Economic News

Economic News

Gold and FX Reserves in 2025Q1

Based on IMF data (COFER, IFS): Figure 1: USD shares of fx  (blue bars), EUR (tan), all other (gray). USD(EUR) share assumes 60%(35%) of unallocated reserves are in USD(EUR). Source: IMF COFER, and author’s calculations.  The drop in USD reserves out of total FX reserves is not apparent. However, gold has taken on a heightened importance in recent years. Taking this into account, we have Figure 2. Figure 2: USD shares of fx and gold reserves (blue bars), EUR (tan), all other (gray), and gold (yellow). USD(EUR) share assumes 60%(35%) of unallocated reserves are in USD(EUR). Assumes quantity of gold holdings stay constant in 2025Q, and observed . Source: IMF COFER, World Gold Council, and author’s calculations.  To the extent that total reserves are the relevant measure, the dollar has dropped by 1.4 percentage points in 2025Q1; the standard deviation of changes is 0.6 ppts. If central banks on net acquired gold in Q1 (World Gold Council suggests 50 tonnes whereas I assumed 0 tonnes), then the drop would be even larger.

Economic News

Who Ousted Hjalmar Schacht?

From (1) Reich and Prussian Minister of Economics and General Plenipotentiary (1937), and (2) President of the Reichsbank (1939) (discussion, Kopper (1998)). While it’s an inexact analogy, it’s of interest to recall it was Hermann Göring. I thought of this when I saw Russell Vought on TV today: Office of Management and Budget Director Russell Vought vowed Friday to press an investigation into renovations at the Federal Reserve building, which he called a “palace” where costs are running amok. A great line from the Wikipedia entry on Schacht: [Schacht] had grown increasingly dissatisfied with Göring’s near-total ignorance of economics, and was also concerned that Germany was coming close to bankruptcy. The main points of disagreement were the Goering’s demand for rearmament despite fiscal strains, aiming for autarky/self-reliance, and dismissal of concerns about deficit spending. Sounds familiar to me. <small>*  Aside: Walther Funk succeeded Schlacht as President of the Reichsbank. I spent half a year living in Funk’s house, on the Wannsee, currently the home of the American Academy in Berlin (as a guest of my wife, a fellow there).</small>    

Scroll to Top