reality to change in practice. Even
Russia and China, the world's leading anti-dollar activists, have so far only managed to shift
about a quarter of their own $60 billion bilateral trade into other currencies.
But now the European Union has announced that it will create a special financial infrastructure to continue trading with Iran, despite
the threat of “secondary sanctions” from Washington. It will have to be built from scratch, to effectively avoid any use of the US
dollar or the global banks and financial circuits that fall under US regulation. The EU, whose own currency, the euro, is a potential
contender to take the dollar's place, has indicated that other signatories of the Iran nuclear deal, such as Russia and China, might
have access to their new payment system for “legitimate” trade with Iran.
In the changing environment other countries, even India, which purchases weapons from sanctioned Russian companies, may find
themselves looking for ways to circumvent the dollar and the US scrutiny that comes with it.
“Of course this plays into Putin's hands, because anything that makes the US look like the enemy, with other countries supporting
us, bolsters his public image,” says Andrei Movchan, economic policy expert with the Carnegie Center in Moscow. “But this is being
driven by the threat that new sanctions, being prepared in Washington, would prohibit Russian banks from dealing in US dollars.”
“In fact, this whole discourse about sanctions and how to evade them is becoming permanent. And, in principle, switching
to
the use of other currencies is feasible; it wouldn't be easy , and would impose a lot of new costs ,
but it can be done.”
The dollar's deep reach
There are short-term risks for the Kremlin in moving against the dollar. The Moscow daily Moskovsky
Komsomolets reported this week that nearly $20 billion has been withdrawn from Russia in the past three months, almost 50 times
the outflow for the same period last year, in part due to the growing official talk about banning the dollar.
But Russian officials have rushed to reassure average citizens that their hard-won right to hold bank accounts denoted in foreign
currency is not under threat. Instead, they have cast the issue in geopolitical terms, warning that the multiplication of US sanctions
against Russia is reaching a point where Washington itself might ban Russian banks from any transactions in dollars. Thus, they say,
the country needs to ready its financial system to meet that challenge.
“More and more countries, not only in the East but also in Europe, are beginning to think about how to minimize dependence on the
US dollar,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told journalists last week. “And they suddenly realize that: a) it is possible, b) it needs
to be done, and c) you can save yourself if you do it sooner.”
Since the end of World War II, the US dollar has been the world's de facto reserve currency. Most goods
traded internationally are priced in dollars, as is 40 percent of global debt and 64 percent of all
governments' foreign currency reserves.
Besides spreading a net of subtle American financial control over much of the world, this has benefited the US in a variety of other
ways. The widespread demand for dollars in international trade, particularly oil and gas, keeps the dollar strong and US interest rates
low, and contributes to its reputation as a “safe haven” currency. Even during the financial collapse of 2008, people the world over
rushed to buy dollars, and dollar-denominated assets such as US treasury bills, in order to keep their money safe.
That, in turn, enables the US government to run very high budget deficits which, despite frequent cries of alarm from conservative
commentators, has yet to create anything like the debt crises that often sink lesser economies, such as Greece. (YNT)
Speaking to an international economic forum in Vladivostok last month, Vladimir Putin warned that US debt is a time bomb that
threatens global stability, and it behooves everyone to get as far away from the dollar as possible as fast as they can. “US foreign
debt amounts to $20 trillion. What will be next? Who knows?” he said.
‘No one wants to hold rubles’
But it's easier said than done. Russia would like to be paid for its exports, especially oil, in a
currency other than dollars . The new Russian government plan will reportedly offer tax incentives for Russian
companies that do business abroad in rubles, which would boost the Russian currency and its international reputation.
“You can talk all you like about de-dollarization, but no one wants to hold rubles , which have lost value
consistently over the past four years,” says Dmitry Oreshkin, head of the Mercator Group, an independent Moscow-
based political think tank. “When you sign contracts, do business over a period of time, everyone needs a reliable
currency that preserves its value. So we are talking about dollars , or maybe euros.”
Russia has succeeded in making the ruble the only currency for domestic transactions, and it has created a domestic payment
system, the Mir card, which is independent from US-based international payment systems like Visa and Mastercard, and hence
sanctions-proof. Yet the Mir card has only 400 participating domestic banks and companies, and is used mainly by the Russian
government to pay its employees and pensioners.
“The ruble-dollar rate remains the standard for Russians. They might use rubles, but they think dollars ,” says
Natalya Orlova, chief economist for Alfa Bank, one of Russia's leading private commercial banks.
“This talk about de-dollarization doesn't mean it will be implemented . It implies that you
should switch, it creates uncertainty, makes the dollar sound toxic. But in practice, it would be
very complicated, and costly, and it would have to be very, very gradual.”
AT NOPEC
OPEC is a powerless organization – it is losing control of the oil markets because
Saudi Arabia is acting independently. Thus, anti-OPEC thumpers don’t apply,
but specific action against Saudi Arabia, a powerful oil producer in its own right,
still does
Treadgold 7/2 [Tim Treadgold studied geology in the 1960s and worked for a small mining
company before getting a start in journalism during the 1969 nickel boom. Opec Is Not Dead Yet,
But It Has Lost Control Of The Oil Market. July 2, 2019.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/timtreadgold/2019/07/02/opec-is-not-dead-yet-but-it-has-lost-
control-of-the-oil-market/#526883e25fa2]
The death of Opec , the oil-producers cartel, has been predicted many times in the past, but
rarely from a member of the club which is why this time it might be correct.
So, when Iran's Oil Minister, Bijan Zanganeh, warned earlier this week on the sidelines of a meeting of the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries that a private production deal negotiated between Russia
and Saudi Arabia "threatened the existence of Opec " he was not exaggerating.
What particularly annoyed Zanganeh was what he called unilateralism, the teaming of two big oil producers to effectively decide
what all Opec members should do.
Adding insult to injury was the fact that one of the countries deciding oil production quotas for the next nine months is not a
member of Opec (Russia is classified as an observer) while the other, Saudi Arabia is a regional enemy.
But, behind the latest oil production and price-rigging exercise is an alarming development that no-one in Opec is prepared to admit
and that's the fact that the cartel and its friends have ceded control of oil to the U.S. and will struggle to get
it back YNT before the renewable energy revolution hits full steam.
The best way to demonstrate the transfer of oil-control to the U.S. (or should that be return of control) is to consider two questions:
which country has the greatest demand for oil and which country is the biggest producer?
To both questions the answer is the U.S., and while there might be an argument over the precise numbers because of Opec's
artificial production controls the reality is that the U.S.
has stormed back into global oil production
leadership courtesy of output from shale and other hard rocks which have been tamed by modern technologies such
as directional drilling and rock fracturing.
The U.S. is also the leader in total oil and gas demand, with China a close competitor in a global economy which is showing signs of
slowing which will further reduce demand for oil.
This is Opec's ultimate problem because while
the cartel's members might believe they control the oil
market, and can increase and decrease production to manipulate the price, the reality is that the game has
changed from a time when a small group of oil producers could hold the world to ransom .
Having a supply competitor in the U.S. is a bad enough for Opec, but having a rival which is also the world's major oil user is double
trouble, especially as the reason the U.S. has reclaimed is oil leadership is not simply a matter of having the right geology, it's more
about having the right technology -- and that technology is transferable from one oil-rich location to another.
The latest production cuts by Opec and Russia might have the desired effect of boosting the oil
price though in doing that it also
encourages increased U.S. shale output .
In a way, Opec is simply subsidizing U.S. shale-oil production as its members try to get the price to a level where
they can balance their budgets.
The irony of what's happening can best be seen in comments from the Saudi oil minister, Khalid al-Falih, who said after the Opec
meeting that U.S. shale oil would one day peak and go the same way as every other oil basin.
"It will peak, plateau and then decline," al-Falih said.
He's absolutely right because that's what happens to every oilfield, and mine, over time.
But what he neglected to add is that the same process of peaking, plateauing and declining is what will also happen to Saudi and
Russian oilfields.
What will last a lot longer than the geology of those fields is the technology to extract difficult or unconventional oil and gas in the
U.S. and the rest of the world as the technology is mastered and exported.
Opec might not be dead but it's certainly a club with some anxious members who are starting to
worry how long they can stick together.
A NOPEC bill is not inevitable – it will fail in congress, just as previous bills have
failed miserably and thus can’t be counted as thumpers
Exarheas 2/14 [Andreas Exarheas is a multimedia journalist with 10 years of experience in
writing, proof reading, researching and editing (copy, audio & video) for online and print media
across a range of industries, including oil & gas, finance, food & beverage, property, sports,
veterinary medicine, travel and entertainment. NOPEC Bill to Fail if Brought to a Vote. February
14, 2019. https://www.rigzone.com/news/nopec_bill_to_fail_if_brought_to_a_vote-14-feb-
2019-158153-article/]
Fitch Solutions expects the NOPEC bill to fail if brought to a vote, according to a report published by
the company earlier this week.
“The U.S. oil industry and oil producing states would fiercely oppose the bill as OPEC serves as key
buffer to low oil prices and any removal of price influence would hurt profits,” Fitch Solutions stated in the report,
which was sent to Rigzone.
“We at Fitch Solutions expect the bill
to fail if brought to a vote as the oil interests and commercial
impacts would be significant and the potential second order effects on U.S. politics, policy and commerce too great
for legislators to risk for the benefit of lower consumer fuel prices,” the company added.
In the report, Fitch Solutions highlighted that the U.S. House Judiciary Committee has passed the ‘markup’ phase of the No Oil
Producing and Exporting Cartels Act. This stage is prior to the floor action phases in which the bill is put on the calendar, debated,
and ultimately voted on, Fitch Solutions confirmed.
“Various versions of the bill have come to this stage of the legislative process previously and
have even passed both the House and Senate, though neither were enacted into law. The President’s office has yet
to state position on the bill though it is expected to be supported,” Fitch Solutions said in the report.
The passage of the NOPEC Act would allow prosecution of sovereign entities under the Sherman Act
by removing elements of sovereign immunity, Fitch Solutions highlighted in the report. The company stated in its publication that
this would open “huge liabilities” to participating OPEC+ producers, “with them potentially facing
unknown financial penalties”.
“Many of the sovereign states may choose to exit the Declaration of Cooperation in order to avoid fallout. Passage of the
NOPEC act, and successful enforcement, could end OPEC's ability to enact production cuts and target
setting, effectively ending the organization’s relevance and impact,” Fitch Solutions stated in the report.
“The end of OPEC interventions could lead to an oversupplied market , lowering fuels costs, although
wild fluctuations in prices would be more likely as balance of supply and demand is a key function of
OPEC's mandate,” Fitch Solutions added.
A NOPEC bill is not inevitable – it will fail in congress, just as previous bills have
failed miserably and thus can’t be counted as thumpers
Exarheas 2/14 [Andreas Exarheas is a multimedia journalist with 10 years of experience in
writing, proof reading, researching and editing (copy, audio & video) for online and print media
across a range of industries, including oil & gas, finance, food & beverage, property, sports,
veterinary medicine, travel and entertainment. NOPEC Bill to Fail if Brought to a Vote. February
14, 2019. https://www.rigzone.com/news/nopec_bill_to_fail_if_brought_to_a_vote-14-feb-
2019-158153-article/]
Fitch Solutions expects the NOPEC bill to fail if brought to a vote, according to a report published by
the company earlier this week.
“The U.S. oil industry and oil producing states would fiercely oppose the bill as OPEC serves as key
buffer to low oil prices and any removal of price influence would hurt profits,” Fitch Solutions stated in the report,
which was sent to Rigzone.
“We at Fitch Solutions expect the bill
to fail if brought to a vote as the oil interests and commercial
impacts would be significant and the potential second order effects on U.S. politics, policy and commerce too great
for legislators to risk for the benefit of lower consumer fuel prices,” the company added.
In the report, Fitch Solutions highlighted that the U.S. House Judiciary Committee has passed the ‘markup’ phase of the No Oil
Producing and Exporting Cartels Act. This stage is prior to the floor action phases in which the bill is put on the calendar, debated,
and ultimately voted on, Fitch Solutions confirmed.
“Various versions of the bill have come to this stage of the legislative process previously and
have even passed both the House and Senate, though neither were enacted into law. The President’s office has yet
to state position on the bill though it is expected to be supported,” Fitch Solutions said in the report.
The passage of the NOPEC Act would allow prosecution of sovereign entities under the Sherman Act
by removing elements of sovereign immunity, Fitch Solutions highlighted in the report. The company stated in its publication that
this would open “huge liabilities” to participating OPEC+ producers, “with them potentially facing
unknown financial penalties”.
“Many of the sovereign states may choose to exit the Declaration of Cooperation in order to avoid fallout. Passage of the
NOPEC act, and successful enforcement, could end OPEC's ability to enact production cuts and target
setting, effectively ending the organization’s relevance and impact,” Fitch Solutions stated in the report.
“The end of OPEC interventions could lead to an oversupplied market , lowering fuels costs, although
wild fluctuations in prices would be more likely as balance of supply and demand is a key function of
OPEC's mandate,” Fitch Solutions added.
AT Trumpers
Trump doesn’t thump – his messing about has failed to dethrone the dollar
despite the predictions of analysts and advisors.
Coy 18 [Peter Coy is the Bloomberg Businessweek Economics Editor. The Tyranny of the U.S.
Dollar. October 3, 2018. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-10-03/the-tyranny-
of-the-u-s-dollar.]
There’s a paradox at the heart of global finance. The U.S. share of the world economy has drifted lower for
decades, and now President Trump is retreating from the American chief executive’s
traditional role as Leader of the Free World. Yet the U.S. dollar remains , as the saying goes,
almighty . “American exceptionalism has never been this stark,” Ruchir Sharma, head of emerging markets and chief global
strategist for Morgan Stanley Investment Management, said at a Council on Foreign Relations symposium on Sept. 24.
By the latest tally of the European Central Bank, America’s currency makes up two-thirds of
international debt and a like share of global reserve holdings. Oil and gold are priced in
dollars, not euros or yen . When Somali pirates hold up ships at sea, it’s dollars they demand. And threats to be cut
off from the dollar-based global payments system strike terror into the likes of Iran, North
Korea, and Russia. It’s no exaggeration to say that the dollar’s primacy is at least as valuable to the U.S. as a couple of aircraft
carrier strike groups.
NEG -- Links
Links - Saudi Petrodollar
Links - Generic
Threats prove retaliation against the dollar is real and possible
Zhdannikov et al. 4-4-19 (4/4/19, Dmitry Zhdannikov, Rania El Gamal, and Alex Lawler || Exclusive: Saudi Arabia
threatens to ditch dollar oil trades to stop 'NOPEC' - sources, Reuters || https://www.reuters.com/article/us-saudi-usa-oil-
exclusive/exclusive-saudi-arabia-threatens-to-ditch-dollar-oil-trades-to-stop-nopec-sources-idUSKCN1RH008)
LONDON/DUBAI (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia is threatening to sell its oil in currencies other than the dollar if
Washington passes a bill exposing OPEC members to U.S. antitrust lawsuits, three sources familiar with Saudi energy policy said.
They said the option had been discussed internally by senior Saudi energy officials in recent months. Two of the sources said the plan
had been discussed with OPEC members and one source briefed on Saudi oil policy said Riyadh had also communicated the threat to
senior U.S. energy officials.
The chances of the U.S. bill known as NOPEC coming into force are slim and Saudi Arabia would be unlikely to follow through, but
thefact Riyadh is considering such a drastic step is a sign of the kingdom’s annoyance about
potential U.S. legal challenges to OPEC.
In the unlikely event Riyadh were to ditch the dollar, it would undermine the its status as the world’s main reserve currency, reduce
Washington’s clout in global trade and weaken its ability to enforce sanctions on nation states.
“The Saudis know they have the dollar as the nuclear option ,” one of the sources familiar with
the matter said.
“The Saudis say: let the Americans pass NOPEC and it would be the U.S. economy that would fall apart,” another source said.
Saudi Arabia’s energy ministry did not respond to a request for comment.
A U.S. state department official said: “as a general matter, we don’t comment on pending legislation.”
The U.S. Energy Department did not respond to a request for comment. Energy Secretary Rick Perry has said that NOPEC could lead
to unintended consequences.
DOLLAR HEGEMONY
NOPEC, or the No Oil Producing and Exporting Cartels Act, was first introduced in 2000 and aims to remove sovereign immunity from
U.S. antitrust law, paving the way for OPEC states to be sued for curbing output in a bid to raise oil prices.
While the bill has never made it into law despite numerous attempts, the legislation has gained momentum since U.S. President
Donald Trump came to office. Trump said he backed NOPEC in a book published in 2011 before he was elected, though he not has
not voiced support for NOPEC as president.
Trump has instead stressed the importance of U.S-Saudi relations, including sales of U.S. military equipment, even after the killing of
journalist Jamal Khashoggi last year.
A move by Saudi Arabia to ditch the dollar would resonate well with big non-OPEC oil producers
such as Russia as well as major consumers China and the European Union, which have been
calling for moves to diversify global trade away from the dollar to dilute U.S. influence over the
world economy.
Russia, which is subject to U.S. sanctions, has tried to sell oil in euros and China’s yuan but the
proportion of its sales in those currencies is not significant.
Venezuela and Iran, which are also under U.S. sanctions, sell most of their oil in other currencies but they have done little to
challenge the dollar’s hegemony in the oil market.
However, if a long-standing U.S. ally such as Saudi Arabia joined the club of non-dollar oil sellers it would be a far more significant
move likely to gain traction within the industry.
WHAT IF?
Saudi Arabia controls a 10th of global oil production, roughly on par with its main rivals - the United States and Russia. Its oil firm
Saudi Aramco holds the crown of the world’s biggest oil exporter with sales of $356 billion last year.
Depending on prices, oil is estimated to represent 2 percent to 3 percent of global gross domestic product. At the current price of
$70 per barrel, the annual value of global oil output is $2.5 trillion.
Not all of those oil volumes are traded in the U.S. currency but at least 60 percent is traded via tankers and international pipelines
with the majority of those deals done in dollars.
Trading in derivatives such as oil futures and options is mainly dollar denominated. The top two global energy exchanges, ICE and
CME, traded a billion lots of oil derivatives in 2018 with a nominal value of about $5 trillion.
Just the prospect of NOPEC has already had implications for the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries. Qatar, one of the
core Gulf OPEC members, quit the group in December because of the risk NOPEC could harm its U.S. expansion plans.
Two sources said that despite raising the dollar threat, Saudi Arabia did not believe it would need to follow through.
“I don’t think the NOPEC bill will pass but the Saudis have ‘what if’ scenarios,” one of the sources said.
In the event of such a drastic Saudi move, the impact would take some time to play out given the industry’s decades-old practices
built around the U.S. dollar - from lending to exchange clearing.
Other potential threats raised in Saudi discussions about retaliation against NOPEC included liquidating the kingdom’s holdings in the
United States, the sources said.
The kingdom has nearly $1 trillion invested in the United States and holds some $160 billion in U.S. Treasuries.
If it did carry out its threat, Riyadh would also have to ditch the Saudi riyal’s peg to the dollar, which has been exchanged at a fixed
rate since 1986, the sources said.
The United States, the world’s largest oil consumer, relied heavily on Saudi and OPEC supplies
for decades - while supporting Riyadh militarily against its arch-foe Iran.
But soaring shale oil production at home has made Washington less dependant on OPEC, allowing it to be more forceful in the way it
deals with Saudi Arabia and other Middle Eastern nations.
Over the past year, Trump has regularly called on OPEC to pump more oil to lower global oil prices, and linked his demands to
political support for Riyadh - something previous U.S. administrations have refrained from doing, at least publicly.
Saudi Arabia will only use the U.S. dollar if it’s in their interest
Davies 6/30/19 Logan Davies is a Regional Manager in the Banking Services industry, and the director of the non-profit
organization, Voluntaryism in Action. He graduated from Middle Georgia State University with a degree in Business Administration .
"The Petrodollar's Influence On US Foreign Policy - Eccentric Economics"https://beinglibertarian.com/petrodollars-influence-us-
foreign-policy/
There is a considerable chance you have heard that the US government invades countries and steals their oil, and the resource being a driving factor in our foreign policy. This is
somewhat correct. Although it may be on a smaller and hushed scale, the government isn’t necessarily invading countries, stealing their oil and proceeding to ship barrels of it
back home. One may counter that the US invades countries that are rich in oil, and then maintains an influential presence and places powerful US companies there to conduct the
export of the valuable resource, and this is a fair assumption. However, the US government’s presence in the Middle East isn’t necessarily to appropriate oil, rather ensure the
longevity of the petrodollar. The petrodollar’s dawn dates back to the 1940s, particularly after WW2. At the Bretton Woods Conference in 1944, the US dollar was established as
the world’s reserve currency. The biggest takeaway from the conference was that since the US held most of the world’s gold, it promised to redeem gold to countries in exchange
for US dollars. In 1945, President Franklin D. Roosevelt met with the King of Saudi Arabia and formalized an alliance. This cemented a relationship between the dollar and oil,
though its marriage would not be knitted until decades later. Excessive spending in the 1960s on various government programs and the Federal Reserve’s manipulation caused
excess dollars to circulate the international economic environment, predictably decreasing its value. This made other countries exchange their dollars for gold at a faster rate, most
notably Britain in the early 1970s. To stop the drain, Nixon removed the US dollar from the gold standard and defaulted on its promise to redeem gold for dollars, which in turn
informally ended the Bretton Woods agreement. Since the dollar was no longer redeemable in gold nor backed by any substance of value, countries had no incentive to continue
utilizing the dollar as the world reserve currency. The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) began discussing accepting payments other than the US dollar,
including gold. After removing the US dollar from the gold standard and inciting a shock and widespread inflation, coupled with another shock induced by OPEC’s embargo on
nations supporting Israel, the US needed a resolution that would attract countries to keep the dollar as their reserve. With Saudi Arabia being one of the most prominent and
powerful members of OPEC, they and the US strengthened their economic alliance in an agreement known as the United States-Saudi Arabian Joint Commission on Economic
Cooperation. With Saudi Arabian influence, OPEC agreed to use US dollars for oil contracts, and would then recycle the US dollars back to the US. In exchange, the US promised
to keep the House of Saud in power to ensure the US dollar would be utilized for oil trade. This agreement officially gave birth to the petrodollar.
