| SHARJAH, 29 May 2005 —
The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) should peg its proposed currency to
gold rather than the American dollar or euro in view of the currency
fluctuations in the international market, says an expert in currency and
gold. Dr.
Ferdinand Lips told a gathering in Dubai that the history of gold shows
that despite its ups and downs the yellow metal has proved itself to be
a “safe and tangible investment option since the value of an ounce of
gold is far greater than currencies that are being devalued by the day.”
Lips was delivering a lecture titled “Oil for gold or oil for paper?
Financial stability, gold and the ongoing rise in commodity prices”
organized by the Gulf Research Center (GRC). “Being in the midst of a
global currency devaluation scenario, it is worth noting that while oil
is the king of commodities, gold is the king of money,” Lips said,
noting that oil is under-priced and that oil producers are not getting
real value by pegging it to the dollar.
The lecture, attended
by prominent members of the banking and finance industry, dealt with how
currencies, investments and every crucial economic factor in the GCC
countries are dependent on the US dollar, which shows increasing signs
of structural weakness. The Gulf countries, Lips said, could escape
potential financial disaster by looking at certain other investment
alternatives.
Lips is the author of
“Gold wars: The battle against sound money as seen from a Swiss
perspective,” He said the GCC banks could do well to set aside a certain
percentage of their reserves in gold and to learn from the European
Central Bank’s mandatory 15 percent gold reserves rule. Currently, the
UAE and Qatar have sold all their reserves, while Kuwait has lent gold
and Saudi Arabia has low reserves of some 200 tons. Lips also suggested
that a monetary institute be set up to create greater awareness of money
and emphasize the crucial need to return to “solid money.” “Gold is the
insurance policy. When the rest of the world will go down on the paper
money system, invest at least one percent in gold as insurance,”
stressed Lips, adding that today’s depreciation limits the purchasing
power of paper currencies, whereas gold is a highly liquid asset.
“Returning to gold as a standard will also put a limit to what
governments can do,” he said.
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