Is Plaza 2.0 on the anvil?
Thirty seven years ago, on 22 nd September of 1985, the representatives from the now defunct G-5 met at Plaza Hotel, New York to discuss one of the most remarkable currency manipulation plans. On that afternoon, the US, France, Germany, UK, and Japan signed the Plaza Accord to weaken the US dollar to help the US reduce its burgeoning trade deficit. As part of the accord, the US agreed to cut its fiscal deficit materially; while Germany and Japan consented to boost their domestic demand by cutting taxes. All parties agreed to actively “manage” their currency markets to “correct” their current account imbalances. In backdrop to the Plaza Accord, the US Dollar had appreciated about 48% during 1980-1985, primarily induced by the sharp hikes in the policy rates by the US Federal Reserve, led by the Paul Volcker; pressurizing the US manufacturing by making (i) imports from Japan and Germany more competitive and (ii) exports to other countries less competitive. This was the time ...