Concisely, an important factor of the US dollar’s value is its dependency on oil trade and the
currency being exchanged between exporting and importing nations. It should be noted, even if the
US isn’t involved in trade between paticular nations, they use US dollars to purchase the oil . This creates an artificial
demand for the US dollar. It is a medium of exchange backed by virtually nothing, with its value being derived from its
exchange utility and, of course, debt. The US dollar is a global currency, and the vast majority of
international transactions are priced in US dollars. Therefore, oil-exporting countries receive revenue in US
dollars. Due to its widespread use, the national income of many oil-exporting nations is dependent upon the value of the dollar. With
the historic market volatility of oil prices, countries that are dependent on the exportation of oil peg their currency to the US dollar,
and do this in the instance the value of the dollar falls, making all of their goods and services in their economies fall to prevent
damaging inflation or deflation. In due time, oil-exporting nations began branching out to ensure their economies did not depend
solely on oil and thus experience the dreaded Dutch disease. These nations began to recycle their US dollars through sovereign wealth
funds, which are invested into non-oil-related ventures essentially making them less dependent on oil. To the alarm of the US, 70% of
the 700 billion investable reserve funds are untraceable. If it is invested in US treasury bonds, a mass withdrawal could destabilize the
dollar. Most countries won’t attempt this, however, since the US is one of OPEC’s biggest customers. However, countries that refuse
to use or attempt to discard the petrodollar for international trade make trade agreements with one another, using their preferred
currencies instead of the petrodollar. Some of examples of these countries are Russia, Iran and Venezuela. A notable nation that faced
repercussions and military actions for its attempt to use gold instead of US dollars was Libya. Conclusively, the US dollar relies
heavily, but not exclusively, on its use as a medium of international exchange, and it is vital nations play along and continue to utilize
it. The history of the petrodollar offers a convincing explanation of why the US is consistently involved in Middle Eastern affairs. It
must continue to satisfy Saudi Arabian interests to ensure they continue to use the US
dollar, and install governments and regimes in nations that will employ the petrodollar to
ensure the currency’s longevity.
AT Won’t Retal - Yes Alternatives
A convergence of other factors means the plan tips everything over the brink
Paul ’18 (1/29/18, Ron Paul || Ron Paul is a former member of Congress and Distinguished Counselor to the Mises Institute|| A
Growing List of Threats to the Dollar, Mises Institute ||https://mises.org/power-market/growing-list-threats-dollar)
Last week the Senate confirmed Jerome Powell as Federal Reserve Chairman by a vote of 84-13. This is in contrast to the contentious
debates and closer votes over Janet Yellen’s confirmation in 2014 and Ben Bernanke’s confirmation for a second term in 2010.
Powell benefited from a perception that the economy’s recovery from the 2007-08 meltdown proves that the Fed is a capable
manager of monetary policy. However, the perceptions of economic recovery and Federal Reserve competence are both far from
the truth.
The economy may seem to have recovered, but the recovery is not built on a firm foundation. Instead it rests on
Fed-created bubbles in areas such as automobile sales, credit cards debt, student loan debt, stocks, and even a new housing bubble.
The most dangerous bubble is the government debt bubble. The Fed facilitates deficit spending by monetizing
the federal debt. The desire to enable Congress’ spending addiction is a major reason why the Fed cannot significantly raise interest
rates, as increasing rates could increase federal debt payments to unsustainable levels. This may be one reason why President
Trump has reversed course and endorsed low interest rates. Of course, all first-term presidents want low interest rates since they
believe the low rates boost the economy and thus help them win reelection.
China is pressuring
One of the issues Powell will face is increasing challenges to the dollar’s world reserve currency status.
Saudi Arabia to price oil in Chinese yuan instead of in American dollars. China and other
countries may take other steps, such as halting purchases of Treasury bonds, that could weaken
the dollar. The threats to the dollar’s world reserve currency status will increase as concerns
about US government and private sector debt, as well as resentment over US militarism and
protectionism, grow.
The dollar still maintains its reserve currency status not because the dollar is strong, but because other countries’ currencies are
weak. However, unless the US gets its economic house in order, that may not long be the case.
A new challenge to the dollar’s status is emerging from the private sector as more individuals seek alternatives to
government-created fiat currency. The dramatic increase in the value of bitcoins may very well be another Fed-created
bubble, but it is one fueled in part by desire to be free of the Fed’s ever-depreciating paper dollars.
Another sign of the people’s rejection of the Fed is the passage of state laws recognizing gold
and silver as legal tender. Arizona passed such a law last year and Wyoming will soon consider a
similar bill. As the failure of our current system becomes more apparent, more states will give their citizens freedom from the
Fed’s money monopoly.
Much to new Fed Chairman Powell’s chagrin, support for the Audit the Fed bill remains high. As knowledge of how the Fed
endangers prosperity grows, the pressure on Congress to pass Audit the Fed will prove irresistible.
Jerome Powell may seem to be assuming the Fed chairmanship at a time of increasing prosperity and renewed respect for the Fed.
However, the prosperity is an illusion built on a series of Fed-created bubbles whose bursting will cause a major economic downturn.
This will increase both the growing challenges to the dollar’s world reserve currency status and the number of people seeking
Powell could be the last Fed chairman if the next Fed-
alternatives to Federal Reserve-created fiat currency.
created economic crisis leads the people to force Congress to audit and then end the Fed.
Rising Chinese ambition guarantees the plan triggers a laundry list of impacts
Guzman ’18 (8/16/18, Timothy Alexander Guzman || is an independent researcher and writer with a focus on political,
economic, media and historical spheres. He has been published in Global Research, The Progressive Mind, European Union
Examiner, News Beacon Ireland, WhatReallyHappened.com, EIN News and a number of other alternative news sites. He is a
graduate of Hunter College in New York City. || The Currency War Will Escalate as China's Petro-Yuan Challenges the US Military-
Backed Petro-Dollar, Global Research||https://www.globalresearch.ca/a-currency-war-will-escalate-as-chinas-petro-yuan-is-set-to-
challenge-the-u-s-military-backed-petro-dollar/5616456)
China (the largest holder of U.S. debt) is the largest importer of oil, while Russia, one of the
largest exporters of oil in the world have agreed to use the petro-Yuan to bypass the petro-
dollar. The petro-Yuan threatens the U.S. dollar’s hegemony around the globe as several nations
have recently demonstrated as they all share an interest in joining the transition from the U.S.
dollar to the Yuan for oil transactions including Washington’s arch enemies Iran, Venezuela and
even Indonesia (currently not on Washington’s hit list).
The mainstream-media has been reporting on the latest developments concerning China’s plan to bypass the dollar and introduce
the petro-Yuan to the international community in an article by CNBC titled ‘China has grand ambitions to dethrone the dollar. It may
make a powerful move this year’:
China is looking to make a major move against the dollar’s global dominance, and it may come as early
as this year. The new strategy is to enlist the energy markets’ help: Beijing may introduce a new way to price oil in coming months —
but unlike the contracts based on the U.S. dollar that currently dominate global markets, this benchmark would use China’s own
currency. If there’s widespread adoption, as the Chinese hope, then that will mark a step toward challenging the greenback’s status
as the world’s most powerful currency.
China is the world’s top oil importer, and so Beijing sees it as only logical that its own currency should price the global economy’s
most important commodity. But beyond that, moving away from the dollar is a strategic priority for
countries like China and Russia. Both aim to ultimately reduce their dependency on the
greenback, limiting their exposure to U.S. currency risk and the politics of American sanctions
regimes
Washington is on a collision course for another war with North Korea with U.S. President Donald Trump leading the charge. With
the power of the U.S. dollar on life support, the U.S. empire of debt continues to use the threat
of war and in some cases, wage actual wars around the world namely Iran, Syria and Venezuela
which have been on Washington’s hit list for some time. Iran and Russia are already slowly
transitioning away from the U.S. dollar to avoid any future economic sanctions imposed by
Washington. Venezuela is also ready and willing to make its move against the U.S. dollar. Reuters did report on the decision
made by the Maduro government to implement a new system of international payments for its oil exports. The report headlined
with ‘Venezuela’s Maduro says will shun U.S. dollar in favor of yuan, others’ quoted what Maduro had said during a session of the
National Constituent Assembly at Palacio Federal Legislativo in Caracas, Venezuela:
“Venezuela is going to implement a new system of international payments and will create a basket of currencies to free us from the
“If
dollar,” Maduro said in an hours-long address to a new legislative superbody, without providing details of the new mechanism.
they pursue us with the dollar, we’ll use the Russian ruble, the yuan, yen, the Indian rupee, the
euro,” Maduro said
Another recent article published by CNBC ‘China will ‘compel’ Saudi Arabia to trade oil in Yuan — and that’s going to affect the US
dollar’ interviewed Carl Weinberg a chief economist and a managing director at High Frequency Economics about how the US dollar
will lose its global dominance in the near future once Saudi Arabia will be forced to use the petro-Yuan since China is the world’s top
importer of oil:
Carl Weinberg, chief economist and managing director, said Beijing stands to become the most dominant global player in oil demand
since China usurped the U.S. as the “biggest oil importer on the planet.”
Saudi Arabia has “to pay attention to this because even as much as one or two years from now,
Chinese demand will dwarf U.S. demand, ” Weinberg said. “I believe that yuan pricing of oil is
coming and as soon as the Saudis move to accept it — as the Chinese will compel them to do
— then the rest of the oil market will move along with them”
The U.S. dollar is slowly losing its’ status as the world’s reserve currency, so is a war with China a possibility? Would the U.S. attack
North Korea as a stern warning to China or would it bring China into the conflict in an attempt to save the U.S. dollar? Saddam
Hussein wanted to trade in Euro’s instead of the U.S. dollar for Iraq’s oil exports and Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi wanted the Gold
Dinar to dethrone the U.S. dollar in the continent of Africa. The decisions made by both Iraq and Libya had consequences that led to
their destruction by U.S. and NATO forces. Can the U.S. do the same to China? I highly doubt it since China has a formidable military
that can defend itself against any U.S. attack. China is certainly not Iraq nor Libya. So will there be a war against China in the long
term? With the U.S. steadily collapsing at a slow pace, Washington would do anything to survive. The U.S. dollar supports the
Military-Industrial Complex and its destructive and very expensive adventures around the world.
The launch of the petro-Yuan will accelerate the process in what we can call De-Dollarization.
However, there are some people in the mainstream-media that are not convinced that the petro-Yuan will overthrow the U.S. dollar
anytime soon, for instance, David Fickling from Bloomberg News recently wrote ‘The Petroyuans time hasn’t come’ said:
Look, for instance, at the most-traded product on the Dalian Commodity Exchange in China, iron ore. While mainland commodity
markets have seen febrile activity in recent years, bid-ask spreads are still several times higher than those on major contracts traded
in London and New York. That makes trading more costly, volatility higher, and price discovery weaker — and as a major consumer
of crude, Beijing ought to be opposed to that sort of change.
The plan turns Saudi Arabia into one of our rivals and incentivizes a switch from
the dollar—the only reason it hasn’t yet is because of strong ties with the US
Wearden ’09 (10/6/09, Graeme Wearden || Wearden tracks the latest world business, economic and financial news in our
daily liveblog. Previously he worked as a technology journalist at CNET Network || US rivals 'plotting to end oil trading in dollars,'
The Guardian ||https://www.theguardian.com/business/2009/oct/06/oil-us-dollar-threat-to-america)
China, Russia, Japan and several of the most powerful Gulf States are actively plotting to end the
decades-old practice of buying and selling oil in dollars, the Independent claimed today.
The newspaper said the plan is for the US currency to be replaced for trading oil by a basket of
currencies, including the Japanese yen, the Chinese yuan, the euro, gold and a new, single
currency for the Gulf states. If executed, the move would be a significant blow to the dollar's
position as the premier world currency and would potentially threaten America's position as the
world's leading economy.
According to the Independent, gold could be used as a temporary replacement for the dollar while the new currency basket was
implemented.
"Secret meetings have already been held by finance ministers and central bank governors in Russia, China, Japan and Brazil to work
on the scheme, which will mean that oil will no longer be priced in dollars," it claimed.
"Chinese financial sources believe President Barack Obama is too busy fixing the US economy to concentrate on the extraordinary
implications of the transition from the dollar in nine years' time. The current deadline for the currency transition is 2018," added.
The dollar fell by around 0.4% against a basket of other currencies following the report. This
pushed gold to a new all-time high of $1,035 per ounce.
The report was swiftly denied by several of the world's biggest oil producers. Muhammad al-Jasser, head of the Saudi Arabian
central bank, claimed it was "absolutely incorrect", while Russian finance minister Dmitry Pankin and a Kuwaiti oil minister both
denied discussing a move away from the dollar.
A source within the United Arab Emirates central bank also told Reuters that it would be sticking with the greenback.
A flawed system?
But analysts believe that the dollar's long-term future as the currency for oil trading is indeed in doubt.
"China, Russia and many Middle East countries already have large dollar reserves. They want to
stop them getting higher, and may even want to star t diversifying them into other currencies,"
pointed out David Hart, oil and gas analyst at investment bank Hanson Westhouse.
For years, economists have speculated about how long oil would continue to be traded in dollars. Critics argue that the current
system is flawed; oil importers are forced to buy dollars to pay for their fuel, while exporters are left with billions of dollars which
they often hold in reserve or reinvest in the US economy. The result, they say, is that the dollar's position as the global reserve
currency is reinforced. Thus, the US economy is supported as any devaluation would cause damage across the world. Most of China's
$2tn (£1.24tn) of foreign currency reserves are in dollars, for example.
Hart said that it is inevitable that the dollar's dominance over the oil market will be broken eventually, possibly sooner than 2018. He
believes the transition would happen slowly, rather than a sudden switch.
"Let's face it, bilateral trade between China and these other countries is growing, so you can see why there is interest in matching up
the currencies," said Hart. "If China and Russia are trading oil, why would they want to do that solely in
dollars?"
Saudi Arabia will be spurred on by Russia and China—no longer needs to listen
to the US
Pieraccini ’17 10/4/17, Federico Pieraccini || He is an Independent freelance writer specialized in international affairs,
conflicts, politics and strategies || Challenging the Dollar: China and Russia's Plan from Petroyuan to Gold, Strategic Culture
Foundation || https://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2017/10/04/challenging-dollar-china-russia-plan-from-petroyuan-gold/
Beijing has started putting strong pressure on Riyadh to start accepting yuan payments for oil
instead of dollars, as are other countries such as the Russian Federation. For Riyadh, this is an almost
existential issue. Riyadh is in a delicate situation, dedicated as it is to keeping the US dollar tied to oil, even though its
main ally, the US, has pursued in the Middle East a contradictory strategy, as seen with the JCPOA agreement. Iran, the main
regional enemy of Saudi Arabia, was able to have sanctions lifted (especially from Europeans countries) thanks to the JCPOA. In
addition, Iran was able to pursue a historic victory with its allies in Syria, gaining a preeminent role in the region and aspiring to
become a regional powerhouse. Riyadhis obliged to obey the US, an ally that does not care about its fate
in the region (Iran is increasingly influential in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon) and is even competing in
the oil market. To make matters worse for Washington, China is Riyadh’s largest customer; and considering
the agreements with Nigeria and Russia, Beijing can safely stop buying oil from Saudi Arabia
should Riyadh continue to insist on receiving payment only in dollars. This would badly hurt the
petrodollar, a perverse system that damages China and Russia most of all.
For China, Iran and Russia, as well as other countries, de-dollarization has become a pressing issue. The
number of countries that are beginning to see the benefits of a decentralized system, as
opposed to the US dollar system, is increasing. Iran and India, but also Iran and Russia, have
often traded hydrocarbons in exchange for primary goods, thereby bypassing American
sanctions. Likewise, China's economic power has allowed it to open a 10-billion-euro line of credit to Iran to circumvent recent
sanctions. Even the DPRK seems to use cryptocurrencies like bitcoin to buy oil from China and bypass US sanctions. Venezuela
(with the largest oil reserves in the world) has just started a historic move to completely
renounce selling oil in dollars, and has announced that it will start receiving money in a basket of currencies without US
dollars. (This is not to mention the biggest change to have occurred in the last 40 years). Beijing will buy gas and oil from
Russia by paying in yuan, with Moscow being able to convert yuan into gold immediately thanks to the Shanghai
International Energy Exchange. This gas-yuan-gold mechanism signals a revolutionary economic change
through the progressive abandonment of the dollar in trade.
Trump administration actions are pushing China and Saudi Arabia together—
unique convergence of factors means the plan guarantees Saudi retaliation
Hatfield ’18 (12/18/18, Matthew Hatfield || writer for the Harvard Political Review || The Worrisom Deal: China and Saudi
Arabia, Harvard Political Review || https://harvardpolitics.com/world/the-worrisome-deal-china-and-saudi-arabia/)
In the end, the linchpin of this relationship is Saudi Arabia’s confidence in the United States dollar,
as it indicates the weight of the Saudi’s trade surplus power. If these conditions are fulfilled, any cheating or straying from Saudi
Arabia’s under-the-table agreement would be illogical and detrimental. However, the United States’ continuing trade and fiscal
Combine this with the unforeseen rise of China
deficits are weakening the dollar and Saudi petrodollar holdings.
and conciliatory actions by China towards Saudi Arabia, and the United State’s petrodollar is in
obvious trouble.
Earlier this year, the Chinese Ambassador Li Huaxin was pictured with Saudi officials as he praised
Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030, which calls for stronger economic cooperation between the two
nations. This pact pressures Saudi Arabia to adopt the “petro-yuan,” which would effectively
axe the petrodollar. Although Saudi Arabia relies heavily on U.S. military power, Saudi Arabia warming ties with China
closeness are alarming. China’s growing economy and standing in the world could undermine the attitude towards the United States.
Above anything else, a shift in alliances could threaten America ’s standing in the Middle East
and world.
The prospective decline of American power through the destabilization of the petrodollar could disrupt a balance of power that has
ensured relative world peace since the Cold War. A weak US economy would leave the nation with a weaker and drive a new dual-
hegemony between Russia and China, who signed an Eurasian Economic Cooperation pact on May 17th in Astana. As Russia
continues to “heat” Europe through its natural gas reserves, which are not sold via the dollar, taking global energy off the dollar – by
taking it off of oil altogether – is a future possibility.
In the last few months, the United States’ reaction to the Chinese-Saudi Arabia negotiations have been rather quiet with little report
to no media attention . With President Trump’s continued rhetoric and talk, it is clear that tariffs and a trade war will be of continual
focus, at least much more relative to the possible attack at the petrodollar, and indirectly, at inflation in the United States.
Time will tell if President Trump continues with the United States’ historic and desperate protectionism of the petrodollar. However ,
as other nations like China and Russia rise to power, America should be weary of confrontation
in this region. In the end, America has an interesting competitive advantage in its petrodollar deal with regional powers like
Saudi Arabia. A final wild card–better energy technology and natural gas, especially from Russia and
Iran–can weaken OPEC supremacy over the oil market, and thus the petrodollar. However, this is
not as dangerous as Chinese intervention into crushing the petrodollar. Nevertheless, with a trade war
ensuing, a new battle is in the horizon and time will tell what happens.
AT Won’t Retal - Arms Key
Saudi Arabia’s number one priority is arms—strong relations now with the US
proves—the plan is more likely than OPEC to trigger the link
Hennigan ’18 (10/18/18, W.J. Hennigan || W.J. Hennigan covers the Pentagon and national security issues in Washington
DC, worked for more than 8 years at the LA Times || What Makes the US-Saudi Relationship so Special? Weapons, Oil, and 'An Army
of Lobbyists,' TIME ||https://time.com/5428669/saudi-arabia-military-relationship/)
It’s a cold financial calculation: Saudi money for U.S.-made weaponry results in American jobs.
This is President Donald Trump’s rationale in dismissing calls in Congress to halt future arms sales to Saudi Arabia following the
mysterious disappearance of Jamal Khashoggi, the Saudi journalist and American resident.
“I don’t like the concept of stopping an investment of $110 billion into the United States,” Trump said last week.
“All they’re going to do is say, ‘That’s OK. We don’t have to buy it from Boeing. We don’t have to buy it from Lockheed. We don’t
have to buy it from Raytheon and all these great companies. We’ll buy it from Russia. We’ll buy it from China,” he said.
The 75-year alliance between the two nations has been built on a simple arrangement:
American demand for Saudi oil and Saudi demand for American firepower.
It is a relationship that is not easily unwound as a bipartisan group of U.S. Senators found out earlier this year when they moved to
cut off military assistance to the Saudis in their war against Houthi rebels in Yemen. The United Nations has said that more half of
the more than 10,000 people who have been killed in the three-year old war are civilians, and the lives of millions are potentially at
risk from famine.
The U.S. government has provided intelligence, munitions and midair refueling to Saudi warplanes since operations kicked off in
2015. Attempts by American lawmakers to stop that aid have thus far failed.
Saudi Arabia has spent at least $5.8 million on lobbying Congress this year, according to data compiled by the Center for Responsive
Politics, a government watchdog. But recently filed documents detailing expenses and reimbursements put the actual number closer
to $9 million, said Lydia Dennett, investigator with the Project on Government Oversight.
“The Kingdom has a veritable army of lobbyists and PR firms working to promote their interests
in a wide variety of ways,” she said.
The Foreign Influence Transparency Initiative, a left-leaning think tank in Washington, recently compiled records filed under Foreign
Agents Registration Act that show in 2017 Saudi lobbyists contacted over 200 members of Congress, including every Senator. The
data also found the Saudi agents contacted officials in the State Department, which oversees foreign military sales, nearly 100 times.
The Saudi-U.S. relationship is peerless when it comes to arms sales. The kingdom buys more
American weapons than any other nation. Saudi Arabia accounted for nearly one-fifth of American of all weapons
exports over the past five years, according to a recent report by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute.
The Pentagon has a team of U.S. service members based out of the capital Riyadh wholly dedicated the “management and
administration of Saudi Arabian Foreign Military Sales.” It serves as a direct pipeline to move weapons from U.S. arms manufacturers
into the arms of the Saudi military.
The U.S. military’s Joint Advisory Division works alongside commanders in each branch of the Saudi military to help fill their weapons
needs. Once the Saudis commit to what they want — tanks, attack helicopters, missiles, ships, laser-guided bombs — the arms
packages must be OK’d by the U.S. Defense and State Departments, and approved by Congress.
The arrangement falls under the U.S. Military Training Mission to Saudi Arabia, which is led by a two-star American general. The
mission is primarily designed to bolster Saudi Arabia against arch-rival Iran in order to assert power and influence in the Middle East.
“We have other very good allies in the Middle East, but if you look at Saudi Arabia: They’re an ally and they’re a tremendous
purchaser of not only military equipment, but other things,” Trump said Wednesday in the Oval Office.
It was the President’s latest attempt to trumpet $400 billion in business deals that his
administration signed in May 2017 during a two-day visit to Saudi Arabia. The eye-popping figure
includes $110 billion in military sales, which analysts point out is misleading because it represented letters of interest and not
firmed-up contracts.
Saudi Arabia has thus far only committed to purchase $14.5 billion-worth of equipment since the announcement was made 17
The Administration says the Saudis are currently pursuing more than $114 billion in
months ago.
military hardware.
But even if the kingdom moves forward with the sales, the transactions wouldn’t be worth it, according to William D. Hartung,
director of the arms and security project at the Center for International Policy. “Jobs are no excuse for arming a regime with Saudi
Arabia’s dismal human rights record, whether it is its role in the killing of Jamal Khashoggi or its indiscriminate bombing of civilians in
Yemen,” he said.
