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Volcker's Legacy: Was He Saint George — or the Dragon?
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14707 |
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CURRENT ISSUES
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11 / 1988 |
4,239 Words |
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John Quinn John Quinn is a former New York newspaper editor who is now a
free-lance writer. |
Now that legendary American moneyman Paul Volcker has receded a few paces into history, can any wisdom be drawn from his long career in finance? What did he set in motion in his role as a daring monetary pioneer? What does he finally represent? Was he, as so many seem to believe, the veritable lodestar of financial wisdom? How did he leave the United States and its Federal Reserve system positioned for the twenty-first century? The principal finding is this:
The trivialization of money is an exceedingly dangerous pursuit.
Volcker certainly had a considerable career. Before his long tenure as chairman of the Fed, he served an extremely influential tour in the U.S. Treasury. For a time, certainly, Volcker was the most powerful moneyman on earth.
Volcker has been credited widely with two fundamental achievements setting the stage for the next century: the architecture of an entirely new world monetary system and the crushing of domestic inflation in the United States and, to some degree, throughout the West. The evidence is mixed, but it can be argued with some justice that the former has proved a failure and that the latter simply is not true—just a case of the weather vane being credited with the wind.
Taking monetary systems first, Volcker is the man who, as undersecretary of the treasury for monetary affairs in 1971, severed the link between money and precious metals that was first forged in prehistory. While doing so, he also traded away the bulk of the U.S. gold reserve at throwaway
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