"The Rise and Fall of the Dollar"
Barry Eichengreen, Pardee Professor of Economics and Political Science, University of California, Berkeley
Conversations host Harry Kreisler welcomes Berkeley economic historian Barry Eichengreen for a discussion of his new book, Exorbitant Privilege. Outlining the history of the dollar's role in the international monetary system, Eichengreen begins with the function and characteristics of a reserve currency. The conversation then moves to an analysis of the institutional prerequisites for the rise of the dollar as an international currency. After describing the dollar's rise and sterling's fall, Eichengreen focuses on the factors that accounted for the dollar's preeminence after World War II. Throughout the conversation, he touches on the personalities who forged America's dominant role. He then chronicles the slow erosion of the dollar as other centers of economic power emerged. The discussion moves on to examine the causes and consequences of the 2008 economic collapse. In light of the fiscal crisis confronting the United States today, Eichengreen speculates on the future of the dollar and on the challenges posed by the euro and the yuan. He concludes with reflections on the role of history in explicating policy choices.
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Since winning the Yale Younger Poets Award in 1951 at the age of 21, Adrienne Rich has become one of the towering voices of our culture. Her many volumes of poetry and criticism summon us to reexamine our lives, from gender roles to the structure of our relationships and politics. Her most recent works include the book of poems Fox, and Arts of the Possible: Essays and Conversations. Co-sponsored by the Department of Women's Studies and by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Studies. [events] [artshumanities] [lunchpoems] Credits: producer:UC Berkeley Educational Technology Services