The Khashoggi case has caused an escalating debate on Capitol Hill over the U.S.-Saudi relationship. Lawmakers on both sides have
called for a reappraisal if the kingdom is found responsible for Khashoggi’s disappearance or death.
James Carafano, a vice president at the Heritage Foundation, a conservative think tank, says it’s critical that Washington doesn’t rush
policy changes on such an enduring alliance until the facts are clear. “This isn’t an episode of ‘Law & Order.’ This is a murder
investigation and a murder investigation takes a lot of time,” he said.
The Trump Administration has repeatedly called for patience. On Thursday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo told reporters outside
the White House that the U.S. will give Saudi Arabia a “few more days” to “conduct a complete, thorough investigation.”
“We’re all going to get to see the response from Saudi Arabia to this,” he said. “When we see that, we’ll get a chance to determine—
all of us will get a chance to make a determination as to the credibility of the work that went into that, whether it’s truly accurate,
fair, and transparent in the very way they made a personal commitment to me, and ultimately made a personal commitment to the
president when they spoke to him.”
Before taking the short walk back into the White House, he added that Saudi Arabia was also “an important strategic alliance of the
United States. We need to be mindful of that as well.”
It should be obvious that the Chinese are having other central banks hold the Yuan in their reserves.
Since 2008, a weak US economy has contributed to the decline of global dollar reserves and created opportunities for the rest for
the world. This has resulted in a decline of American influence globally and increased the momentum for a de-dollarized world.
The dollar’s dominance was carried over four decades due to the ability to purchase Saudi oil with the paper money.
As investors saw in part one, the Saudi Kingdom is preparing for a new global system and unrest
in the middle east. And the world now seeing the powerful China and Russian gas relations,
countries can now begin to sell their commodities to other countries in their own domestic
currencies without the degradation from American pressure in foreign policy.
Saudi Arabia will ditch the dollar if the US hurts their relations
Zhdannikov et al 19 (Dmitry Zhdannikov, Rania El Gamal, Alex Lawler, Zhdannikov is a
Reuter's energy editor, El Gamal is the Chief Energy Correspondent at Reuters, Lawler is a Senior
Correspondent at Reuters, "Exclusive: Saudi Arabia threatens to ditch dollar oil trades to stop
'NOPOEC' - sources", 4/4/19, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-saudi-usa-oil-
exclusive/exclusive-saudi-arabia-threatens-to-ditch-dollar-oil-trades-to-stop-nopec-sources-
idUSKCN1RH008)
Saudi Arabia is threatening to sell its oil in currencies other than the dollar if Washington
passes a bill exposing OPEC members to U.S. antitrust lawsuits, three sources familiar with Saudi energy
policy said.
They said the
option had been discussed internally by senior Saudi energy officials in recent months. Two of
the sources said the plan had been discussed with OPEC members and one source briefed on Saudi oil policy said Riyadh
had
also communicated the threat to senior U.S. energy officials .
The chances of the U.S. bill known as NOPEC coming into force are slim and Saudi Arabia would be unlikely to follow through, but
the fact Riyadh is considering such a drastic step is a sign of the kingdom’s annoyance about potential U.S. legal challenges to OPEC.
In the unlikely event Riyadh were to ditch the dollar, it would undermine the its status as the
world’s main reserve currency, reduce Washington’s clout in global trade and weaken its ability
to enforce sanctions on nation states.
“The Saudis know they have the dollar as the nuclear option ,” one of the sources familiar with the matter said.
“The Saudis say: let the Americans pass NOPEC and it would be the U.S. economy that would fall apart ,” another
source said.
Saudi Arabia’s energy ministry did not respond to a request for comment.
A U.S. state department official said: “as a general matter, we don’t comment on pending legislation.”
The U.S. Energy Department did not respond to a request for comment. Energy Secretary Rick Perry has said that NOPEC could lead
to unintended consequences.
Link -- Empirics
Canada is an empirical example
Onoszko and Algethami ‘18 (8/8/18, Maciej Onoskzko and Sarah Algethami || Staff members of Bloomberg ||
Canadian dollar whipsaws as row with Saudi Aarbia escalates, Financial Post ||
https://business.financialpost.com/news/economy/spat-with-saudi-arabia-intensifies-whipsawing-the-canadian-dollar)
Saudi Arabia is considering additional measures against Canada amid reports it plans to unload its holdings of Canadian stocks and
bonds as a dispute over women’s rights activists intensifies.
Foreign Minister Adel Al-Jubeir, speaking at a news conference in Riyadh, said there was no need for mediation in the dispute.
“Canada knows what it needs to do,” he said.
The Canadian currency dropped as much as 0.5 per cent to 76.21 US cents after the Financial
Times reported that the Saudi Arabia central bank and state pension funds have instructed their
overseas asset managers to dispose of Canadian assets starting Tuesday. The loonie rebounded shortly
afterward to trade 0.1 per cent weaker at 10:03 a.m. in Toronto.
A source at a Saudi bank told Reuters the bank was contacted by the central bank on Wednesday afternoon asking for information
about all their Canadian exposure – investments in Canada and foreign exchange positions.
The bank had received no instructions to sell assets as they do not have any exposure there, the source said.
Saudi Arabia suspended diplomatic ties and halted new trade dealings late Sunday following
comments by Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland criticizing the kingdom for arrests of women’s rights
activists. The kingdom has since escalated its moves against Canada, suspending flights to Toronto and ordering the return of
thousands of students who are studying at Canadian schools.
Saudi Arabia’s deepening row with Canada threatens to scare off regime’s already nervous foreign investors
Saudi Arabia is disposing of Canadian assets ‘no matter the cost’ , FT reports
The cost of landing on Saudi Arabia’s bad side will be big
Russia voiced support for Saudi Arabia in its worsening row with Canada on Wednesday, telling Ottawa it was unacceptable to
lecture the kingdom on human rights.
Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said that human rights should be promoted with respect for specific
national customs and traditions.
“We have always said that the politicisation of human rights matters is unacceptable,” Zakharova said.
“What one probably needs in this situation is constructive advice and assistance rather than criticism from a ‘moral superior’,” she
said.
Since rising to power in 2015, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has courted Western allies to support his reform plans, offering
billions of dollars of arms sales and promising to fight radicalism in the kingdom.
But the row threatens to slow Riyadh’s foreign investment drive, a campaign already unsettled by a series of assertive foreign policy
initiatives by the top oil exporter.
Inflows slowed in recent years mainly due to low oil prices, but regional turmoil doesn’t help, critics of the government say.
“Saudi Arabia simply cannot afford to alienate any other sections of the global community in the midst of its unpopular military
engagement in Yemen, its indirect confrontation with Iran,” commentator Jamal Khashoggi wrote in the Washington Post.
Saudi’s asset sales may not have a big impact on the Canadian currency, although seasonally
thin trading in August
could exacerbate that effect. Saudi holdings of Canadian dollar reserves are between $10 billion
and $25 billion, with the upper end of that estimate representing 10 per cent of daily Canadian
dollar volumes, according to estimates from the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce.
“That’s enough to leave a mark on the loonie in August when volumes are typically lighter, ” said
Bipan Rai, North American head of foreign exchange strategy at CIBC. Still, Rai said the impact on the currency should be
“ephemeral” as bilateral trade between Saudi Arabia and Canada is small.
So far this year, Canada has exported $1.4 billion in merchandise goods to Saudi Arabia and imported $2 billion, according to
Statistics Canada data.
AFF -- Warming Turn
I/T Collapse
2AC
Collapse good- only way to be able to reduce emissions
Vernon morning star 19 ‘ ( May. 25, 2019 “standard of living is not sustainable”
https://www.vernonmorningstar.com/opinion/standard-of-living-is-not-sustainable/)
The other statement that stood out for me was, “We must be able to afford the solutions if our economies are not to
collapse under the weight of irrational policies.…” Quite a lot is packed into this statement.
First off, as much as we like to think of ourselves as rational, Western economic policies are highly irrational. Our “good life” is based on several actions.
Western societies exploit through military and financial domination as much of the world’s resources as they can.
Our economy is based almost entirely on debt, reliant mainly on the U.S. global reserve currency, the petrodollar,
which the U.S. can “sell” as much of as they can as it is currently required by other countries to
purchase most items (caution: Russia and China are slowly leading others away from the petrodollar and thus U.S. economic control). Our
economy is a consumer-based one, much of which is never recycled or reused and much of that
consumption is debt based.
In 2008, there was a signal about what needs to be done to help the environment from its plague of chemical contaminants. As the economy declined, so
did the carbon emissions. Unfortunately, the best way to help the environment is to collapse our
current economy globally to a non-consumer oriented on e, to one that provides more support to health, education, workers
rights and safety, human rights in general, support for independent farmers, and works towards eliminating all harmful chemicals from the environment.
In short, our standard of living is not sustainable, is not rational, will eventually collapse,
hopefully not cataclysmically. I highly doubt that a significant number of people are willing to
decrease their lifestyle in a significant way in order to change our current
economic/environmental trajectory.
Global warming results in ocean acidification and collapse of the marine food
web- means extinction.
Romm ‘9 (Joe, a Fellow at American Progress and is the editor of Climate Progress, which New York Times columnist Tom
Friedman called "the indispensable blog" and Time magazine named one of the 25 “Best Blogs of 2010.″ In 2009, Rolling Stone put
Romm #88 on its list of 100 “people who are reinventing America.” Time named him a “Hero of the Environment″ and “The Web’s
most influential climate-change blogger.” Romm was acting assistant secretary of energy for energy efficiency and renewable energy
in 1997, where he oversaw $1 billion in R&D, demonstration, and deployment of low-carbon technology. He is a Senior Fellow at
American Progress and holds a Ph.D. in physics from MIT, “Imagine a World without Fish: Deadly ocean acidification — hard to deny,
harder to geo-engineer, but not hard to stop — is subject of documentary ,” http://thinkprogress.org/romm/2009/09/02/204589/a-
sea-change-imagine-a-world-without-fish-ocean-acidification-film/,)
Global warming is “capable of wrecking the marine ecosystem and depriving future generations
of the harvest of the seas” (see Ocean dead zones to expand, “remain for thousands of years”). A post on ocean acidification from the
new Conservation Law Foundation blog has brought to my attention that the first documentary on the subject, A Sea Change: Imagine a World without
Fish, is coming out. Ocean acidification must be a core climate message, since it is hard to deny and
impervious to the delusion that geoengineering is the silver bullet. Indeed, a major 2009 study GRL study,
“Sensitivity of ocean acidification to geoengineered climate stabilization ” (subs. req’d), concluded: The results
of this paper support the view that climate engineering will not resolve the problem of ocean acidification,
and that therefore deep and rapid cuts in CO 2 emissions are likely to be the most effective
strategy to avoid environmental damage from future ocean acidification . If you want to understand ocean
acidification better, see this BBC story, which explains: Man-made pollution is raising ocean acidity at least 10
times faster than previously thought, a study says. Or see this Science magazine study, “Evidence for Upwelling of Corrosive
“Acidified” Water onto the Continental Shelf” (subs. req’), which found Our results show for the first time that a large section of the
North American continental shelf is impacted by ocean acidification . Other continental shelf regions may also be
impacted where anthropogenic CO2-enriched water is being upwelled onto the shelf. Or listen to the Australia’s ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef
Studies, which warns: The world’s oceans are becoming more acid, with potentially devastating
consequences for corals and the marine organisms that build reefs and provide much of the
Earth’s breathable oxygen. The acidity is caused by the gradual buildup of carbon dioxide (CO2)
in the atmosphere, dissolving into the oceans . Scientists fear it could be lethal for animals with chalky skeletons which make
up more than a third of the planet’s marine life”¦. Corals and plankton with chalky skeletons are at the base of the
marine food web. They rely on sea water saturated with calcium carbonate to form their
skeletons. However, as acidity intensifies, the saturation declines, making it harder for the animals
to form their skeletal structures (calcify). “Analysis of coral cores shows a steady drop in calcification over the last 20 years,” says
Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg of CoECRS and the University of Queensland. “There’s not much debate about how it happens: put more CO2 into the
air above and it dissolves into the oceans. “When CO2 levels in the atmosphere reach about 500 parts per million, you put calcification out of business
in the oceans.” (Atmospheric CO2 levels are presently 385 ppm, up from 305 in 1960.) I’d like to see an analysis of what happens when you get to 850
to 1000+ ppm because that is where we’re headed (see U.S. media largely ignores latest warning from climate scientists: “Recent observations confirm
“¦ the worst-case IPCC scenario trajectories (or even worse) are being realised” “” 1000 ppm). The CLF post notes: Dr. Jane Lubchenco, Administrator of
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) warns that an acidic ocean is the “equally evil twin” of climate change. Scott Doney, a
senior scientist at the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution noted in a public presentation that “New England is the most vulnerable region in the
country to ocean acidification.” In June, dozens
of Academies of Science, including ours and China’s, issued a
joint statement on ocean acidification, warned “Marine food supplies are likely to be reduced with
significant implications for food production and security in regions dependent on fish protein,
and human health and wellbeing” and “Ocean acidification is irreversible on timescales of at least
tens of thousands of years.” They conclude: Ocean acidification is a direct consequence of increasing atmospheric CO2 concentrations.
To avoid substantial damage to ocean ecosystems, deep and rapid reductions of global CO2 emissions by at least 50% by 2050, and much more
thereafter are needed. We, the academies of science working through the InterAcademy Panel on International Issues (IAP), call on world leaders to: “¢
Acknowledge that ocean acidification is a direct and real consequence of increasing atmospheric
CO2 concentrations, is already having an effect at current concentrations, and is likely to cause
grave harm to important marine ecosystems as CO2 concentrations reach 450 ppm and above;
“¢ Recognise that reducing the build up of CO2 in the atmosphere is the only practicable solution to mitigating ocean acidification; “¢ Within the
context of the UNFCCC negotiations in the run up to Copenhagen 2009, recognise the direct threats posed by increasing atmospheric CO2 emissions to
the oceans and therefore society, and take action to mitigate this threat; “¢ Implement action to reduce global CO2 emissions by at least 50% of 1990
levels by 2050 and continue to reduce them thereafter. If
we want to save life in the oceans “” and save ourselves ,
since we depend on that life “” the time to start slashing carbon dioxide emissions is now .
EX - Emissions Cause Warming
Emissions cause global warming
C2ES N/D (C2ES - the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions – an independent, nonpartisan,
nonprofit organization working to forge practical solutions to climate change, “Climate Basics”,
https://www.c2es.org/content/climate-basics-for-kids/)
Scientific evidence paints a clear picture: Climate change is happening, it is caused in large part by human activity, and it will have
many serious and potentially damaging effects in the decades ahead. Greenhouse gas emissions from cars, power
plants and other man-made sources—rather than natural variations in climate— are the primary
cause. These emissions include carbon dioxide — the main greenhouse gas — which has
reached a concentration level in our atmosphere that the Earth hasn’t seen for more than
400,000 years. These greenhouse gases act like a blanket, trapping the sun’s warmth near the earth’s surface, and affecting the
planet’s climate system. Today in the United States, electricity and transportation (cars, trucks and planes) are responsible for
almost 60 percent of carbon dioxide emissions. The rest comes from agriculture, industry, such as factories that make products we
use, and from energy we use in our homes and businesses. The
first is to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions
responsible for climate change. By choosing cleaner ways to power our homes, offices, and cars, and being more
efficient and less wasteful, we can produce fewer greenhouse gas emissions.
AFF -- AT Impacts
**AFF Turns DA**
Oil Volatility
Link Turn - Solving oil volatility ensures the NOPEC doesn’t pass which
preserves dollar heg – NOPEC is key
Cunningham 19 (Nick Cunningham, Nick Cunningham is a freelance writer on oil and
gas, renewable energy, climate change, energy policy and geopolitics. He is based in
Pittsburgh, PA., "Saudis Threaten ‘Nuclear Option’ To Kill Petrodollar", 4/7/19,
https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Saudis-Threaten-Nuclear-Option-To-Kill-
Petrodollar.html#)
Saudi Arabia threatened to use the “nuclear option” of undermining the petro-dollar if the U.S.
moves forward with the NOPEC bill.
The U.S. Congress has been mulling legislation, known as the NOPEC bill, which would allow the Justice
Department to take antitrust action against OPEC for manipulating the oil market.
Specifically, the bill would remove sovereign immunity countries have from such action, allowing the U.S. government to sue.
In theory, the law would prevent OPEC from coordinating production cuts.
ME Instability
Link Turn - Stopping instability in the Middle East is key to keeping dollar
hegemony – the aff solves
Hatfield 18 (Matthew Hatfield, Journalist at Harvard Political Review, "The Worrisome Deal:
China and Saudi Arabia", 12/18/18, https://harvardpolitics.com/world/the-worrisome-deal-
china-and-saudi-arabia/)
In order to stabilize the petrodollar, the United States also needs a stable Middle East . Sanctions are
one way to control Middle Eastern affairs. Because oil is found in so many aspects of world operations, major world deals are made
in dollars and pass through American-connected banks, allowing the U.S. government to monitor, control, and sanction such deals.
Paired with the immense sale of arms and weapons to Saudi Arabia, the United States provides
countless incentives for the Saudis to stay in the deal, helping Saudi Arabia remain a prominent
Middle Eastern power.
AT Econ
N/L
US dollar hegemony won’t collapse the economy
Amadeo 19 (Kimberly Amadeo - 20 years senior-level corporate experience in economic
analysis and business strategy. She received an M.S. in Management from the Sloan School of
Business at M.I.T.Kimberly is the U.S. Economy expert for The Balance, and has been writing for
Dotdash/About.com since 2006, “Top 10 Reasons Why the U.S. Economy Won't Collapse”,
https://www.thebalance.com/us-economy-wont-collapse-3980688)
The U.S. debt is $21 trillion, more than the economy produces in a year, but although the debt-to-GDP ratio is in the danger
zone, it's not enough to cause a collapse. First, the United States prints its money. That means it is in control
of its currency. Lenders feel safe that the U.S. government will pay them back . In fact, the United
States could run a much higher debt-to-GDP ratio than it does now and still not face economic
collapse. Japan is another strong economy that controls its currency. It has had a debt-to-GDP ratio above 200 percent for years. Its economy is
sluggish but in no danger of collapse. The United States won't default on its debt. Most members of Congress realize
a debt default would destroy America's credibility in the financial markets. The tea party Republicans in Congress were a
minority that threatened to default during the 2011 debt ceiling crisis and in 2013. China and Japan are the biggest owners of the U.S. debt,
but they have no incentive to create a collapse. The United States is their largest market. If it fails,
so do their economies. Furthermore, China is not selling all of its dollar holdings. It has remained above $1 trillion since 2013. For more,
see U.S. Debt to China. If anything, the dollar would slowly decline instead of collapse. It fell 40 percent
between 2002 and 2008. It has gotten stronger since then because of the financial crisis. Investors flock to
ultra-safe U.S. Treasurys and the U.S. dollar as a safe haven. The dollar won't be replaced as the world's global currency. The
doomsayers point to gold, the euro, or Bitcoin as a replacement for the dollar. China has said it would like the yuan to replace the dollar. It's true that
the dollar's value is supported by its role, but none of these other alternatives have enough circulation to replace
the dollar. The Fed's quantitative easing program and low fed funds rate won't cause hyperinflation. If anything, these programs have created a
liquidity trap. That's when people, businesses, and banks hoard the extra cash instead of spending or lending it. The real cause of hyperinflation has
been debt repayments to fund wars. The stock market hit new highs in 2018. Stock prices are based on corporate earnings, so that’s a sign of business
prosperity. Consumer
confidence hit an 18-year high in 2018. Consumer spending drives almost 70
percent of the economy. Economic growth is slow but stable. Since the Great Recession, the economy has grown between
1.5 - 2.7 percent per year. According to business cycle theory, a bust only occurs after a boom. That's when GDP is more than 3 percent. It hasn't been
that high since 2005 according to a review of GDP by year. President Obama added to the debt to get us out of recession, not send us into collapse.
Many of these doomsters accuse Obama of deliberately increasing the debt to destroy the United States.
rely on the US market. It is also why Germany supplies BMWs and Mercedes-Benzes in return
they lack adequate internal demand. Consequently, they must
for paper dollar IOUs. Conventional theory says the dollar will only lose its dominance when countries become saturated
with dollar holdings. At that stage they will cease buying and may even sell dollars, causing the currency to fall. The problem with this story is that countries
have no incentive to sell dollars, as this would kill the golden goose of export-led growth.
L/T - Generic - International
US dollar hegemony is dangerous for the global economy
Roosevelt Institute 09 (Kimberly Amadeo - policy reforms capable of redefining the
American economy and our democracy. Roosevelt is armed with a transformative vision for the
future, working to move the country toward a new economic and political system, “The Dangers
of ‘Dollar Hegemony’”, https://rooseveltinstitute.org/dangers-dollar-hegemony/)
Rich nations need to recognize that their efforts to squeeze every last drop of advantage from already unfair
finance and trade will only plunge the world into deeper depression . History has shown that while the poor
suffer more in economic collapse, the rich, even as they are financially cushioned by their wealth and advantage, are hurt by the sociopolitical
repercussions of such a collapse, in the form of war, revolution or both. Dollar
hegemony prevents all non-dollar
economies from financing domestic development with sovereign credit , denominated in their own currencies;
it forces them to rely on foreign capital denominated in dollars . Moreover, the exporting economies
are in essence shipping the real wealth created there by low wages and environmental abuse to
importing nations. The dollar-denominated trade surplus earned by exporting nations cannot be spent in their domestic economies without
first converting those dollars into local currencies. But the conversion will create inflation since the wealth behind
the new local currency has already been shipped to the importing nations. Thus, exporting nations, while
starved for capital, have to invest the dollars they earn from low wages and environmental abuse back into the dollar economy, enabling the importing
economies to have more dollars with which to import more. Capital from the dollar economy is in reality debt from the exporting economies, which will
return to the lending economies as foreign capital to invest in the export sector. Dollar
hegemony in essence freely transfers the wealth from
poor economies to rich economies. This free transfer of wealth hurts
workers in both the poor and rich economies by
keeping wages low through cross-border wage arbitrage. Low wages then create overcapacity,
unsupported by demand in every economy.
—the largest group on the list, with a total of 134 companies—weakened because the surging
dollar meant that their prices were higher in foreign markets. Second, sales outside the U.S.—
whether by U.S. or non-U.S. multi-nationals— in foreign currencies such as euros, yen, and yuan
translated into far fewer dollars than they did last year. For instance, 1 billion euros in sales added up to $1.3 billion in 2014 and
just $1.1 billion in 2015. Part of this is technical, of course, driven by the fact that the Global 500 is calculated in dollars. To determine rankings, we use an average of exchange
rates over the previous year to convert, say, Toshiba’s sales from yen into dollars. Incredibly, no fewer than 19 of the 21 currencies represented on the list retreated against the
dollar in 2015. The euro fell 16.4% vs. the dollar, the yen slid 8.4%, and the yuan dipped 2%. Emerging-market currencies took the biggest hits—notably the Brazilian real (–
29.4%) and the Russian ruble (–36.9%). The best measure of how U.S. multi-nationals fared against foreign competitors is to strip out the conversion effect and compare revenue
growth in home currencies. Overall, Asian companies performed the best last year, lifting their average sales in yen, rupees, and the like by 11%, vs. a 5.8% gain after conversion
to dollars. China was an exception, however: Though the yuan fell slightly against the dollar, it appreciated strongly vs. most of the world’s currencies, pummeling exports of
Chinese companies. European companies on average had flat sales in their local currencies. But many that did large volume in the U.S. performed brilliantly, as they got a boost
from being able to produce their goods in euros or pounds and sell them in dollars.
