?Nations of the world are being advised to stop pegging their currencies to the US dollar.
The advice came yesterday from Rahul Bajaj, a leading Indian industrialist who sits on the board of the New York Stock Exchange and is also on the board of the Harvard School of Business. Bajaj, who is also a director on the Commonwealth Business Council, was however, unable to pinpoint a currency which could replace the US dollar, although he did mention the German mark as being in the running. But Bajaj said severing ties with the US dollar was not an "immediate solution," but one the world should look carefully at. The G 20 countries were moving in that direction, and as recently as November 7 when their finance ministers met in London that was the direction that they were considering, Bajaj warned.
His comments came during a session of the business forum in Port-of-Spain that is a forerunner to this weekend's Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM). The session entitled New Global Financial Structure: Instruments of Growth was held aboard the cruise liner Serenade of the Seas in the Port-of-Spain harbour and attended by scores of leading economists and business personalities from the Commonwealth. It was chaired by National Insurance Board and Unit Trust executive, Ruben McSween and other top-flight panellists, including Prof Compton Bourne who is head of the Caribbean Development Bank; Pascal Dozie, chairman of the Diamond Group of Nigeria and Srinivas Stridhar who is chairman of a State-owned bank in India that has US$35 billion in assets at 3,500 branches.
Bajaj, who is an Indian MP and chairman of the Bajaj Auto Group, the leading two and three-wheel vehicle manufacturer in India, pointed to the continued depreciation of the US dollar as well as the trillions of dollars in debt that is bogging down that country as two reasons for severing the pegging tie. Bajaj was described as the "doyen" of Indian industry by Stridhar and his outspoken assessment of the fate of the US dollar was echoed by Bourne, a former UWI, St Augustine, principal who is an emeritus economics professor.