Actually the article is correct. It wouldn't necessarily be a bad thing for us all the way around. Yes the price of imports, particularly oil would go up, and this is bad. At the same time, though it would free up our monetry policy (maybe good,maybe bad depending on who's making it, don't want to be Argentina circa 1985). It would also boost exports from here, and help manufacturing and agriculture. The big downside to me would be a fall off in foreign investment partiicularly in T bills.The strange thing about this is that the people it would seem to screw are the Chinese. Because they devalue the yuan to artificially low levels in order to make their exports cheaper, you woud think an international hard currency and a weak dollar would be the last thing they'd want. Then again I'm not an economist, or maybe they're just thinking (very) long term and want to weaken US influence the Pacific a couple of decades from now. It seems Geithner should take one lesson from Greenspan, and master the fine art of shutting the hell up, unless you've planned out what you want to say.
fightingquaker13