L/T - Stocks
Dollar collapse will cause stocks to rise
John 1/28/19 Ciaran John is a business and law student. "Do Stocks Rise When The Dollar Falls?"
https://finance.zacks.com/stocks-rise-dollar-falls-9961.html
The market value of the U.S. dollar has an impact on every segment of the economy,
including the stock market. A strong dollar is synonymous with falling equity prices,
while a weaker dollar can cause stock prices to rise. However, the relationship between currency valuations
and the stock market is complex. A weak dollar is not necessarily good news for investors. The relationship between the value of the
US dollar and the stock market is far from direct. That being said, a cheaper dollar can strengthen exports which, in turn, can boost
domestic profits and share value. This is just one example of the impact of value adjustments to the US dollar. Before 1973, the
Bretton Woods international monetary system determined the value of the U.S. dollar. In 1973, the federal government decided to
float the dollar; the currency's value is now based on supply and demand. Commodities including gold and oil are priced in dollars.
Foreign investors buy dollars to make transactions involving dollar denominated goods easier to facilitate. For the same reason, U.S.
companies and investors buy euros, pesos and other currencies. Many foreign investors view the dollar as a safe haven investment and
buy U.S. currency when other nations experience economic problems. Conversely, investors often sell dollars when the U.S. economy
goes into a downturn. If the dollar drops in value, the price of goods denominated in dollars increases. Consequently, stocks in energy
companies may rise as the dollar weakens. Imports become more expensive after a dollar devaluation, but foreign companies can
acquire American goods at lower prices. This helps to drive up exports. As exports increase, profits rise and stocks in U.S. companies
rise in value. Investors attempting to profit from rising stock prices may shift their cash from bonds to stocks. The increased
competition for stocks drives prices up even further. So-called day traders are sensitive to current economic trends. These investors
help to drive up stock prices when the dollar weakens. However, other investors take a longer-term view and analyze the underlying
factors that have caused the dollar to fall in value. Issues such as excessive levels of government debt may raise red flags and suggest
that the U.S. economy is headed into a downturn. Consequently, investors may shy away from stocks and move their money into safer
investments, such as bonds. This action could cause the stock market rally to dissipate. On the other hand, if the long-term economic
forecast looks good, investors may snap up stocks with the expectation that they can make gains as the economy stabilizes. The U.S.
funds attempt to
stock market includes a variety of funds that trade currencies and assets denominated in dollars. Some
capitalize on a strong dollar by investing in oil, gold and U.S. currency. Other funds take a
contrarian view and bet against the dollar by investing in currencies from other nations . When the dollar drops in
value, funds containing foreign currency and assets rise in value. The gains in these
securities are offset by losses in funds tied to the dollar.
AT Heg
Trumpers
American hegemony is already dead and will continue – empirics and Trump
Schindler 17 - John R. Schindler, a security expert and former National Security Agency analyst
and counterintelligence officer, 17 ("The Year American Hegemony Ended", Observer, 12-31-
2017, Available Online from http://observer.com/2017/12/president-trump-inherited-a-
hegemon-in-decline-inflicted-more-damage///dvb
The United States has been the world’s greatest power since 1945 , when that mantle—half-
passed from London to Washington after the First World War—firmly landed in American hands
after the Second World War. Since 1991, when the Cold War ended with Soviet collapse, America has been the world’s
hegemon, to use the proper term, the force whose power could not be seriously challenged on the global stage.
For 26 years now—a happy generation—America has been able to do whatever it wanted, to anyone, at any time of our choosing,
anywhere on earth. Notwithstanding the decline of major sectors of the American economy, our military has covered the globe with
deployments as the Pentagon has divided our planet into “geographic combatant commands” to formalize our hegemony. Our
allegedly deep defense thinkers have hailed this as our viceroys enacting Washington’s benevolent imperial will anywhere we desire.
It needs to be said that plenty of the planet has been happy to acquiesce in American hegemony. While we’re hardly the pure-
hearted hegemon we imagine ourselves to be, the United States appears like a relatively positive force on the global stage,
compared to other options. Even among skeptics regarding America’s global dominance, few pine instead for hegemony under, say,
Beijing and its Communist party bosses.
Nevertheless, 2017 gave unmistakable signs that American hegemony, which has been waning for a
decade, has now ended. A new age has dawned, even though it’s still early and the sun is far from full. As commander-in-
chief, in his first year in the Oval Office, President Donald Trump has ranted and raved on Twitter almost
daily, with no effect save to confuse our allies about what exactly is going on in Washington. De
facto, America has two foreign and defense policies: what the president says and what our national security bureaucracy does. The
gap between presidential rhetoric, much of it unhinged, and actual policy toward the world
grew throughout 2017.
It’s no wonder, then, that North Korea seems anything but cowed, despite a year of Trumpian rants at Pyongyang. The Kim dynasty
keeps rattling its nuclear saber at will, firing off missiles over the Pacific to showcase its power, and Washington’s demands that they
cease have had no impact. While the Trump administration propagates the fantasy that North Korea will never become a nuclear
power, that troublesome country has plainly had atomic weapons for years. That this unreality-based policy might end badly for
everyone—even a merely conventional war on the Korean peninsula will mean millions of refugees and casualties—is obvious and
constitutes one of the major what-ifs for the coming year.
The National Security Strategy recently rolled out by the White House with fanfare, however, appreciates none of these new
geopolitical realities. It imagines a world where American power, while now confronted by Russia and a rising China, remains above
fundamental challenge. Predictably, the president’s release of “his” NSS had barely any connection to the actual document. To be
fair to Trump, the NSS always is a political write-up, not really any kind of strategy, and the relationship between its wish-list and
actual Beltway policy is often tenuous; the current administration has decided to sever any NSS connection to reality altogether.
It should be noted that President Trump
inherited a hegemon in decline. His predecessors did plenty of
damage before the current Oval Office occupant decided to inflict more. Bill Clinton’s well-
intentioned if often mishandled humanitarian interventions in the Balkans gave the illusion that
America knew how to “nation build” broken societies at modest cost in lives and treasure.
We did not, as is demonstrated by the multi-decade debacles in the Greater Middle East initiated by George W. Bush in the
aftermath of 9/11. In overreaction to jihadist terrorism, Washington decided to recreate that troubled region by, in effect, handing a
broken Iraq to the mullahs in Tehran. The magical transformative powers of the U.S. military on foreign societies turned out to be as
much a fantasy as the Bush experiment with mortgage loans for everyone. In a similar vein, the less said about our never-ending war
in Afghanistan—which amounts to an effort to coercively make that country what it has never been, politically and socially—perhaps
the better.
The loss of American prestige associated with the Iraqi and Afghan debacles is difficult to
overstate. Plenty of the world was content to go along with American hegemony so long as it
was somewhat competent. No fair-minded strategist, surveying what the Bush administration did in the Muslim
heartland, could look at Washington’s defense and foreign policy elites, the architects of grand
failures, with any comfort.
Not that Barack Obama made things better. Although he entered the White House with a mandate
to undo the damage wrought by his predecessor, he mostly failed to do so. It’s difficult to not have
sympathy for President Obama, who when he realized the extent of the Iraq horror he inherited, wanted to abandon the biggest
failure in America’s history abroad. It’s less easy to excuse Obama’s missteps in Afghanistan , where a half-
hearted “surge” failed to change any facts on the ground that really mattered.
Still, Obama’s biggest failures came elsewhere. His willingness
to participate in the overthrow of the Gadhafi
regime in Libya on dubious humanitarian grounds birthed violence and crisis graver than existed
there in the first place. Worse, taking out the former rogue Gadhafi after he had abandoned his weapons of mass
destruction and was cooperating with America’s war on terrorism, sent an indelible message that Washington’s word is no good—so
never, ever give up your WMDs. Pyongyang, among others, watched and learned.
Then there’s Obama’s mishandling of Russia , with fateful consequences. His abandonment of his own “red line” in
Syria in 2013 was easily read as a grave strategic error, since Obama in effect outsourced U.S. policy in the Middle East to Moscow—
the results of which are painfully clear today. Obama’s
reticence to do much about Vladimir Putin’s
aggression in Ukraine a few months later is a matter of record, while his strange unwillingness to
confront the Kremlin over its rancid spy-propaganda offensive against the West in 2015
undoubtedly encouraged aggressive Russian interference in America’s election the following
year.
Putin and other malefactors got the message that Obama’s America would not stand up to troublemakers who could push back.
Diffident messaging is never good for the hegemon’s reputation, especially when it’s already blighted due to incompetence and
imperial overstretch. In 2017, in stark contrast, Donald Trump led the country in the opposite direction, with unceasing bluster
about American strength and willingness to go it alone, anytime Washington wants to, damn the consequences.
Trump’s screw the-world style in foreign affairs was on display this month with the White House’s decision to recognize
Jerusalem as Israel’s capital. This pleased the Israeli right-wing and major donors to President
Trump, yet in no way enhanced American power or prestige: quite the opposite. Reaction from
the Muslim world was predictably furious, while the Trump administration made everything
worse at the United Nations. There, Nikki Haley, our ambassador, publicly threatened members who didn’t vote with
Washington against a UN resolution condemning our embassy move. This was American diplomacy at its most heavy-handed and
tone-deaf, and it failed dismally. Virtually the whole world voted against Trump, with even most of NATO siding against Washington.
This was a major diplomatic defeat for the alleged global hegemon.
President Trump is all about “strength” and he loves to tweet about our military, his own draft-dodging notwithstanding. In a sense,
Trump is a perfect fit for our era, when all America has left is raw military power. Our economy has been in decline for decades, our
divided society displays unmissable rot, and our politics are a partisan shamble in the aftermath of 2016. What America has left is its
military, which is the ultimate underpinning of hegemony.
However, just how much military overmatch the Pentagon has left, after a near-generation of
down-punching in the Middle East against fourth-rate foes without strategic success, is now
America’s great imponderable. We have spent trillions of dollars on Iraq, Afghanistan, and
killing jihadists all over, and the price in military obsolescence and declining morale is evident to
anyone who wants to see.
Our Air Force, which hasn’t faced a serious peer competitor in the skies since the middle of the Second World War, is shedding pilots
at an alarming rate, while it has far too few F-22 fighters to maintain air dominance worldwide, which Washington has taken as a
given for decades. However, our
Navy is in even worse shape, with a staggering number of admirals
under a cloud for participation in an appalling corruption-cum-espionage scandal, while our fleet
in 2017 demonstrated that it has lost grip on basic navigation at sea, with fatal results. Considering
the U.S. Navy has been the guarantor of freedom of navigation on the world’s seas since 1945, the protector of international trade
and the backbone of American hegemony, its sad decline has far-reaching consequences.
That said, our Army is equally unready for battle against a peer. In its shadow war in eastern Ukraine, Russia’s
ground forces have demonstrated killing capabilities far beyond what America and NATO can do. The combination of Russian long-
range artillery and electronic warfare has obliterated whole Ukrainian battalions, and right now they would do the same to the U.S.
Army. Grave underinvestment in field artillery and electronic warfare hangs over our army. Russia has excelled at artillery for
centuries, and that arm is the great killer on the modern battlefield. Armies that go into battle outgunned by the Russians historically
get blasted off the field with heavy casualties. Right now, the U.S. Army is frantically playing catch-up so it can take on the Russians
as equals if it comes to a fight.
Our army’s opening performance has often been subpar, as demonstrated by defeats like Kasserine Pass and Task Force Smith.
However, America always had time on our side to turn it around. We may not if the battlefield is in the Baltics, which the Russians
may overrun in a couple days, before the U.S. Army has a chance to stop the invader. These are the scenarios that keep Pentagon
planners up at night as we enter the new year.
Above all, Trump’s go-it-alone attitude is precisely the wrong take as American hegemony disappears . Some empires decline slowly,
others fall fast after a major defeat; history is filled with both outcomes. Since 1945, Washington has presumed that it can deploy
our military anywhere, at the time and place of our choosing, thanks to our dominance of the world’s skies and oceans. Even in a
worst case, we could always get our forces home. This should no longer be assumed. The world has changed, American
hegemony has collapsed , and if it’s not careful Washington may find out the hard way. Let’s hope cooler and wiser heads
prevail in 2018.
China and Russia are trying to gain primacy and Trump has left the gate right
open
Cohen 17
Eliot A. Cohen is a contributing editor at The Atlantic and dean of The Johns Hopkins University
School of Advanced International Studies. From 2007 to 2009, he was the Counselor of the
Department of State. OCTOBER 2017/
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2017/10/is-trump-ending-the-american
era/537888///dvb
American foreign policy was, if not in crisis, in big trouble. Strong forces were putting stress on the old global political order: the
rise of China to a power with more than half the productive capacity of the United States (and defense spending to match); the
partial recovery of a resentful Russia under a skilled and thuggish autocrat; the discrediting of Western elites by the
financial crash of 2008, followed by roiling populist waves, of which Trump himself was part; a turbulent Middle East; economic
dislocations worldwide.
An American leadership that had partly discredited itself over the past generation compounded these problems. The
Bush administration’s war against jihadist Islam had been undermined by reports of mistreatment and torture; its Afghan campaign
had been inconclusive; its invasion of Iraq had been deeply compromised by what turned out to be a false premise and three years of
initial mismanagement.
These circumstances would have caused severe headaches for a competent and sophisticated successor. Instead, the United
States got a president who had unnervingly promised a wall on the southern border (paid for by
Mexico), the dismantlement of long -standing trade deals with both competitors and partners, a closer
relationship with Vladimir Putin, and a ban on Muslims coming into the United States.
right-wing plutocrat Donald Trump in the White House. One complaint about Trump that should be held at arm’s-length by
anyone on the left, however, is the charge that Trump is contributing to the decline of U.S. global power —to the
erosion of the United States’ superpower status and the emergence of a more multipolar world.
This criticism of Trump comes from different elite corners. Last October, the leading neoconservative foreign policy intellectual and
former George W. Bush administration adviser Eliot Cohen wrote an Atlantic magazine essay titled “How Trump Is Ending
the American Era. ” Cohen recounted numerous ways in which Trump had reduced “America’s standing and ability to
influence global affairs.” He worried that Trump’s presidency would leave “America’s position in the world stunted” and
For the purposes of this report, I’ll leave aside the matter of whether Trump is, in fact , speeding the decline of
U.S. global power (he undoubtedly is) and how he’s doing that to focus instead on a very different question: What would be
so awful about the end of “the American Era”—the seven-plus decades of U.S. global economic and related military supremacy
between 1945 and the present? Why should the world mourn the “premature” end of the “American Century”?
Thumper -- U.S. Interventionism
Americas intervention is an independent hegemony thumper
Katehon 16
Katehon think tank is an independent organization consisting of an international network of
people - from a wide variety of fields and disciplines - who specialize in the geopolitical,
geostrategic and political analysis of world events. The group consists of political thinkers,
international relations (IR) researchers, experts in security and counter-terrorism, and
journalists concerned with international affairs, geopolitics, ethno-politics and inter-religious
dialogue. 22.07.2016 katehon.com/directives/dugins-guideline-american-hegemony-dragon-
wounded///dvb
What is the US doing today and what is its place in the modern world? This is not an idle question. We can see that the
Americans and their global networks are still making themselves felt and continuing to interfere in the internal
affairs of their allies, neutral countries, and even in their enemies’ countries.
Literally just a few days ago, they tried to carry out a military coup in Turkey and provoke unrest in Armenia and Kazakhstan.
However, it is becoming increasingly evident that they are much weaker than before. Washington tried to prevent Brexit, but failed.
The Gulenist mutiny in Turkey also ended in failure . So, can we unequivocally state that the unipolar world
has finished and that we live in a new, post-American world?
Unsustainable
Heg collapse inevitable – alt causes
Switzer 16 (Tom Switzer, Former editor of the Spectator Australia, opinion editor of The
Australian, editorial writer at the Australian Financial Review and assistant editor at the
American Enterprise Institute in Washington, DC, Former senior fellow at the United States
Studies Centre at the University of Sydney. 21 June 2016. “Why Donald Trump Should Embrace
Offshore Balancing” http://nationalinterest.org/blog/the-buzz/why-donald-trump-should-
embrace-offshore-balancing-16661)
Great sea changes of foreign policy thought are rare in American public life. But there’s abundant evidence
that the US is experiencing one now . Polls show that the American people are tired of the world, with a
majority believing that it’s high time for the nation to concentrate on its own neglected internal
problems. The defense budget has fallen and will continue to fall, and there’s a strong aversion to seeing US soldiers killed
and wounded. To the extent that such views prevail, they’re inimical to the post-Cold War consensus that the US should impose its will and leadership across the globe. Enter
Donald Trump, whose divisive rhetoric and rude-and-crude behavior shouldn’t disguise the fact that he has caught the significance of the new mood. Like Bernie Sanders,
Trump found a receptive primary campaign audience whenever he questioned America’s propensity for promoting
democracy and subsidizing allies’ defenses. And, unlike Hillary Clinton, he recognizes that US military
interventions in the Middle East all too often make a bad situation worse, getting America bogged down in sectarian wars while
radicalizing a new generation of jihadist. If a foreign policy keeps hurting US interests and making the world a far more dangerous place, then some new thinking is in order.
Unfortunately, Trump’s failed to match his shrewd instincts with any policy substance. He could do worse than consult an important article in the latest Foreign Affairs magazine.
John Mearsheimer from the University of Chicago and Stephen Walt from Harvard University are two of America’s most distinguished scholars of international relations. Neither
will vote for Trump or work for his administration if he’s elected in November. Nonetheless, they agree with Trump in his rejection of idealistic crusades. As the US interventions
in Afghanistan, Iraq and Libya have shown, there’s not an American solution to every problem . In fact, there are a good
many problems, for which there may be no solution at all . They also agree that “free riders”—allies whose security
relies overwhelmingly on US largesse— are a consequence of the post-Cold War strategy of global liberal
hegemony. Mearsheimer and Walt instead propose a policy of offshore balancing, which concentrates on preserving US
hegemony in the Western Hemisphere and preventing the rise of hegemonic powers in Europe,
Asia and the Persian Gulf. In deciding when to deploy military power, they argue, the US should allow problems to be
handed to those closest to the problem . This way, a sense of responsibility and initiative can be
developed throughout the international system and the US can reserve its own intervention for
the great issues, acting as a balancer of last resort rather than what Madeleine Albright called an ‘indispensable nation’. In practice, that
means that the US should get out of Europe and turn NATO over to the Europeans, as Trump himself
suggests. Russia, after all, is a declining power, whose actions in the Baltics are more reactive to western policy (NATO
expansion, for instance) than aggressive. In the Persian Gulf, the US should aim to prevent Iran, the only
rising power in the region, from becoming a hegemon via a limited rapprochement. (Egypt, Syria, Israel
aren’t vital strategic interests.) Meanwhile, acting as a balancer of last resort in the Middle East would ameliorate
America’s terrorism problem. Why? Because such a policy respects the sovereignty of other states and doesn’t trigger
nationalist anger at the US, which is one of the main driving forces behind jihadism . Asia’s different. The rise
of China, Mearsheimer and Walt suggest, is bound to threaten the regional equilibrium, so US military force will be needed in the region more than ever. That’s especially so,
position as the world’s greatest power or retreating to a form of isolationism . It means that although the US can
afford to scale back somewhat and force other states to bear a fairer share of global burdens, Washington will need to remain the balancer
of last resort in those strategically important regions. By being more discriminating, selective and prudent, a
policy of offshore balancing will prevent rivals from dominating key regions of the world and
preserve US primacy over the long haul. Trump should embrace the Mearsheimer–Walt thesis, which would be manna from heaven.
system is becoming increasingly unwilling due to politics . To put the overall thesis of this book succinctly,
the greatest threat to American hegemony and the stability of global capitalism in the twenty-first century is
America. I will also provide an analysis of the major challengers on an international stage to American
hegemony in order to show that they suffer from significant institutional, political and economic
problems. In Europe, the institutional framework of the EU and the Euro has constrained both wealthier northern countries and
the economically weak south. While the economic crisis in Southern European countries is abated through loans, along with
austerity measures, politically, there is little popular will to increase the political unity of Europe. On the contrary, years of recession,
a migration crisis from the Middle East and the rise of right-wing nationalist parties have made many Europeans far more sceptical of
"Project Europe". The Recession has shown the fissures within the European Union, along geographic lines. In 2016, Britain voted for
a "Brexit" from the European Union, and while the details have yet to be worked out, this is a worrying sign for future integration in
Europe. It continues to be unlikely Europe will be able to seriously contend with the USA as a unified global superpower in the near
future.
Impact D - No Impact
No impact to heg- US intervention, military spending and activism have no
influence on levels of peace- their evidence is psychologically biased
Fettweis 5-8-17
(Christopher J.-assistant professor of political science at Tulane University. “Unipolarity,
Hegemony, and the New Peace” Published in Security Studies Vol 26 No 3.
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09636412.2017.1306394?
src=recsys&journalCode=fsst20)
Even the most ardent supporters of the hegemonic-stability explanation do not contend that US
influence extends equally to all corners of the globe The United States has concentrated its .
policing in strong points,” or the most important parts of the world: Western
what George Kennan used to call “
Europe, the Pacific Rim, and Persian Gulf .64 By doing so, Washington may well have contributed more to great power peace than the overall global decline in warfare. If the former phenomenon
contributed to the latter, by essentially providing a behavioral model for weaker states to emulate, then perhaps this lends some support to the hegemonic-stability case.65 During the Cold War, the United States played referee to a few intra-West squabbles,
in the first world, including the presence of a common enemy, democracy, economic
interdependence, general war aversion, etc . The looming presence of the leviathan is certainly among these plausible explanations, but only inside the US sphere of influence. Bipolarity was
bad for the nonaligned world, where Soviet and Western intervention routinely exacerbated local conflicts. Unipolarity has generally been much better, but whether or not this was due to US action is again unclear. Overall US interest in the affairs of the Global
affairs of Latin America compared to any time in the twentieth century, for instance, and also
less conflict Warfare in Africa is at an all-time low, as is relative US interest outside of
.
counterterrorism and security assistanc Regional peace and stability exist where there is US e.66
active intervention, as well as where there is not. No direct relationship seems to exist across
regions . If intervention can be considered a function of direct and indirect activity, of both political and military action, a regional picture might look like what is outlined in Table 1. These assessments of conflict are by necessity relative, because there
world are clustered in the upper right quadrant, where US intervention has been high, but
conflict levels low. US intervention is imperfectly correlated with stability , however. Indeed, it is conceivable that the
relatively high level of US interest and activity has made the security situation in the Persian
Gulf and broader Middle East worse substantial hard power investments Somalia, . In recent years, (
Afghanistan, Iraq), moderate intervention (Libya), and reliance on diplomacy (Syria) have been
equally ineffective in stabilizing states torn by conflict . While it is possible that the region is essentially unpacifiable and no amount of police work would bring peace to its
it remains hard to make the case that the US presence has improved matters. In this “strong
people,
point,” at least, US hegemony has failed to bring peace. In much of the rest of the world, the United States has not been especially eager to enforce any particular
uninterrupted string of successes . During the turn-of-the-century conventional war between Ethiopia and Eritrea, a highlevel US delegation containing former and future National Security Advisors (Anthony
Lake and Susan Rice) made a half-dozen trips to the region, but was unable to prevent either the outbreak or recurrence of the conflict. Lake and his team shuttled back and forth between the capitals with some frequency, and President Clinton made repeated
phone calls to the leaders of the respective countries, offering to hold peace talks in the United States, all to no avail.67 The war ended in late 2000 when Ethiopia essentially won, and it controls the disputed territory to this day. The Horn of Africa is hardly the only
Stability exists
region where states are free to fight one another today without fear of serious US involvement. Since they are choosing not to do so with increasing frequency, something else is probably affecting their calculations.
even in those places where the potential for intervention by the sheriff is minimal. Hegemonic
stability can only take credit for influencing those decisions that would have ended in war
without the presence, whether physical or psychological, of the United States It seems hard to .
make the case that the relative peace that has descended on so many regions is primarily due
to the kind of heavy hand of the neoconservative leviathan, Something else or its lighter, more liberal cousin.
appears to be at work. Conflict and US Military Spending How does one measure polarity? Power is traditionally considered to be some combination of military and economic strength, but despite scores of efforts, no widely
. Perhaps overall military spending might be thought of as a proxy for hard power
accepted formula exists
capabilities perhaps too the amount of money the United States devotes to hard power is a
;
reflection of the strength of the unipole there is no obvious correlation, and . When compared to conflict levels, however,
certainly not the kind of negative relationship between US spending and conflict that many
hegemonic stability theorists would expect to see During the 1990s, the United States cut back .
on defense by about 25 percent spending $100 billion less in real terms in 1998 that it did in
,
military capabilities doubts that the defense budget has been cut much too far to meet
America’s responsibilities to itself and to world peace, The world grew ” argued Kristol and Kagan at the time.69
dramatically more peaceful while the United States cut its forces and stayed just as , however,
peaceful while spending rebounded after the 9/11 terrorist attacks . The incidence and
magnitude of global conflict declined while the military budget was cut under President
Clinton, in other words and kept declining , Overall US (though more slowly, since levels were already low) as the Bush administration ramped it back up.
military spending has varied during the period of the New Peace from a low in constant dollars
of less than $400 billion to a high of more than $700 billion, but war does not seem to have
noticed The same nonrelationship exists between other potential proxy measurements for
.
hegemony and conflict there does not seem to be much connection between warfare and
:
fluctuations in US GDP, alliance commitments, and forward military presence There was very .
little fighting in Europe when there were 300,000 US troops stationed there, for example, and
that has not changed as the number of Americans dwindled by 90 percent. there does not Overall,
seem to be much correlation between US actions and systemic stability Nothing the United .
States actually does seems to matter to the New Peace . It is possible that absolute military spending might not be as important to explain the phenomenon as relative.
Although Washington cut back on spending during the 1990s, its relative advantage never wavered. The United States has accounted for between 35 and 41 percent of global military spending every year since the collapse of the Soviet Union.70 The perception of
perhaps it is
relative US power might be the decisive factor in decisions made in other capitals. One cannot rule out the possibility that it is the perception of US power—and its willingness to use it—that keeps the peace. In other words,
the grand strategy of the United States, rather than its absolute capability, that is decisive in
maintaining stability. It is that to which we now turn . Conflict and US Grand Strategy The perception of US power, and the strength of its hegemony, is to some degree a
If indeed US strategic choices are responsible for the New Peace, then variation in
function of grand strategy.
those choices ought to have consequences for the level of international conflict A restrained .
United States is much less likely to play the role of sheriff than one following a more activist
approach . Were the unipole to follow such a path, hegemonic-stability theorists warn, disaster would follow. Former National Security Advisor Zbigniew Brzezinski spoke for many when he warned that “outright chaos” could be expected to follow a
loss of hegemony, including a string of quite specific issues, including new or renewed attempts to build regional empires (by China, Turkey, Russia, and Brazil) and the collapse of the US relationship with Mexico, as emboldened nationalists south of the border
reassert 150-year-old territorial claims. Overall, without US dominance, today’s relatively peaceful world would turn “violent and bloodthirsty.” 71 Niall Ferguson foresees a post-hegemonic “Dark Age” in which “plunderers and pirates” target the big coastal cities
like New York and Rotterdam, terrorists attack cruise liners and aircraft carriers alike, and the “wretchedly poor citizens” of Latin America are unable to resist the Protestantism brought to them by US evangelicals. Following the multiple (regional, fortunately) nuclear
wars and plagues, the few remaining airlines would be forced to suspend service to all but the very richest cities.72 These are somewhat extreme versions of a central assumption of all hegemonic-stability theorists: a restrained United States would be accompanied
by utter disaster. The “present danger” of which Kristol, Kagan, and their fellow travelers warn is that the United States “will shrink its responsibilities and—in a fit of absentmindedness, or parsimony, or indifference— allow the international order that it created and
sustains to collapse.” 73 Liberals fear restraint as well, and also warn that a militarized version of primacy would be counterproductive in the long run. Although they believe that the rule-based order established by United States is more durable than the relatively
fragile order discussed by the neoconservatives, liberals argue that Washington can undermine its creation over time through thoughtless unilateral actions that violate those rules. Many predicted that the invasion of Iraq and its general contempt for international
hegemonicstability theorists expect a rise of chaos during a restrained presidency, liberals also
have grave concerns regarding primacy then maintaining that . Overall, if either version is correct and global stability is provided by US hegemony,
stability through a grand strategy based on either primacy (to neoconservatives) or “deep
engagement” (to liberals) is clearly a wise choice .75 If, however, US actions are only tangentially related to the outbreak of the New Peace, or if any of the other proposed
of American presidents have differed in some important ways . The four administrations are reasonable representations of the four ideal types outlined by
Posen and Ross label “neo-isolationism” but its proponents refer to as “strategic restraint 77 In .”
no case did the various anticipated disorders materialize . armed conflict levels fell As Table 2 demonstrates,
steadily, irrespective of the grand strategic path Washington chose. Neither the primacy of
George W. Bush nor the restraint of Barack Obama had much effect on the level of global
violence the world has not experienced an increase in violence while the
. Despite continued warnings (and the high-profile mess in Syria),
United States chose uninvolvement . If the grand strategy of the United States is responsible for the New Peace, it is leaving no trace in the evidence. Perhaps we should not expect a correlation to show
up in this kind of analysis. While US behavior might have varied in the margins during this period, nether its relative advantage over its nearest rivals nor its commitments waivered in any important way. However, it is surely worth noting that if trends opposite to
those discussed in the previous two sections had unfolded, if other states had reacted differently to fluctuations in either US military spending or grand strategy, then surely hegemonic stability theorists would argue that their expectations had been fulfilled.
Many liberals were on the lookout for chaos while George W. Bush was in the White House, just
as neoconservatives have been quick to identify apparent worldwide catastrophe under
President Obama If increases in violence would have been evidence for the wisdom of
.78
hegemonic strategies, then logical consistency demands that the lack thereof should at least
pose a problem the only evidence we have regarding the relationship between US power
. As it stands,
and international stability suggests that the two are unrelated. The rest of the world appears
quite capable and willing to operate effectively without the presence of a global policeman .
Those who think otherwise have precious little empirical support upon which to build their case.
Hegemonic stability is a belief, in other words, rather than an established fact, and as such deserves a different kind of examination. The Political Psychology of Unipolarity Evidence supporting the notion that US power is primarily responsible for the New Peace is
Political psychology
slim, but belief in the connection is quite strong, especially in policy circles. The best arena to examine the proposition is therefore not the world of measurable rationality, but rather that of the human mind.
can shed more light on unipolarity than can any collection of data or evidence Just because an .
outcome is primarily psychological does not mean that it is less real perception quickly becomes ;
explanatory power in international politics whether they have a firm foundation in empirical
reality or not. Like all beliefs, faith in the stability provided by hegemony is rarely subjected to much analysis.79 Although they almost always have some basis in reality, beliefs need not pass rigorous tests to prove that they match it. No
amount of evidence has been able to convince some people that vaccines do not cause autism, for example, or that the world is more peaceful than at any time before, or that the climate is changing due to human activity. Ultimately, as Robert Jervis explains, “we
unjustified, inaccurate beliefs, folly often follows . The person who decides to take a big risk because of astrological advice in the morning’s horoscope can benefit from baseless
superstition if the risk pays off. Probability and luck suggest that successful policy choices can sometimes flow from incorrect beliefs. Far more often, however, poor intellectual foundations lead to suboptimal or even disastrous outcomes. It is worthwhile to analyze
the foundations of even our most deeply held beliefs to determine which ones are good candidates to inspire poor policy choices in those who hold them. People are wonderful rationalizers. There is much to be said for being the strongest country in the world; their
status provides Americans both security and psychological rewards, as well as strong incentives to construct a rationale for preserving the unipolar moment that goes beyond mere selfishness. Since people enjoy being “number one,” they are susceptible to
American .81 Perhaps the satisfaction that comes with being the unipolar power has inspired Americans to misperceive the positive role that their status plays in the world. Three findings from political psychology can shed light on perceptions of
They are mutually supportive, and, when taken together, suggest that it is likely that US
hegemonic stability.
policymakers overestimate the extent to which their actions are responsible for the choices of
others. The belief in the major US contribution to world peace is probably unjustified. The Illusion of Control Could 5 percent of the world’s population hope to enforce rules upon the rest? Would even an internationally hegemonic United States be
common tendency of people to overestimate their ability to control events. A variety of evidence has accumulated over the past forty
situations where outcomes are clearly generated by pure chance, people tend to believe that
they can exert control over even ts.83 There is little reason to believe that leaders are somehow less susceptible to such illusions than subjects in controlled experiments. The extensive research on the illusion
far more confident than others, often overly so, and that confidence leads them to inflate their
own importance. Leaders of superpowers are thus particularly vulnerable to distorted
85
perceptions regarding their ability to affect the course of events. US observers had a greater
structural predisposition to believe that they would have been able to control events
than others, for example,
that value individualism are more likely to harbor illusions of control than those from collectivist
societies, where assumptions of group agency are more common . When compared to people from other parts of the world, Westerners tend to view
countries with individualistic societies are therefore at high risk for misperceiving their ability to
influence events . For the United States, the illusion of control extends beyond the water’s edge. An oft-discussed public good supposedly conferred by US hegemony is order in those parts of the world uncontrolled by sovereign states, or
the “global commons.” 88 One such common area is the sea, where the United States maintains the only true blue-water navy in the world. That the United States has brought this peace to the high seas is a central belief of hegemonic-stability theorists, one rarely
examined in any serious way. Indeed the maritime environment has been unusually peaceful for decades; the biggest naval battles since Okinawa took place during the Falklands conflict in 1982, and they were fairly minor.89 If hegemony is the key variable
the reason other states are not building blue-water navies is not because the United States
dissuades them from doing so but rather because none feels that trade is imperiled .90 In earlier times, and certainly
all economies, and it would be in the interest of no state to interrupt it .91 Free trade at sea may no longer need protection, in other words,
to which they control events in their lives. Furthermore, if these observations from political psychology are right about the factors that influence the growth of illusions of power, then US leaders and analysts are
particularly susceptible to misperception They may well be overestimating the degree to which .
the United States can affect the behavior of others . The rest of the world may be able to get along just fine, on land and at sea, without US attempts to control it. Ego-Centric
they play in the thinking process of others. Jervis was the first to discuss this phenomenon, now
known as the “ego-centric bias,” which has been put to the test many times since he wrote four
decades ago . Building on what was known as “attribution theory,” Jervis observed that actors tend to overestimate their importance in the decisions of others. Rarely are our actions as consequential upon their behavior as we believe them to
This is not merely ego gratification, though that plays a role; actors are simply more conscious
be.92
of their own actions than the other factors central to the internal deliberations in other capitals .
make US analysts even more susceptible to its effects. First, the bias is magnified when the
behavior of others is desirable This “self-serving bias” is one
. People generally take credit for positive outcomes and deflect responsibility for negative ones.
distortion by ego-centric, self-serving biases. When war breaks out, it is not the fault of US
leaders; when peace comes to a region, Washington is happy to take credit . There was for some time a debate among psychologists
susceptibility to the bias, perhaps because of the value individualistic societies place on self-
enhancement (as opposed to self-effacement).96 Actors from more collectivist societies tend to have their egos rewarded in different ways, such as through contributions to the community and connections to others. People from Western
countries are far more likely to take credit for positive outcomes than those from Eastern, in other words, and subjects in the United States tower over the rest of the West. US leaders are therefore more culturally predisposed to believe that their actions are
with high self-esteem are more likely to believe that they are at the center of the decision-
making process of others than those who think somewhat more modestly .97 Leaders of any unipolar state may well be more likely to
hold their country in high regard, and therefore are more vulnerable to exaggerated egocentric perceptions, than their contemporaries in smaller states. It might not occur to the lead diplomat of other counties to claim, as did Madeleine Albright, that “if we have to
US security community may be even more vulnerable to this misperception than the average
group of people . For example, many in that community believed that the United States played a decisive role in Vladimir Putin’s decisions regarding Crimea and eastern Ukraine. President Obama’s various critics argued that perceptions of
American weakness inspired or even invited Russian aggression. The refusal to act in Syria in particular emboldened Moscow (despite the fact that in 2008, in the face of ample displays of US action in the Middle East, Moscow had proven sufficiently bold to invade
Georgia). Other critics suggested that a variety of provocative US behaviors since the end of the Cold War, especially the expansion of NATO and dissolution of the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, poisoned US–Russian relations and led to an increase in Kremlin paranoia
pervasive that they generate something of a law of political psychology: we are probably less
influential in others’ decision making than we think we are . This extends to their decisions to resolve contentious issues peacefully. While it may be natural for US
making of others, and in the maintenance of international stability. The effect of the ego-centric bias may be especially difficult for the unipolar
important to calculations made in other capitals than they believe . They may well be especially unlikely to recognize the possibility that hegemony is
epiphenomenal, that it exists alongside, but does not affect, global stability and the New Peace. Overestimated Benevolence After three years in the White House, Ronald Reagan had learned something surprising: “Many people at the top of the Soviet hierarchy
were genuinely afraid of America and Americans,” he wrote in his autobiography. He continued: “Perhaps this shouldn’t have surprised me, but it did … I’d always felt that from our deeds it must be clear to anyone that Americans were a moral people who starting at
the birth of our nation had always used our power only as a force for good in the world…. During my first years in Washington, I think many of us took it for granted that the Russians, like ourselves, considered it unthinkable that the United States would launch a first
motivations to the behavior of others, it is exceedingly difficult for them to accept that anyone
could interpret their actions in negative ways . Leaders are well aware of their own motives and tend to assume that their peaceful intentions are obvious and transparent. Both strains of
other states to be successful ; it has no hope to succeed if it encounters resistance from the less powerful members of the system, or even if they simply refuse to follow the rules. Relatively small police forces require
nonthreatening. The lack of balancing behavior in the system, which has been puzzling to many realists, seems to support the notion of widespread perceptions of benevolent hegemony.101 Were they threatened by the order
constructed by the United States, the argument goes, smaller states would react in ways that reflected their fears. Since internal and external balancing accompanied previous attempts to achieve hegemony, the absence of such behavior today suggests that
something is different about the US version. Hegemonic-stability theorists purport to understand the perceptions of others, at times better than those others understand themselves. Complain as they may at times, other countries know that the United States is
acting in the common interest. Objections to unipolarity, though widespread, are not “very seriously intended,” wrote Kagan, since “the truth about America’s dominant role in the world is known to most observers. And the truth is that the benevolent hegemony
exercised by the United States is good for a vast portion of the world’s population.” 102 In the 1990s, Russian protests regarding NATO expansion—though nearly universal—were not taken seriously, since US planners believed the alliance’s benevolent intentions
were apparent to all. Sagacious Russians understood that expansion would actually be beneficial, since it would bring stability to their western border.103 President Clinton and Secretary of State Warren Christopher were caught off guard by the hostility of their
counterparts regarding the issue at a summit in Budapest in December 1994.104 Despite warnings from the vast majority of academic and policy experts about the likely Russian reaction and overall wisdom of expansion itself, the administration failed to anticipate
The Russians did not seem to believe American assurances that expansion would
Moscow’s position.105
actually be good for them. The United States overestimated the degree to which others saw it
as benevolent Once again, the culture of the United States might make its leaders more
.
vulnerable to this misperception . The need for positive self-regard appears to be particularly strong in North American societies compared to elsewhere.106 Western egos tend to be gratified through self-
The need to be
promotion rather than humility, and independence rather than interdependence. Americans are more likely to feel good if they are unique rather than a good cog in society’s wheel, and uniquely good.
perceived as benevolent, though universal, may well exert stronger encouragement for US
observers to project their perceptions onto others. The United States almost certainly frightens
others more than its leaders perceive A quarter of the 68,000 respondents to a 2013 Gallup poll .
in sixty-five countries identified the United States as the “greatest threat to world peace ,” which was
potential for police brutality, even if it occurs rarely. Such ungratefulness tends to come as a surprise to US leaders. In 2003, Condoleezza Rice was dismayed to discover resistance to US initiatives in Iraq:
probably exaggerate the extent to which US hegemony is everywhere secretly welcomed it is ; not just
behavior. To review, assuming for a moment that US leaders are subject to the same forces that affect every human being, they overestimate the amount of control they have over other actors, and are not as important to decisions made elsewhere
as they believe themselves to be. And they probably perceive their own benevolence to be much greater than do others. These common phenomena all influence US beliefs in the same direction, and may well increase the apparent explanatory power of hegemony
United States is probably not as central to the New Peace as either liberals or
beyond what the facts would otherwise support. The
neoconservatives believe. In the end, what can be said about the relationship between US power and international stability? Probably not much that will satisfy partisans, and the pacifying virtue of US hegemony will
remain largely an article of faith in some circles in the policy world. Like most beliefs, it will remain immune to alteration by logic and evidence. Beliefs rarely change, so debates rarely end. For those not yet fully converted, however, perhaps it will be significant that
corroborating evidence for the relationship is extremely hard to identify . If indeed hegemonic stability exists, it does so without leaving
Neither Washington’s spending, nor its interventions, nor its overall grand strategy
much of a trace.
seem to matter much to the levels of armed conflict around the world The (apart from those wars that Uncle Sam starts).
empirical record does not contain strong reasons to believe that unipolarity and the New Peace
are related political psychology suggest that hegemonic stability is a belief particularly
, and insights from
susceptible to misperception. US leaders probably exaggerate the degree to which their power matters, and could retrench without much risk to themselves or the world around them. Researchers will need to
time, no matter how dominant the United States or what policies President Trump follows, or is,
how much resentment its actions cause in the periphery . The people of the twenty-first century are likely to be much safer and more secure than any of their
predecessors, even if many of them do not always believe it.
Heg Bad - Generic
Hegemony risks moral hazards, causes all their war scenarios
Posen 2013 - Ford International Prof of Political Science and Director of the Security Studies @
MIT
Barry R, "The Case for a Less Activist Foreign Policy," 92 Foreign Aff. 116
U.S. security guarantees also encourage plucky allies to challenge more powerful states,
confident that Washington will save them in the end-a classic case of moral hazard. This phenomenon
has caused the United States to incur political costs, antagonizing powers great and small for no
gain and encouraging them to seek opportunities to provoke the U nited States in return. So far, the
United States has escaped getting sucked into unnecessary wars, although Washington
dodged a bullet in Taiwan when the Democratic Progressive Party of Chen Shui-bian governed the island, from 2000 to
2008. His frequent allusions to independence, which ran counter to U.S. policy but which some Bush administration officials
reportedly encouraged, unnecessarily provoked the Chinese government; had he proceeded, he would have surely triggered a
dangerous crisis. Chen would never have entertained such reckless rhetoric absent the long-standing backing of the U.S.
government.
The Philippines and Vietnam (the latter of which has no formal defense treaty with Washington) also seem to
have figured out that they can needle China over maritime boundary disputes and then seek
shelter under the U.S. umbrella when China inevitably reacts. Not only do these disputes make it
harder for Washington to cooperate with Beijing on issues of global importance; they also risk
roping the United States into conflicts over strategically marginal territory
. Georgia is another state that has played this game to the United States'
detriment. Overly confident of Washington's affection for it, the tiny republic deliberately
challenged Russia over control of the disputed region of South Ossetia in August 2008. Regardless of
how exactly the fighting began, Georgia acted far too adventurously given its size, proximity to Russia, and distance from any
plausible source of military help. This needless war ironically made Russia look tough and the United States unreliable.
This dynamic is at play in the Middle East, too. Although U.S. officials have communicated time and again to leaders
in Jerusalem their discomfort with Israeli settlements on the territory occupied during the 1967 war, Israel regularly
increases the population and dimensions of those settlements . The United States' military
largess and regular affirmations of support for Israel have convinced Israeli hawks that they
will suffer no consequences for ignoring U.S. advice. It takes two to make peace in the Israeli-Palestinian
conflict, but the creation of humiliating facts on the ground will not bring a negotiated settlement any closer. And Israel's policies
toward the Palestinians are a serious impediment to improved U.S. relations with the Arab world.
Heg Bad - M.E. Interventionism
An increase of hegemony legitimizes the US to engage in middle eastern
countries – this causes a laundry list of impacts
Shepp 18 [Jonah Shepp 7-1-2018 Intelligencer While Condemning Iran, the U.S. Contributes to
Terrorism in the Middle East, Too http://nymag.com/intelligencer/2018/08/iran-us-contribute-
terrorism-middle-east.html Accessed 11-28-2018]
The Trump administration’s concern over Iran’s support for terrorist organizations throughout the Middle East is entirely legitimate.
Iran projects regional power through a variety of non-state proxies: Hezbollah in Lebanon and Syria, Hamas in Gaza, various Shi’ite
militias in Iraq, and Yemen’s Houthi rebels. All of these organizations have engaged in terrorist activity, while the Syrian regime of
Bashar al-Assad, an Iranian client, has committed countless atrocities over more than eight years of civil war there. Yet the
United States has little in the way of moral high ground from which to berate Iran for
supporting terrorism and destabilizing fragile states in its backyard. Over the past few
decades, the U.S. has often found itself doing the same thing in the course of projecting
our own power and defending the hegemony of our problematic allies in the Middle East.
The latest example of this comes from Yemen, where an Associated Press investigation published Monday
found that the U.S.-backed military coalition led by Saudi Arabia and the United Arab
Emirates has on numerous occasions paid off members of Al Qaeda in the Arabian
Peninsula (AQAP) to abandon their strongholds or even to join up with coalition forces. While
ostensibly at war with both AQAP and the Iran-backed Houthi rebels, the U.A.E. and Saudi Arabia see the latter as the more pressing
threat by far. Accordingly, the AP found, local
militias supported by the coalition frequently recruit
seasoned Al Qaeda fighters into their ranks to fight the Houthis, in deals allegedly
brokered by Emirati agents and greased with Saudi money. The U.S. does not directly
fund the coalition, and the investigation found no evidence of American money making
its way to AQAP militants. Nonetheless, the U.S. has supported the coalition with
billions of dollars in weaponry, while providing intelligence and air support, chiefly in
the form of drone strikes. Money is fungible, and every dollar the U.S. spends on
weapons for the coalition is a dollar Saudi Arabia or the U.A.E. saves to spend on bribing
or recruiting AQAP jihadists. When our drones hold off on bombing AQAP convoys
while the coalition grants them safe passage into their mountain hideaways, we are still
complicit in a dirty deal. This doesn’t make us any worse than Iran, but it underscores the reality that in messy wars over
failed states, nobody comes out with clean hands. Not one participant in the humanitarian catastrophe that is the Yemeni civil war has
in mind the best interests of Yemen as a country or the Yemeni people. As the regional powers play their grand strategy game and
attempt to muscle the country into their respective spheres of influence, everyone on the ground is just scrambling to survive and to
expand their piece of a very small pie. The attitude of local militia commanders was described to the AP thusly: “We
will unite
with the devil in the face of Houthis.” In this context, the notion that we could intervene
in Yemen and not end up doing business with people who ought to be our enemies is
almost ridiculous. The same is true of Syria, where the U.S. has consistently had a hell of
a time sorting out the “good” rebel factions we can conscientiously support from the
jihadists we’d rather not. Despite our best efforts to only arm the good guys, some of the
weapons we dumped into Syria inevitably fell into the hands of radical terror groups,
including ISIS. In Iraq, too, militias once supported by Iran have become partners of the U.S. in our efforts to help that country
beat back ISIS and restore some vestige of stability. Alliances with paramilitary groups were also a key component of the U.S.
counterinsurgency operations during the most violent years of our occupation of Iraq. Needless to say, that occupation was itself
among the most destabilizing events to befall the Middle East in its modern history and has led to tens of thousands of deaths from
terrorism. It’s
hard for the U.S. to credibly condemn Iran for supporting terrorism when
every time we involve ourselves in a Middle Eastern conflict, we find ourselves
contributing — directly or indirectly, wittingly or unwittingly — to instability, violence,
and yes, terrorism. The means of our foreign policy in the Middle East are at odds with
its supposed ends. Our invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, our attempts to tip the scales of
the conflicts in Libya and Syria, and our intervention in Yemen have only exacerbated
the region’s ills. Our close relationship with Saudi Arabia, which easily rivals Iran as an
inspiration, sponsor, and financier of terrorism, is a big part of the problem. By
supporting Saudi hegemony in the greater Middle East, we have abetted the proliferation
of a radical Islamist ideology no less toxic than that of the Iranian mullahs. Moreover, by
keeping Iran in a constant state of threat, we justify its leaders’ paranoia and motivate
them to counter the Saudis with weapons proliferation and terrorist activities of their own
Heg Bad - Prolif
Heg causes prolif but decline prevents it
Friedman et al. 13
Benjamin Friedman is the William Joseph Maier Professor of Political Economy and former Chair
of the Department of Economics @ Harvard, Brendan R. Green is a Professor of Political Science
@ Williams College, Justin Logan is the director of foreign policy studies @ the Cato Institute,
International Studies, Vol. 38, No. 2, Fall 2013, pp. 181-199, “Correspondence: Debating
American Engagement: The Future of U.S. Grand Strategy,”
http://object.cato.org/sites/cato.org/files/articles/isec_c_00140.pdf#page=3
Brooks et al. warn that a variety of states would develop nuclear weapons absent ∂ U.S.
protection. We agree that a proliferation cascade would create danger and that restraint∂ may cause some new states to seek
nuclear weapons. Proliferation cascades are∂ nonetheless an unconvincing rationale for primacy.
Primacy likely causes more proliferation among adversaries than it prevents among allies.
States crosswise with the∂ United States realize that nuclear arsenals deter U.S. attack and
diminish its coercive power. U.S. protection, meanwhile, does not reliably stop allied and
friendly states from building nuclear weapons. Witness British, French, and Israeli
decisionmaking.∂ Proliferation cascades were frequently predicted but never realized during
the Cold∂ War, when security was scarcer.15 New research argues that security considerations
are∂ often a secondary factor in the proliferation of nuclear weapons , and that states with the
strongest appetites for proliferation often lack the technical and managerial capacities∂ to
acquire the bomb.16 Finally, even if proliferation cascades occur, they do not∂ threaten U.S.
security. Few, if any, states would be irrational enough to court destruction ∂ at the hands of the
U.S. nuclear arsenal, especially if the United States is not enmeshed∂ in their conflicts.
AT Transition Wars
Hegemonic decline will be peaceful
Fettweis 2017 - Associate Professor of Political Science at Tulane University
Christopher, "Unipolarity, Hegemony, and the New Peace," Security Studies, 26:3, 423-451, DOI:
10.1080/09636412.2017.1306394
Why has armed conflict declined to historically low levels ? What accounts for the post-Cold War peace, and
how long is it likely to last? Surely no questions are more important for either the theory or practice of international relations, and
few are harder to answer. Only by understanding the causes of the New Peace can we extrapolate its likely future, however, and
plan accordingly. Of the many possible independent variables, none is more controversial than the suggestion
that hegemonic stability is at work. The possibility that the United States , wittingly or not, has
essentially established a global Pax Americana is generally overlooked by the major scholarly
works on the subject. This stands in stark contrast to the policy world, where the many positive aspects of
unipolarity and/or US hegemony are articles of faith, rarely discussed and never seriously
questioned. Scholar and public intellectual Michael Lind spoke for many when he wrote, “in my experience, most members of
the U.S. foreign policy elite sincerely believe that the alternative to perpetual U.S. world domination is chaos and war.” 4 One of
those is certainly Robert Kagan, who noted, “Pinker traces the beginning of a long-term decline in deaths from war to 1945, which
just happens to be birthdate of the American world order. The coincidence eludes him, but it need not elude us.”5
This paper examines the theoretical, empirical, and psychological foundations of that widespread belief. The first section discusses the New Peace and its potential explanations;
the second explains the difference between unipolarity and hegemony, and examines the logic of the hegemonic-stability argument; the third turns to the evidence, comparing
both US power and grand strategy to conflict levels; the fourth examines the political psychology of hegemony and reviews some major findings that provide insight into how
international order can be misperceived. Insights from that field are crucial in any discussion of the relationship between US power and global stability, which is built far more on
belief and perception than evidence.
The New Peace does not appear to be the result of unipolarity or US hegemony. While that
conclusion might not sit well with many US analysts, the news is not all bad, for if the current
generation of declinists is right and unipolarity’s days are numbered, the odds are good that
the world will not descend into the atavistic chaos that haunts the neoconservative
imagination. The United States can adjust its grand strategy without fear in the Trump years,
perhaps even letting the “unipolar moment” expire, because the New Peace may well be unrelated to its
dominance.6
AT Prolif
No Prolif
No risk of proliferation – use of weapons has been highly exaggerated and
attacks aren’t executed
Mueller 18 (John, Adjunct Professor of Political Science and Woody Hayes Senior
Research Scientist at Ohio State University and a Senior Fellow at the Cato
Institute. He is the author of Atomic Obsession: Nuclear Alarmism From
Hiroshima to Al Qaeda, “Nuclear Weapons Don’t Matter”, Foreign Affairs, Nov-
Dec 2018, https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/2018-10-15/nuclear-weapons-dont-matter )
Since the 1940s, nuclear weapons have greatly affected defense budgets, political and military
posturing, and academic theory. Beyond that, however, their practical significance has been vastly
exaggerated by both critics and supporters. Nuclear weapons were not necessary to deter a third world
war. They have proved useless militarily; in fact, their primary use has been to stoke the national
ego or to posture against real or imaginedthreats. Few states have or want them, and they seem to
be out of reach for terrorists . Their impact on international affairs has been minor compared with the sums and
words expended on them. The costs resulting from the nuclear weapons obsessionhave been huge. To hold its own in a
snarling contest with the Soviet Union during the Cold War, the United States spent $5–$10 trillion maintaining a
vast nuclear arsenal—resources that could have been used more productively on almost anything else. To head off the
imagined dangers that would result from nuclear proliferation, Washington and its allies have imposed devastating
economic sanctions on countries such as Iraq and North Korea, and even launched a war of aggression—sorry,
“preemption”—that killed more people than did the nuclear bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. The
time has long since come to acknowledge that the thinkers of the early nuclear age were mistaken in believing
that the world had been made anew . In retrospect, they overestimated the importance of the
nuclear revolution and the delicacy of the balance of terror . This spurred generations of officials to worry
more about nuclear matters than they should have and to distort foreign and security policies in unfortunate ways. Today’s
policymakers don’t have to repeat the same mistakes, and everybody would be better off if they didn’t. Over the decades, the
atomic obsession has taken various forms, focusing on an endless array of worst-case scenarios : bolts
from the blue, accidental wars, lost arms races, proliferation spirals, nuclear terrorism . The common
feature among all these disasters is that none of them has ever materialized . Either we are
the luckiest people in history or the risks have been overstated.
person to lead the world toward nuclear disarmament . The fact that a leader as inexperienced as Trump has
access to nuclear launch codes that could destroy whole nations instantaneously has publicly reignited the issue of nuclear
proliferation. However, the
fundamental problem is not that Trump has access to the nuclear codes—it’s that
they exist
in the first place. Getting people to sit up and recognize that there is an unacceptable level of
nuclear threat is an essential step to global nuclear disarmament; governments will not budge without public support. If
anything, Trump’s presidency has re-alerted the world to the notion of nuclear annihilation
and led to an awakening in social activism in younger generations . Many interpreted this as a call to
expand nuclear weaponry, perhaps in response to Russian president Vladimir Putin’s statement earlier in the day that Russia needed
to “strengthen the military potential of strategic nuclear forces.” A Trump spokesperson later said that “ strengthen” referred
to the need to work against proliferation to rogue nations . But was that truly his intention? After all, he also
supposedly remarked, “Let it be an arms race. We will outmatch them at every pass and outlast them all,” to MSNBC co-host Mika
Brzezinski when asked about the tweet. This is comment is similar to those made by president Reagan early in his presidency, before
he changed his tune toward abolition. If Trump is truly in favor of nuclear disarmament, he may be the
best-positioned world leader in recent history to move this effort forward. The fear he has
incited has had the unintended byproduct of increasing public awareness of this topic for the first
time in decades. Then there are his close connections with Russia: He places a high priority on improving relations with the other
country most deeply embroiled in the problem, and the selection of Rex Tillerson as secretary of state adds the strength of an
individual experienced in working with Russia. He has also met with former secretary of state Henry Kissinger, who has
recommended “Russia should be perceived as an essential element of any new global equilibrium, not primarily as a threat to the
United States.” Add to this the fact that the Democrats likewise do not wish for Trump to be anywhere near “the big red button,” so
proposals he puts forward in Congress toward nuclear abolition should be met with some degree of bi-partisan support. Oddly
enough, nuclear non-proliferation might be about to have its moment.
No Impact
There’s no impact to proliferation – alarmists are wrong
Mueller 17 (John, Professor of Political Science and Senior Research Scientist at the Mershon
Center for International Security Studies and Senior Fellow at CATO Institute, “Cato Handbook
for Policymakers – 76. Nuclear Weapons: Proliferation and Terrorism”, Cato Institute, 7-9-
19, https://object.cato.org/sites/cato.org/files/serials/files/cato-handbook-
policymakers/2017/2/cato-handbook-for-policymakers-8th-edition-76_0.pdf)
Except for their effects on agonies, obsessions, rhetoric, posturing, and spending, the consequences of nuclear
proliferation have been largely benign: those who have acquired the weapons have “used”
them simply to stoke their egos or to deter real or imagined threats. For the most part, nuclear powers have
found the weapons to be a notable waste of time, money, effort, and scientific talent. They have quietly kept the
weapons in storage and haven’t even found much benefit in rattling them from time to time. If the recent efforts to keep Iran
from obtaining nuclear weapons have been successful, those efforts have done Iran a favor. There has never been a
militarily compelling reason to use nuclear weapons , particularly because it has not been possible to
identify suitable targets—or targets that couldn’t be attacked as effectively by conventional munitions. Conceivably,
conditions exist under which nuclear weapons could serve a deterrent function, but there is little reason to suspect that they have
been necessary to deter war thus far, even during the Cold War. The main Cold War contestants have never believed that a
repetition of World War II, whether embellished by nuclear weapons or not, is remotely in their interests. Moreover, the weapons
have not proved to be crucial status symbols. How much more status would Japan have if it possessed nuclear weapons? Would
anybody pay a great deal more attention to Britain or France if their arsenals held 5,000 nuclear weapons, or much less if they had
none? Did China need nuclear weapons to impress the world with its economic growth or its Olympics? Those
considerations
help explain why alarmists have been wrong for decades about the pace of nuclear proliferation .
Most famously, in the 1960s, President John Kennedy anticipated that in another decade “fifteen or twenty or twenty-five nations
may have these weapons.” Yet, of the dozens of technologically capable countries that have considered
obtaining nuclear arsenals, very few have done so . Insofar as most leaders of most countries (even rogue ones)
have considered acquiring the weapons, they have come to appreciate several drawbacks of doing so: nuclear weapons are
dangerous, costly, and likely to rile the neighbors. Moreover, as the University of Southern California’s Jacques Hymans has
demonstrated, the
weapons have also been exceedingly difficult for administratively dysfunctional
countries to obtain—it took decades for North Korea and Pakistan to do so. In consequence, alarmist
predictions about proliferation chains, cascades, dominoes, waves, avalanches, epidemics, and points of no return have
proved faulty. Although proliferation has so far had little consequence, that is not because the only countries to get nuclear
weapons have had rational leaders. Large, important countries that acquired the bomb were run at the time by unchallenged—
perhaps certifiably deranged—monsters. Consider Joseph Stalin, who, in 1949, was planning to change the climate of the Soviet
Union by planting a lot of trees, and Mao Zedong, who, in 1964, had just carried out a bizarre social experiment that resulted in an
artificial famine in which tens of millions of Chinese perished. Some also fear that a country might use its nuclear weapons to
“dominate” its area. That argument was used with dramatic urgency before 2003 when Saddam Hussein supposedly posed great
danger, and it has been frequently applied to Iran. Exactly how that domination is to be carried out is never made clear. The notion,
apparently, is this: should an atomic rogue state rattle the occasional rocket, other countries in the area, suitably intimidated, would
bow to its demands. Far more likely, threatened states would make common cause with each other
and with other concerned countries (including nuclear ones) against the threatening neighbor. That is how countries
coalesced into an alliance of convenience to oppose Iraq’s region-threatening invasion of Kuwait in 1990. Yet another concern
has been that the weapons will go off, by accident or miscalculation, devastating the planet in the process:
the weapons exist in the thousands, sooner or later one or more of them will inevitably go off. But those
prognostications have now failed to deliver for 70 years . That time period suggests something more
than luck is operating. Moreover, the notion that if one nuclear weapon goes off in one place, the world will necessarily be
plunged into thermonuclear cataclysm should remain in the domain of Hollywood scriptwriters.
AT Riots
Inevitable
Riots inevitable several implications
Dohmen 11
Bert Dohmen is the President of Dohmen Capital Research, which has been providing market
timing for traders and investors world-wide for over 40 years. My firm utilizes advanced
technical analysis, combined with credit market analysis Jan 31
2011/https://www.forbes.com/sites/investor/2011/01/31/global-riots-opportunity-or-
danger/#6c6079dc2c33///dvb
Riots are in the streets around the globe ! The complaints include lack of “freedom,” lack of jobs, and especially
unaffordable food prices. Until last month it was Europe, with Greece, France, Britain, etc. Now it’s the Middle
East. Algeria and Tunisia were in the news last week. This week it spread to Egypt, Yemen, etc. Governments will be toppled.
Isn’t it amazing how suddenly , in one week, all these people thousands of miles apart decide
to go into the streets to protest conditions they have lived under for the past 50 years or
more? Coincidence?
Governments will now be toppled, radicals will take over and Washington will demonstrate that the
U.S. “supports democracy” even if it means creating more nations that support terrorism . Iran
of the past 30 years will be the model. In fact, one Washington official said on FoxNews, “we have to support democratic reforms
even if it means creation of governments we won’t like.” In Pakistan there is the potential of nuclear bombs controlled by the
extremists.
The riots and upheavals are not short term events. These will continue and escalate as the
year goes on. I would not be an early bargain hunter. The U.S. stock market rally has made a
top and will now have a meaningful correction. Be prepared!
1. Avoid emerging markets
2. Oil prices will rise
3. Alternative energy should get a boost, led by solar
4. Gold and silver have probably made a correction bottom as Middle Eastern demand now
supplants the reduced crisis demand from Europe.
5. The general stock market, with the exceptions stated, will undergo a meaningful
correction.
No Impact
No impact to riots – even the rioters know it’s senseless
Joseph 16 [George Joseph is a former editorial fellow at CityLab. George Joseph, 9-22-2016,
"From Ferguson to Charlotte, Why Police Protests Turn Into Riots," CityLab, accessed 7-26-2019,
https://www.citylab.com/equity/2016/09/from-ferguson-to-charlotte-why-police-protests-turn-
into-riots/500981/]
On Wednesday night, riots again rocked Charlotte, North Carolina, in response to the police shooting of Keith Lamont
Scott, a 43-year-old African-American man. Hundreds marched through the city’s entertainment district, once again
met by riot police deploying rubber bullets and tear gas. Some protesters threw bottles at police and damaged businesses late into the night,
as National Guard and State Highway Patrol troopers began to pour into the city. During the protest, one civilian was shot and seriously injured . Police claim
they were not involved in this shooting, which some protesters have disputed.
observers quickly denounced the riotous protests as senseless violence, criticizing the
Some
looting that have occurred over the past two days without looking at the intense geographic
and economic segregation in which they took place. From Ferguson to Baltimore to Charlotte, rioting, Hyman notes, often
breaks out in poor, black neighborhoods—where people feel both oppressed by police and by
the predatory lenders and overpriced stores in their communities. Hyman explored this idea in a conversation with CityLab:
Ferguson, Baltimore, and now Charlotte: We sometimes see that local protests in response to police killings morph into riots. Why do you think this is?
Riots, though they do occur, are relatively rare. More frequent are peaceful protests and community meetings, but these of course don’t get the same coverage. Riots occur because
these police killings just keep happening, no matter how many peaceful marches happen. It is, in every sense, maddening. Many have tried to discredit the riots
by pointing to the occasional looting that has occurred, claiming such actions by protestors are
destructive to "their own communities." In Ferguson, a QT gas station became an iconic site of destruction during the protests. In Baltimore, it was a CVS and the
payday lender ACE Cash Express. In Charlotte on Tuesday, it was a Walmart. What drives the animus against these institutions, which often seem to be large corporate chains, and why are they the secondary
targets of anti-police brutality protests?
For poor black people in cities, the surveillance that they experience at stores and on the streets are of a piece. When they walk in a store they are watched. When they leave the store, their receipts are
questioned. They might be ripped off, or not, but they are made to feel less like sovereign customers and more like suspects. Unwarranted police stops feel similar. Those who are watched feel disrespected, and
constantly reminded that they are not in charge. Riots provide that sense of control, but at a terrible cost.
Middle-class white people rarely have these experiences, so it is hard for them to understand what Walmart and police could have in common.
You have written that "riots reflect fury not just at the police, but at the constraints of the ghetto’s retail economy, where the poor pay more." How do police uphold this “ghetto retail economy,” where the poor
are deprived of the competitive market pricing present in better-off suburbs?
In places where there are few legitimate jobs, the underground economy makes up the difference. Payday lenders and pawn brokers are the tip of an illicit iceberg, of which the drug trade is a major part. Fighting
this illegal economy has resulted in police becoming an occupying force. Policing an economy with a handgun, needless to say, is an impossible task. Are there historical cases in which riots have been an effective
tactic for police brutality reform?
Riots draw attention to these issues in a way that protests and op-eds do not . It is hard to say that riots lead to
reform, but without the riots, these kinds of activities would easily slip forgotten into the news cycle. In that sense, they are effective. But too much rioting, and the
death, and on some level, that is true. It is not a failure of individuals but a failure of the
system. I would urge Charlotteans not to put too much faith in holding someone accountable, but have a broader conversation about what can be done, systemically, to prevent this [police violence]
from continuing to happen. As long as police experience themselves as a militarized, occupying force, these kinds of abuses will continue.
Riots fail – they’re tactically counterproductive
Pinker 12 [Steven Pinker is a Johnstone Family Professor in the Department of Psychology at
Harvard University. He conducts research on language and cognition, writes for publications
such as the New York Times, Time and The Atlantic. JULY/AUGUST 2012 ISSUE, "Violence
Doesn’t Work (Most of the Time)," Atlantic, accessed 7-26-2019,
https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2012/07/violence-doesn-t-work-most-of-the-
time/309031/]
People have long assumed that violence is necessary for political change. Rulers never cede power
voluntarily, the argument goes, so progressives have no choice but to contemplate the use of force to
bring about a better world, mindful of the trade-off between a small amount of violence now and acceptance of an unjust
status quo indefinitely. Terrorists invoke this trade-off to justify what would otherwise be wanton
murder. Even their most vociferous condemners concede that terrorism, though highly immoral, is often efficacious.
Of course, Mohandas Gandhi, and later Martin Luther King Jr., argued the opposite—that
violence, in addition to being morally heinous, is tactically counterproductive. Violent
movements attract thugs and firebrands who enjoy the mayhem . Violent tactics provide a pretext for
retaliation by the enemy and alienate third parties who might otherwise support the movement.
So how effective is violence? Political scientists have recently tried tallying the successes and failures of violent and nonviolent
movements. The evidence is piling up that Gandhi was right—at least on average. In separate analyses,
Audrey Cronin and Max Abrahms have shown that terrorist movements almost always fizzle
out without achieving any of their strategic aims . Just think of the failed independence
movements in Puerto Rico, Ulster, Quebec, Basque Country, Kurdistan, and Tamil Eelam. The
success rate of terrorist movements is, at best, in the single digits.
In their recent book, Why Civil Resistance Works, Erica Chenoweth and Maria Stephan found that about three-quarters of
nonviolent movements get some or all of what they want, compared with only about a third
of the violent ones. The Arab Spring bears this out: consider the more or less nonviolent movements that ousted the leaders
of Egypt, Tunisia, and Yemen (together with the violent one needed in Libya). Even more encouraging, the success rate of nonviolent
protest movements has steadily climbed since the 1940s, while that of violent movements has fallen since the 1980s.
AT Sanctions
Sanctions Bad - U.S. Cred
Sanctions are actively hurting the U.S. , no sanctions would be better for US
legitimacy
Bandow 18' (Doug, september 20, 2018,Doug Bandow is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute.
A former special assistant to President Ronald Reagan, he is author of Foreign Follies: America’s
New Global Empire. "Washington’s Endless Sanctions Are Finally Backfiring"
https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/washingtons-endless-sanctions-are-finally-
backfiring/https://www.theamericanconservative.com/articles/washingtons-endless-sanctions-
are-finally-backfiring/
This arrogance has driven the Trump administration’s misguided policy toward Iran . After his visit to
Riyadh last year—the first trip of his presidency—Trump appeared to be taking orders from the Saudis. He abandoned the nuclear deal,
which created the most intrusive nuclear inspection regime ever, and demanded that Tehran drop its independent foreign policy, handing
Riyadh regional dominance. Washington insisted that it would deploy America’s full power
against any nation, friend or foe, that continued to trade with Iran. “Anyone doing business with Iran will NOT be doing business with the
United States,” tweeted the president. After seeking to prevent the Europeans from following an independent foreign policy, Washington sought to
coerce them to back its irresponsible course. Now it blames their refusal to do so on former Obama officials like John Kerry rather than the
administration’s own irresponsible arrogance.
Washington has encountered unusual resistance. American economic strength gives unique advantages vis-à-vis
other governments, but their acquiescence to the U.S. is also critical. And resistance may be
growing. For instance, China and India appear likely to continue at least some commercial
dealings with Iran, challenging the U.S.
More significantly, the Europeans are considering a number of strategies, including using the European Investment Bank and/or
their central banks to handle financial transactions with Iran. That would dare Washington to initiate economic war against them
—barring their firms from complying with American sanctions, establishing an alternative to the SWIFT global financial messaging
network, and creating a “special purpose” financial company to process payments for deals with
Iran. The latter would establish a de facto accounting firm to handle money both ways, keeping the cash within the EU and avoiding reliance on
banks vulnerable to U.S. sanctions. Germany’s finance ministry reported ongoing negotiations: “ The German government is
working together with [European agencies and countries] on maintaining financial payment
channels with Iran.” France is even considering using state-owned firms to trade with Iran.
Just as misguided U.S. policy toward Moscow pushed Russia and China together, reversing
Richard Nixon’s famous strategy, pervasive American sanctions now are pushing the Europeans
towards China and Russia.
And while European governments were not willing to greatly bestir themselves over Washington’s
attempts to isolate, say, Cuba and Sudan, Iran is different. America abandoned an international agreement,
dismissed European interests, disrupted burgeoning commerce, further destabilized the Middle East, and
demanded humiliating obedience. Europeans, used to giving in, now are angrier and less willing to accept the Trump
administration’s fait accompli. French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire opined: “I want Europe to be a sovereign continent, not a vassal, and that
means having totally independent financing instruments that do not today exist.”
AT Russia Sanctions - Don’t Work
Sanctions against Russia are no longer effective, if anything it backfires
Closson 19' ( January 1, 2019, Stacy Closson is a Global Fellow at Kennan and Senior Adjunct
Professional Lecturer at American University’s School of International Service. ... She came to
Patterson from the Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars in Washington, D.C.
where she was a Kennan fellow."Diminishing Returns: How Effective Are Sanctions Against
Russia?"www.ponarseurasia.org/memo/diminishing-returns-how-effective-are-sanctions-
against-russia
Signs of Diminishing Returns
In the case of the United States and Russia, sanctions regimes are overlapping and this is
undermining their strength. For example, targeting Russian billionaire Oleg Deripaska’s Rusal
aluminum business backfired when the price of aluminum skyrocketed , threatening a potential global
shortage. The Trump administration is now backtracking , preparing to remove financial restrictions
on Rusal and two other Deripaska-linked companies. The previously mentioned DAKSAA and DETER bills under
consideration in the Senate hit companies involved in the Nordstream II pipeline from Russia to Germany under the Baltic Sea. This could alienate
France and Germany, who are critical to overall sanctions success. It
could also harm U.S. companies with ties to the
European energy interests, which are numerous and diverse.
If the point of sanctions is to punish the Russian government, the evidence is mixed . The sanctions
will make more enemies than friends, something that is difficult to recover, as the United States
discovered in Iraq. Surveys suggestthat Russians still very much support their government’s actions in Crimea. The smart sanctions targeting
oligarchs combined with a lack of foreign finance for their businesses has allowed the Russian government to consolidate even more assets. Indeed,
strong leaders like Vladimir Putin who have little political dissent and can manipulate elite politics are more likely to retain their position. At
the
same time, sanctions seem to be gradually straining the oligarchs’ relationship with the security
services and with the president.
Putin may be learning the wrong lessons in sanctions effectiveness. After the collapse of the
USSR, Russia used a series of sanctions against former Soviet states to extract concessions, but
by mid-2000, their impact was negligible . Now, learning from the sanctions against it since 2014, Russia is sanctioning over 300
Ukrainian business leaders and almost 70 businesses. Not only that, but Russia’s latest detention of Ukrainian ships
and sailors in the Sea of Azov preceded by Russian backed elections in the two separatist regions
of eastern Ukraine in violation of Minsk II signal that Putin is not deterred by the sanctions that
exist, nor the potential for more.
Going after Russia’s energy sector could also backfire. Forbidding U.S. companies from operating
in regions where Russian banks and energy companies are involved hampers the U.S. ability to
compete. Already, the absence of Western firms has increased the importance of Chinese investment in Russia’s energy projects, particularly in
the Arctic, albeit at the expense of Russia ceding a percentage of ownership of its firms. A second round of U .S. sanctions to be
determined this February 2019 under the 1991 Chemical and Biological Weapons Control and
Warfare Elimination Act in response to the Russian poisoning of the Skripals i n Britain may restrict all
Russian products into the United States, including the 5 percent of Russian crude imported from Russia. However, Russia is already redirecting oil to
China from Europe, and this would only further regionalize oil trade, which is not good in terms of maintaining a moderated global price.
There are also efforts by companies and countries globally to avert sanctions on Russia. Western creditors by fall 2016 were adjusting cooperation to
avoid those Russians directly targeted and look for other ventures. There are further reports that European companies were finding alternative ways to
place orders from Russian companies or exporting items to Russia through partners or subsidiaries in third countries .
The U.S. Congress
added a waiver to CAATSA to prevent sanctions on countries, such as India, who are reliant on
defense equipment from Russia.
Finally, the negative impact on Russia’s economy from sanctions appears to have hit a wall . Up
to 2017, most experts agreed sanctions were harming the Russian economy. I ndeed, the overall trend since
2014 is one in which the Russian economy is not growing as expected, but this is also viewed by experts as the result of a poor Russian domestic
business climate (e.g., attracting investors, stalled technology sector) and lower oil prices. Instead, there are some signs since 2017 that Russia is
recovering, albeit modestly, due to stronger global growth and rising oil prices. Moscow’s
foreign currency reserves are at an
all-time high and a dramatic reduction in capital flight has freed up dollars for social programs.
AT Ukraine Civil War
Non-UQ
The Ukraine civil war has been going on since 2014
Twickel 19 (Nikolaus von Twickel – A Berlin-based writer focusing on the war in Donbass, “The
State of Play in the Donbass”, https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2019/03/11/the-state-of-
play-in-the-donbass-a64764)
The Donbass region of eastern Ukraine is among Europe’s most deadly modern battlefields on which more
than 13,000 people have been killed since 2014. Tragically, the suffering people of Donbass happen to live at the wrong
place at the wrong time. While the overall death toll is shocking, the broad European public has become comfortably numb about it, as people are
dying in much smaller numbers than in 2014 and 2015. Last year, the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) recorded 43 civilian
deaths – half as many as in 2017. While military violence is almost always an unnecessary evil, this one is particularly bizarre in that it occurs with little
or no military value. Since the signing of the Minsk Package of Measures in February 2015 (“Minsk II”), both sides have barely moved an inch over the
“Contact Line” agreed with French and German help in the Belarusian capital. Instead, Eastern
Ukraine has become an
information warfare battleground. The shootings and killings serve a political purpose – the sides
want to keep the status quo in order to avoid the agreement’s unsavoury political parts. They
may also want to send a signal to the outside world that they are under attack and convince
their domestic audience to put up with wartime constraints. As the military dimension has receded, the clash of
narratives has grown disproportionately. Ukraine is eager to tell the world that it is fighting Russia, who has attacked, invaded and occupied parts of the
country since the annexation of Crimea in 2014. For Russia and its proxies in Donbass, a civil war in eastern
Ukraine is happening.
Shelling and skirmishes still happen regularly in the Ukraine civil war
CFR 19 (Global Conflict Tracker – the Council on Foreign Relations, a nonpartisan foreign policy
think tank, “Conflict in Ukraine”, https://www.cfr.org/interactive/global-conflict-
tracker/conflict/conflict-ukraine)
The conflict in eastern Ukraine has transitioned to a stalemate after it first erupted in early
2014, but shelling and skirmishes still occur regularly, including an escalation in violence in the
spring of 2018. Since taking office, the Donald J. Trump administration has continued to
pressure Russia over its involvement eastern Ukraine . In January 2018, the United States imposed new sanctions on twenty-one
individuals and nine companies linked to the conflict. In March 2018, the State Department approved the sale of anti-tank weapons to Ukraine, the first sale of lethal weaponry
since the conflict began, and in July 2018 the Department of Defense announced an additional $200 million in defensive aid to Ukraine, bringing the total amount of aid provided
since 2014 to $1 billion. In October 2018, Ukraine joined the United States and seven other North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) countries in a series of large-scale air
exercises in western Ukraine. The exercises came after Russia held its annual military exercises in September 2018, the largest since the fall of the Soviet Union. The crisis in
Ukraine began with protests in the capital city of Kiev in November 2013 against Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych’s decision to reject a deal for greater economic
even greater number of protesters and escalated the conflict, President Yanukovych fled the
country in February 2014.
War Inevitable
The Ukraine civil war shows no sign of ending
GRI 19 (Global Risk Insight – founded at the London School of Economics (LSE) to revolutionize
the political risk industry, and bring it to the 21st century, “The Ukraine conflict in 2019:
Prospects for de-escalation look remote”, https://globalriskinsights.com/2019/01/prospects-for-
de-escalating-the-conflict-in-eastern-ukraine/)
Currently, there is no progress towards the implementation of the Minsk Agreements, amid
constant ceasefire violations and the continued presence of heavy weaponry in the conflict area.
There are growing military losses on both sides and ongoing civilian casualties. Moreover, monitoring
by the OSCE’s SMM (Special Monitoring Mission) faces severe impediments. Discussions within the framework of Normandy Four
format and the Trilateral Contact Group (TCG) on key issues–the exchange of hostages, the
ceasefire and withdrawal of
heavy weaponry, and illegal formations from the Ukrainian territory– have also been fruitless. The
provisions of the Minsk Agreements on the withdrawal of heavy weaponry and ceasefire control have been violated on numerous
occasions. For instance, over just a couple of weeks in December 2018, there were over 20,000 recorded ceasefire violations and
160 weapons used in direct violation of the agreed withdrawal lines (most of the weapons were used by pro-Russian separatists, in
areas controlled by them). Overall, since 2016, there has been a steady increase in ceasefire violations in the Donetsk region, with
slightly fewer in the Luhansk region: in total, there were 320,000 and 410,000 ceasefire violations in 2016 and 2017 respectively.
Although the final data for 2018 is not yet available, given this trend and reports throughout the year, we can expect the number of
ceasefire violations to remain at the same or even higher level. The
SMM continues to face difficulty with
verifying the withdrawal of heavy arms and ceasefire control , freedom of movement and
monitoring of situation along the perimeter of conflict area. In spite of an increase in OSCE observers, it
remains problematic for the SMM to monitor the area of the front line of the conflict. The OSCE has at its disposal around 800
international monitors, backed up by a recently relaunched drone surveillance program and video cameras. Nevertheless, SMM’s
monitoring efforts have been constantly limited due to restrictions of its freedom of movement. In the period from 1 July 2017 to 30
June 2018, SMM personnel were restricted in its movement 758 times. A large majority of these incidents (87%) occurred in the
territories that are under the control of pro-Russian separatists, up from 72% at the start of the given period, which suggests that
the degree of obstruction of the SMM’s work is increasing. At the same time, SMM’s monitoring drones are often shut down in the
Since 2016,
territories controlled by pro-Russian separatists, and video surveillance cameras in the conflict area are attacked.
Ukraine has tried without notable success to reach an agreement on the permanent deployment
of SMM’s international monitors along the conflict zone border , within the framework of the
Minsk Agreements. This has not materialized mainly because such a change in the mandate of the OSCE’s SMM requires a
consensus of all 57 OSCE Member States at the OSCE Permanent Council, and Russia will not support it.
No Escalation
The Ukraine civil war won’t escalate in a nuclear way
Twickel 19 (Nikolaus von Twickel – A Berlin-based writer focusing on the war in Donbass, “The
State of Play in the Donbass”, https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2019/03/11/the-state-of-
play-in-the-donbass-a64764)
Nevertheless, Ukraine should not become a nuclear power . Its own interests and those of the West
will best be served if Kiev fulfills its oft-made pledges to join the Nonproliferation Treaty (npt) as
a nonnuclear weapon state. The benefits provided by nuclear weapons are less certain and
more conditional than the proponents of nuclear prolif eration believe. When the costs and
complications associated with nuclear acquisition are taken into account, the case for Ukrainian
nuclear weapons is not compelling. The case for nuclear proliferation rests on the pacific effects of nuclear weapons. As Kenneth
Waltz asserts in the most famous advocacy of proliferation, nuclear spread "will promote peace and reinforce international stability." Because nuclear
weapons greatly in- crease the costs and risks of war, they induce caution in the behavior of states and substantially reduce the likelihood of
miscalculation. Wars between nuclear-armed states become simply too dangerous to fight. The force of this argument is greatly strengthened by the
experience of the Cold War, in which the two bitterly opposed protagonists avoided war for nearly half a century despite numerous crises and
provocations.
AFF -- AT UQ
UQ -- DH Inevitable
Generic
No dollar collapse, and even if it does there’s no impact
Ross 6-25-19 Sean has a background which includes working as a bankruptcy specialist,
consultant, broker, financial advisor, and as a journalist. Sean is the founder and manager of
Free Lances, Ltd., a hub for freelance editors, researchers, and writers. What it would take for
the U.S. dollar to collapse https://www.investopedia.com/articles/forex-
currencies/091416/what-would-it-take-us-dollar-collapse.asp
Ever since the launch of quantitative easing (QE), worried investors have asked, "will the U.S. dollar collapse?" It is an interesting
question that might superficially appear plausible, but a currency crisis in the United States is unlikely . Review
the dollar's strengths and weaknesses to see why.
History is full of sudden currency
collapses. Argentina, Hungary, Ukraine, Iceland, Venezuela, Zimbabwe and Germany have
each experienced terrible currency crises since 1900. Depending
on your definition of a collapse, the Russian
currency calamity during 2016 could be considered another example. The root of any collapse
is a lack of faith in the stability or usefulness of money to serve as an effective store of value
or medium of exchange. As soon as users stop believing that a currency is useful, that currency is in trouble. This can be
brought about through improper valuations or pegging, chronic low growth or inflation.
Ever since the Bretton Woods Agreement in 1944, other major governments and central banks have relied on the U.S. dollar to back
up the value of their own currencies. Through its reserve currency status, the dollar receives extra legitimacy in the eyes of domestic
users, currency traders and participants in international transactions.
The U.S. dollar is not the only reserve currency in the world, though it is the most prevalent. As of
September 2016, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) approved four other reserve currencies: the euro, British pound
sterling, Japanese yen and Chinese yuan. It is important that the dollar has competitors as an international Reserve
currency because it creates a theoretical alternative for the rest of the world in case American policymakers lead the dollar down a
damaging path.
Finally, the American economy is still the largest and most important economy in the world.
Even though growth has slowed significantly since 2001, the American economy still regularly
outperforms its peers in Europe and Japan. The dollar is backed up by the productivity of
American workers, or at least so long as American workers continue to use the dollar almost
exclusively.
The fundamental weakness of the US dollar is that it is only valuable through government fiat.
This weakness is shared by every other major national currency in the world and is perceived as
normal in the modern age. However, as recently as the 1970s, it was considered a somewhat radical proposition. Without the
discipline imposed by a commodity-based currency standard (such as gold), the worry is that governments might print too much
money for political purposes or to conduct wars.
In fact, one reason the IMF was formed was to monitor the Federal Reserve and its commitment to Bretton Woods. Today, the IMF
uses the other reserves as a discipline on Fed activity. If
foreign governments or investors decided to switch
away from the U.S. dollar en masse, the flood of short positions could significantly hurt
anyone with assets denominated in dollars.
If the Federal Reserve creates money and the U.S. government assumes and monetizes debt faster than the U.S. economy grows, the future value of the currency should fall in
absolute terms. Fortunately for the United States, virtually every alternative currency is backed by similar economic policies. Even if the dollar faltered in absolute terms, it may
still be stronger globally, due to its strength relative to the alternatives.
There are some conceivable scenarios that might cause a sudden crisis for the dollar. The most realistic is the dual threat of high inflation and high debt, a scenario in
which rising consumer prices force the Fed to sharply raise interest rates. Much of the national debt is made up of relatively short-term instruments, so a spike in rates would act
like an adjustable-rate mortgage after the teaser period ends. If the U.S. government struggled to afford its interest payments, foreign creditors could dump the dollar and
trigger a collapse.
If the U.S. entered a steep recession or depression without dragging the rest of the world with it, users might leave the dollar. Another option would involve some major power,
such as China or a post-European Union Germany, reinstating a commodity-based standard and monopolizing the reserve currency space. However, even in these scenarios, it is
not clear that the dollar necessarily would collapse.
The collapse of the dollar remains highly unlikely. Of the preconditions necessary to force a
collapse, only the prospect of higher inflation appears reasonable. Foreign exporters such as
China and Japan do not want a dollar collapse because the United States is too important a
customer. And even if the United States had to renegotiate or default on some debt
obligations, there is little evidence that the world would let the dollar collapse and risk
possible contagion.
dollar from abandonment , destroyed nations seeking sovereignty from US dominance, secured the opium trade,
increased control over oil and have frustrated Eurasian integration.
In addition, we have seen certain countries face a bombardment of sanctions and hostility in an
attempt to destroy energy-producing centres that the US does not control, not least Russia.
Since that day [dissolution of Bretton Woods], a true financial empire has emerged , the US dollar’s
hegemony has been established, and we have entered a true paper currency era. There is no
precious metal behind the US dollar. The government’s credit is the sole support for the US
dollar. The US makes a profit from the whole world.
This means that the Americans can obtain material wealth from the world by printing a piece
of green paper . […] If we [now] acknowledge that there is a US dollar index cycle [punctuated by engineered crises, including
war] and the Americans use this cycle to harvest from other countries, then we can conclude that it was time for the Americans to
harvest China…
AT Petro-Yuan
The petrodollar doesn’t exist and there’s no impact
Bulloch 18 (Douglas Bulloch, Professor of International Relations Theory and International
Politics at London School of Economics, "Why The Petro-Dollar Is A Myth, And The Petro-Yuan
Mere Fantasy", 4/26/18 https://www.forbes.com/sites/douglasbulloch/2018/04/26/the-petro-
dollar-is-a-myth-the-petro-yuan-mere-fantasy/#250249a36a14)
China's recent introduction of yuan-denominated oil futures has attracted some fairly extensive
press commentary. Partly this is down to a habit of over-interpreting everything happening in China as just more evidence of
their unstoppable rise to global superpower status, but it is also due to some profound misconceptions about the importance of oil
as a commodity. It
is widely thought, for example, that oil somehow underwrites the global financial
system and guarantees the U.S. dollar's hegemonic status.
Inevitably, stories about the toppling of the "Petro-dollar" and the long yearned for rise of an alternative reserve currency, one not
dependent on the whims of a capricious political elite in Washington, have proliferated across the alter-net and on the state-backed
media platforms of Russia and China.
But we should be clear: the Petro-dollar does not exist, and really hasn't done in any meaningful way
since the 1970s, therefore the "Petro-yuan" has no future. This is not to say that oil will never be traded in yuan,
that is likely, but it is to say that trading oil in yuan will not suddenly transform the currency into the
global reserve many claim is inevitable.
UQ -- DH Low
Generic
US dollar status as global reserve currency edges down further
Richter 19 (Wolf Richter, 4-1-2019, “U.S. dollar status as global reserve currency edges down
further”, https://wolfstreet.com/2019/04/01/us-dollar-status-as-global-reserve-currency-edges-
down-further/)
The amount of USD-denominated exchange reserves ticked down to $6.62 trillion , and the dollar’s share
of global foreign exchanges reserves dropped to 61.7% , the lowest since 2013 . In 1999, the euro
became an accounting currency in the financial markets, replacing the European Currency Unit. On January 1, 2002, Euro banknotes
were released into circulation and gradually replaced the national banknotes of the original member states of the Eurozone. Note
the drop of the dollar’s share, from 71.5% in 2001 to 66.5% in 2002. Today, the euro has replaced 19 national currencies. The
combined share of the dollar and the euro edged down to 82.4% in Q4 2018 . The remaining
currencies make up 17.6% of allocated global reserve currencies. On October 1, 2016, the IMF added the Chinese renminbi to its
currency basket, the Special Drawing Rights (SDR), elevating it to an official global reserve currency. Hopes by some folks that it
would dethrone the dollar as hegemon have been disappointed.
There are four interlocking pieces to this monetary hegemony: (1) The ability to
force other countries to trade in dollars, (2) controlling access to the global
payments system, (3) the primacy of the dollar as a global reserve currency (4)
the nature of the dollar as a fiat currency. These are all currently under threat.
Mok 7/1
Andy Mok is the founder and president of Red Pagoda Resources. He has significant experience
in business management, private equity and public policy. 1-July-
2019/https://news.cgtn.com/news/2019-07-01/Why-has-the-clock-started-ticking-on-the-U-S-
dollar-deathwatch--HXc5WwRLWw/index.html///dvb
The dollar as a unit of account
By forcing other to price goods and services in dollars, the U.S. creates demand for its currency. This requires buyers to find ways to
earn dollars to pay for their purchases. However, because the dollar is a fiat currency (more on this below), the
U.S. can create dollars literally out of thin air without providing anything of value in exchange
for a new batch (or boatload) of dollars. As American economist Barry Eichengreen noted "It costs only a few cents for the
Bureau of Engraving and Printing to produce a 100 dollars' bill, but other countries had to pony up 100 dollars' of actual goods in
order to obtain one."
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder (C) announces a record 8.9 billion U.S. dollars' fine against the
French bank BNP Paribas for violating international sanctions during a press conference at the U.S. Justice Department in
Washington, U.S., June 30, 2014. /VCG Photo
Control of the global payment system
However, on June 28, France, Germany and the UK announced that an alternative payment system called Instex
became operational . This payment balancing system permits companies in Europe to buy Iranian goods, and vice-versa,
without accessing SWIFT. Given the growing number of countries which the U.S. has threatened with economic
aggression including China, Iran, Russia, Venezuela and others, the desire for an alternative payment
system is undeniable .
The dollar two-step: A fiat currency becomes the global reserve currency
Before August 13, 1971 the U.S. dollar was backed by gold-meaning that a dollar could be converted into a certain amount of gold, a
physical commodity with real value. However on that fateful day, President Nixon declared that dollars could no longer
be exchanged for gold or any other reserve asset and turned the dollar in fiat money (meaning a
currency with no intrinsic value).
But to sustain global demand for the dollar, the U.S. also reached an agreement in the 1970s whereby Saudi Arabia would only
accept payment for oil in dollars irrespective of whom or where the buyer was. With oil being the world's most valuable commodity,
this ensured that countries everywhere would need to secure dollars to both settle oil purchases and hedge against oil price changes
and to manage the value of their own currencies. As noted above, this allowed the U.S. to enforce the dollar as a global unit of
account. Combined with the ability to print money, this provided the fuel for unlimited
spending and American hegemony.
Both those the U.S. deems adversaries such as Iran, and Russia as well as ostensible allies like France, Germany and the UK
ago. Russia is now recruiting other nations to participate in its alternative to the U.S.–
controlled SWIFT bank-messaging system . China has set up a parallel mechanism, the Cross–Border Interbank
Payments System.
The G–20 gathering marked an important step for these de-dollarization efforts . France, Germany,
and Britain announced on the opening day that a trading system developed over the past year to circumvent U.S.
sanctions against Iran — and any entity transacting with it — is now operational. The Instrument in Support of Trade
Exchanges, or Instex, replaces the Special Purpose Vehicle Europeans devised a year ago. All three sponsors, along with Russia,
China, and the U.S., are signatories of the 2015 accord governing Iran’s nuclear programs, which the U.S. repudiated last year.
DH Low -- China
China is challenging the U.S. for the currency hegemon now
Kalkine 6/25. Team Kalkine, Kalkine Media. 25 June 2019. "Europe And China
Colluding to Challenge The US Dollar Hegemony".
https://kalkinemedia.com/2019/06/25/europe-and-china-colluding-to-challenge-
the-us-dollar-hegemony/
China, with its giant economy, has a huge influence on world economies, particularly those
connected to it. It is one of the largest export partners of the United States , with around $ 129.9 billion
of goods and services exported in 2017 and it is also the largest import partner whose imports were valued at $ 505.5 billion as of
2017, according to the Office of the United States Trade Representative. The Chinese are just putting in place the financial plumbing
that could, if it finds support from relevant reforms and the essential political action, lay the grounds for a future where RMB would
be of immense global prominence. Under the controversial global development strategy, Belt and Road Initiative, which is aimed at
financing infrastructure projects in 152 countries as well as international organizations across regions, China
offered
incentives to the recipient countries to use the RMB as an invoicing currency. Beijing also
launched a contract in RMB-termed oil futures in 2018 that gained quite the prominence and
may prove to be threat to the US dollar with expanding volumes. The Chinese government has
eased down interest rates to zero, that helps in making the Chinese bond market quite
attractive for the foreign investors . However, although a flourishing Chinese economy is backing the RMB’s
international stature, there are some limitations in terms of China’s fixed-exchange rate regime and rigid capital account. The nation
restricts capital movements to maintain control over its domestic economy. Moreover, RMB is not a freely convertible currency that
poses another shortcoming to become the global currency. While China’s quest for the internationalisation of its RMB is recent, the
Europeans have been contemplating to do so with their explicit ambition.
DH Low -- Debt
US debt amounts to 200 trillion and the Fed lost all its value – all comes back to
the greenback
Guzman 7/4
Timothy Alexander Guzman is an independent researcher and writer with a focus on political,
economic, media and historical spheres. He has been published in Global Research, The
Progressive Mind, European Union Examiner, News Beacon Ireland, WhatReallyHappened.com,
EIN News and a number of other alternative news sites. He is a graduate of Hunter College in
New York City. July 4 2019/https://www.globalresearch.ca/a-world-without-dollars-are-we-
approaching-the-end-of-americas-financial-order/5667143///dvb
In the last decade or so, the reputation of the U.S. dollar has been widely discredited because it is viewed
by many governments around the world as a risky asset since the U.S. econ omy holds more than
$21 trillion in debt and if you add the unfunded liabilities in the form of promises to ensure payments to retirees
associated with government pensions, entitlement programs and social security amounts to more than $200 trillion .
The dollar is a fiat currency based on “faith” which is issued by the Treasury department and backed by the full weight of U.S.
government, but countries who are routinely threatened by Washington with economic sanctions have
lost faith in the dollar . The dollar is a debt instrument issued to the public with no real objective measure of the
dollar’s true value. Since the Federal Reserve Bank was founded in 1913, the dollar has lost over 97% of its value . In
2018, rt.comreported that
“the Russian president noted that there are risks in settlements in national currencies, but they could be minimized. “ Risks
exist everywhere and they need to be minimized, and in order to minimize them
diversification is required.” Holding dollars is risky “According to Putin, the US dollar is also a risky financial tool. “US
foreign debt amounts to $20 trillion. What will be next? Who knows?”
The U.S. will never be able to finance their debt even if they brought back their
manufacturing base , reduce government spending and end all of their wars including those in Iraq and Afghanistan. Peter
Schiff of Euro Pacific Capital recently told Rick Sanchez of RT News that
“All the signs are already there. Look at what’s happening out there. The stock market is falling , Look at
homebuilders , the housing stocks , the financials , the retailers – all these are the same things that were
happening in 2007 leading to that crisis,” Schiff warned. “ So, what you’ve got to do is get out of U.S. dollar
assets. The dollar is going to be the biggest casualty along with the American standard of
living.”
DH Low -- Sanction Circumvention
The dollar is an unfunded liability – Other countries using the Yuan, Ruble, and
Cryptocurrencies to build new payment and transfer systems outside the US-
dollar domain to circumvent sanctions.
Koenig 7/22
Peter Koenig has studied the phenomenology of money since the early 1980s, giving
presentations and performing original research with small groups. on 2019-07-22
https://www.21cir.com/2019/07/the-world-is-dedollarizing-the-end-of-dollar-hegemony///dvb
No longer international monetary transactions controlled by US banks and – by the US-dollar
controlled international transfer system, SWIFT, the system that allows and facilitates US financial and economic sanctions of all
kinds – confiscation of foreign funds, stopping trades between countries, blackmailing ‘unwilling’ nations into submission.
What would happen? – Well, the short answer is that we would certainly be a step close to world peace, away from US
(financial) hegemony , towards nation states’ sovereignty, towards a world geopolitical structure of
more equality.
We are not there yet. But graffities are all over the walls signaling that we are moving quite rapidly in that
direction.
And Trump knows it and his handlers know it – which is why the onslaught of financial crime – sanctions – trade
wars – foreign assets and reserves confiscations , or outright theft – all in the name of “Make America Great
Again”, is accelerating exponentially and with impunity.
What is surprising is that the Anglo-Saxon hegemons do not seem to understand that all the threats ,
sanctions, trade barriers, are provoking the contrary to what should contribute to American
Greatness.
Once the world gets sick and tired of the grotesque dictate of Washington and the sanction schemes for those who do no longer
want to go along with the oppressive rules of the US, they will be eager to jump on another boat, or boats – abandoning the
dollar and valuing their own currencies.
The US-dollar , a fiat currency, by its sheer money mass, may bend national economies up or down, depending in which
direction the country is favored by the hegemon. Let’s put the absurdity of this phenomenon in perspective.
Today, the dollar is based not even on hot air and is worth less than the paper it is printed on .
The US GDP is US$ 21.1 trillion in 2019 (World Bank estimate), with current debt of 22.0 trillion, or about 105% of GDP. The world
GDP is projected for 2019 at US$ 88.1 trillion (World Bank).
According to Forbes, about US$ 210 trillion are “unfunded liabilities ” (net present value of future projected but
unfunded obligations (75 years), mainly social security, Medicaid and accumulated interest on debt), a figure about 10 times the US
GDP, or two and a half times the world’s economic output.
This figure keeps growing, as interest on debt is compounded , forming part of what would be called in business terms
‘debt service’ (interest and debt amortization), but is never ‘paid back’.
This monstrous debt is partly owned in the form of treasury bonds as foreign exchange reserves
by countries around the world.
The bulk of it is owed by the US to itself – with no plans to ever “pay it back” – but rather create
more money, more debt, with which to pay for the non-stop wars, weapon manufacturing and lie-propaganda to keep the populace
quiet and in lockstep.
It would generate a chain reaction that might bring down the whole dollar-dependent world economy . It
There are increasingly blockchain technology alternatives available. China, Russia, Iran and Venezuela are already
already has acquired – other trading partners , mostly Asian, Asian-Pacific and European – with whom China will
deal in other than dollar-denominated contracts and outside the SWIFT transfer system, for example using the
Chinese International Payment System (CIPS) which, by the way, is open for international trade by any country
across the globe.
This will not only circumvent punishing tariffs on China’s exports (and make US customers of Chinese
goods furious, as their Chinese merchandise is no longer available at affordable prices, or no longer available at all), but this strategy
will also enhance the Chinese Yuan on international markets and boost the Yuan even further as a reliable reserve
than 90% to below 60% and will rapidly decline further as Washington’s coercive financial policies prevail. Dollar reserves are
rapidly replaced by reserves in Yuan and gold, and that even in such staunch supporters of the west as is Australia.
Finally, investments of the Chinese Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), also called the New Silk Road , will be mostly made in
Yuan and local currencies of the countries involved and incorporated in one or more of the several BRI land and maritime routes
teaching without, however, forcing uniformity, but promoting cultural diversity and human equality – and
all of it outside the dollar dynasty, breaking the nefarious dollar hegemony.
UQ -- DH Unsustainable
Generic
The collapse of dollar hegemony is a question of when not if
Hedges 2/4 (Chris Hedges a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, a New York Times best-selling
author, a professor in the college degree program offered to New Jersey state prisoners by
Rutgers University. 04 February 2019. "Goodbye to the Dollar". Truth
Dig.https://www.truthdig.com/articles/goodbye-to-the-dollar/
When George W. Bush unilaterally invaded Iraq , defying with his doctrine of preemptive war international law and
dismissing protests from traditional allies, he began the rupture. But Trump has deepened the fissures . The
Trump administration’s withdrawal from the 2015 Iranian nuclear agreement, although Iran had abided
by the agreement, and demand that European nations also withdraw or endure U.S. sanctions saw European nations
defect and establish an alternative monetary exchange system that excludes the United States .
Iran no longer accepts the dollar for oil on international markets and has replaced it with the
euro, not a small factor in Washington’s deep animus to Teheran. Turkey is also abandoning the dollar. The U.S.
demand that Germany and other European states halt the importation of Russian gas likewise saw the Europeans ignore
Washington. China and Russia, traditionally antagonistic, are now working in tandem to free themselves
from the dollar. Moscow has transferred $100 billion of its reserves into Chinese yuan, Japanese yen and euros. And, as
ominously, foreign governments since 2014 are no longer storing their gold reserves in the United
States or, as with Germany, removing them from the Federal Reserve. Germany has repatriated its 300
tons of gold ingots. The Netherlands repatriated its 100 tons. The U.S. intervention in Venezuela, the potential trade war with China,
the withdrawal from international climate accords, leaving the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty, the paralysis in
Washington and disruptive government shutdown and increased hostilities with Iran bode ill for America. American
foreign
and financial policy is hostage to the bizarre whims of stunted ideologues such as Mike Pompeo, John
Bolton and Elliott Abrams. This ensures more global chaos as well as increased efforts by nations
around the globe to free themselves from the economic stranglehold the U nited States
effectively set in place following World War II. It is only a question of when not if the dollar
will be sidelined . That it was Trump, along with his fellow ideologues of the extreme right, who destroyed the
international structures put in place by global capitalists, rather than socialists these capitalists invested tremendous
resources to crush, is grimly ironic.
On June 9, 2016, China granted the United States a quota of 250 billion yuan, the equivalent of
$38 billion, under China's Renminbi Qualified Foreign Institutional Investor program. It
appointed one Chinese and one U.S. bank to conduct RMB clearing business in the United
States.
The level of trade is not the only reason the U .S. dollar is the world's reserve currency. The strength of the U.S. economy instills
trust. Most important are the transparency of U.S. financial markets and the stability of its monetary policy.
On the other hand, Stuart Oakley, managing director of Nomura, pointed out in a 2013 article that China
owns $5 trillion of
unallocated central bank reserves and these could be in yuan. As more bilateral swap lines are
set up and China moves further down its path of capital market liberalization, central banks'
appetite to own this currency will grow.
Could China's ambition to make the yuan the world's currency lead to a dollar collapse ?
Probably not. Instead, it will be a long, slow process that results in a dollar decline, not a collapse.
Use of yuan in Britain proves Chinese rise is inevitable and starting already
Foss '19 (1/10/19, Paul-Martin Foss || Paul-Martin Foss is the founder, President, and Executive Director of the Carl Menger
Center for the Study of Money and Banking, a think tank dedicated to educating the American people on the importance of sound
money and sound banking || Bank of England Shocker: Chinese Yuan to Replace US Dollar as World Reserve Currency, GoldCo ||
https://goldco.com/bank-england-shocker-chinese-yuan-replace-us-dollar-world-reserve-currency/)
We’ve been saying for years that the US dollar will eventually be replaced as the world’s reserve currency. But it’s only now
that world financial authorities are admitting the obvious.
With the dollar having lost 85% of its value since the gold window was closed in 1971, it continues to lose purchasing power year
after year as the Federal Reserve continues to create trillions of dollars worth of new money. While the Fed remains adamant that
the dollar won’t be supplanted, the Bank of England disagrees.
Bank of England Governor Mark Carney was remarkably frank about the dollar’s demise in a
recent AMA-style forum on the Bank of England’s website. In his view the dollar will eventually
be supplanted by the Chinese yuan.
Among the reasons Carney cited for his stance are:
Emerging market economies (including China) make up 60% of the global economy;
The US only has a 10% share of international trade;
That lag between global trade and economic importance and reserve currency status will eventually be overcome.
Carney noted that even though the US overtook Britain in the late 19th century as the world’s largest, it still took until the 1920s
With China nipping at the US economy’s
before the dollar became a dominant currency in international trade.
heels, it may only be a few years before China’s economy surpasses the US in size. From there
it’s only a matter of time before the yuan completely replaces the dollar.
With Russia, India, and other countries increasingly adopting the yuan in international trade, the
dollar is being sidelined. That’s bad news for American investors who hold dollar-denominated stocks and bonds. When the
dollar loses its reserve status the value of those investments will plunge. Thankfully there’s a way for investors to protect themselves
once that happens: investing in gold.
With the Bank of England now understanding that the dollar will be supplanted as the world’s reserve currency, will the Fed step up
and take responsibility or will it throw ordinary investors under the bus? Given the decreasing purchasing power of the dollar over
the past 50 years and the dramatic increase in the value of gold, we’ll bet on the latter.
Trump thumps – Saudi Arabia already doesn’t like us and will sell the
petrodollar
Giambruno ND (Nick Giambruno, He’s also the Chief Analyst of Casey Research’s
flagship advisory, "Donald Trump, Saudi Arabia, and the Petrodollar", ND
https://internationalman.com/articles/donald-trump-saudi-arabia-and-the-petrodollar/)
Besides Hillary Clinton, the single biggest loser from the US presidential election was
Saudi Arabia.
The Saudis did not want Donald Trump in the White House . And not because of some bad blood on
Twitter. There are real geopolitical issues at stake.
At the moment, Trump seems determined to walk back on US support for the so-called “moderate” rebels in Syria.
The Saudis are furious with the US for not holding up its part of the petrodollar deal. They
think the US should have already attacked Syria as part of its commitment to keep the
region safe for the monarchy.
Toppling Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is a longstanding Saudi goal. But a President Trump makes that unlikely.
That’s not good for Saudi Arabia’s position in the Middle East, nor its relationship with the
US.
This is just one of the ways President Trump will hasten the death of the petrodollar.
AFF - Links
No Replacements
False Reports
US dollar will not be replaced
Memo 19 (The Middle East Monitor (MEMO) is a not-for-profit[1] press monitoring
organisation, founded on 1 July 2009.[2] MEMO is largely focused on the Israeli–Palestinian
conflict, but writes about other issues in the Middle East as well. It has a Spanish edition.[3] It
has been characterized as a pro-Hamas publication by the BBC.[4], “Saudi Arabia denies plans to
ditch dollar in oil sale deals”, 4/9/2019 https://www.middleeastmonitor.com/20190409-saudi-
arabia-denies-plans-to-ditch-dollar-in-oil-sale-deals/)
Saudi Arabia, the world’s largest oil exporter, yesterday denied media reports claiming the kingdom
intends to sell its oil in currencies other than the US dollar. The Saudi Energy Ministry
described the reports as “inaccurate”. “The kingdom has been trading its oil in dollars for decades
which has served well the objectives of its financial and monetary policies,” the ministry said. The
ministry affirmed the kingdom’s commitment to its role as a stabilising force in the energy
markets, and “its desire not to risk such a key policy through a fundamental change to the
financial terms of oil trading relationships around the world”. Earlier in the day, Saudi Energy Minister
Khalid Al-Falih confirmed that the US dollar remains the approved currency for the country’s
crude oil tradings.
sales as transacted in U.S. dollars —which is to say, oil sales: the dollar has long been the standard currency for all such
dealings. The primary world reserve currency, meanwhile, is the very same dollar—full stop. The origins of this arrangement hark back to Bretton Woods, the 1944 confab of Allied nations where it was
decided that the dollar would be the world’s backup buck, backed itself by gold at a fixed rate of $35 per ounce. International spending, though—and it was a spendy era, what with the rebuilding of
Europe, the Great Society, the Vietnam War, etc—promptly grew to dwarf the Fort Knox reserves, which at one point held only a third of the gold needed to cover the dollars in foreign circulation,
prompting fears of a run on the place. In 1971 President Richard Nixon suspended the direct convertibility of the U.S. dollar into gold, bringing about a system of floating, rather than fixed, exchange
rates. Among other things this move, the so-called Nixon Shock, increased the ability of the Federal Reserve to influence monetary policy, which in turn, decades later, led yahoos like Ron Paul and Ted
Cruz to pine for a return to the gold standard. (Most economists continue to see this as a pretty bad idea.) But the key development of the era, for our purposes, was a deal where, in exchange for U.S.
military support and other preferential treatment, the Saudis agreed to conduct oil transactions in dollars only. Soon OPEC as a whole signed on. As prices shot up in the ’70s, oil-exporting countries in
the Middle East found themselves with more dollars than they knew what to do with; they placed them in U.S. and British banks, which in turn used the dollars to make loans to developing countries that
needed the money to . . . import oil, the resulting relationship of indebtedness a boon to U.S. global hegemony. Sound a bit Kissingerian? Well, the whole thing was Henry’s baby: he called the scheme
“recycling petrodollars.” (“Petrodollars” as opposed to, say, “dollars” because they don’t circulate in the U.S.; economists thought it’d be useful to make the distinction.) Conveniently, the Saudis also
used their petrodollar surpluses to buy munitions from American arms manufacturers, who, with Vietnam winding down, were grateful for the business. All around, a shining example of U.S. foreign
policy: we enrich ourselves and impoverish the developing world while selling weapons to jerks. Doffing your tinfoil hat, then, you come to see the petrodollar bathed in the glow of ’70s and ’80s
nostalgia, like disco and Oliver North. What relevance does it have nowadays? Well, to hear the, er, more concerned parties tell it, if the oil-producing countries decide to stop using the dollar for oil
transactions—switching to, say, the euro—it’ll send the world economy into a tailspin. There has been a little attrition, most notably in 2000 when the United Nations’ “oil for food” program gave Iraq
permission to sell its oil for euros; hardcore skeptics cite this threat to the rule of the petrodollar as a contributing factor in the U.S. invasion. Since then Iran has switched to conducting its oil
Gazprom Neft, Russia’s third-largest oil producer, began selling oil to China in exchange for renminbi. But an
transactions in euros, and recently
abrupt abandonment of the petrodollar system is in nobody’s best interest : since most
major nations continue to back their own currency with the U.S. dollar, everybody’s
got some skin in the game vis-à-vis keeping that currency stable. That’s not to say the
petrodollar regime isn’t a bit sensitive these days , but it’s for another reason: fracking.
Environmental implications aside, hydraulic fracturing (discussed here in 2013) has put major shale oil reserves in play and (for now, at least)
upended the world energy market. In 2011, for instance, the U.S. imported about $360 billion worth of oil; by 2015, that number had dropped to
$120 billion. One estimate last year pegged OPEC’s 2015 profits at $350 billion lower than those in 2014—the largest year-over-year drop ever. Oil
gazillionaires who spent the commodity-boom aughts buying up Manhattan penthouses are now rapidly burning through their petrodollar savings;
if the trend continues, Bloomberg suggested, demand will fall for “everything from European government debt to U.S. real estate.” Not nothing, in
other words, but neither is it global collapse.
Arm Sales Not Key
Generic
Arms sales are not key -- tariffs and trade wars are
Hatfield 18 (Matthew Hatfield, Journalist at Harvard Political Review, "The Worrisome Deal:
China and Saudi Arabia", 12/18/18, https://harvardpolitics.com/world/the-worrisome-deal-
china-and-saudi-arabia/)
The prospective decline of American power through the destabilization of the petrodollar could disrupt a balance of power that has
ensured relative world peace since the Cold War. A
weak US economy would leave the nation with a weaker
and drive a new dual-hegemony between Russia and China , who signed an Eurasian Economic Cooperation
pact on May 17th in Astana. As Russia continues to “heat” Europe through its natural gas reserves ,
which are not sold via the dollar, taking global energy off the dollar – by taking it off of oil
altogether – is a future possibility .
In the last few months, the United States’ reaction to the Chinese-Saudi Arabia negotiations have been rather quiet with little report
to no media attention . With President Trump’s continued rhetoric and talk ,
it is clear that tariffs and a trade war will
be of continual focus, at least much more relative to the possible attack at the petrodollar , and indirectly, at
inflation in the United States