HISTORY OF THE “NEW IRAQI DINAR”
“How shipping tons of U.S. currency to Iraq remade its economy—and was roundly criticized all the same.
Good decision, bad press.” – By John B. Taylor
In February, the House Committee on Oversight and Government
Reform held a hearing that criticized the decision to ship U.S. currency into Iraq just after Saddam Hussein’s government fell. As the committee’s
chairman, Henry Waxman (D-California), put it in his opening statement, “Who in
their right mind would send 360 tons of cash into a war zone?” His criticism
attracted wide attention, feeding antiwar sentiment and even providing material
for comedians. But a careful investigation of the facts behind the currency
shipment paints a far different picture.
The currency that was shipped into Iraq in the days after the fall of Saddam Hussein’s government was
part of a successful financial operation that had been carefully planned months
before the invasion. Its aims were to prevent a financial collapse in Iraq , put the financial system on a firm footing, and pave the way
for a new Iraqi currency. Contrary to the criticism that such currency
shipments were ill advised or poorly monitored, this financial plan was carried
out with precision and was a complete success.
The plan, which had two stages, was designed to work in Iraq ’s cash economy, in which checks or electronic funds transfers
were virtually unknown and shipments of tons of cash were commonplace. In the
first stage, the United
States would pay
Iraqi government employees and pensioners in American dollars. These were
obtained from Saddam Hussein’s accounts in American banks, which were frozen
after he attacked Kuwait in 1990 and amounted to about $1.7 billion. Because the dollar
is a strong and reliable currency, bringing in dollars would create financial
stability until a new Iraqi governing body could be established and design a
new currency. The second stage of the plan was to print a new Iraqi currency
for which Iraqis could exchange their old dinars.
One of the most successful and carefully planned operations of
the war has been held up to criticism and ridicule.
The final
details of the plan were reviewed in the White House Situation Room by
President Bush and the National Security Council on March 12, 2003 . I attended that meeting. Treasury Secretary John Snow opened
the presentation with a series of slides. “As soon as control over the Iraqi
government is established,” the first slide read, we plan to “use United States dollars to pay civil servants and pensioners. Later, depending
on the situation on the ground, we would decide about the new currency.”
Another slide indicated that we could ship $100 million in small denominations
to Baghdad on one week’s notice. President Bush approved the plan with the
understanding that we would review the options for a new Iraqi currency later,
when we knew the situation on the ground.
To carry out the first stage of the plan, President Bush issued
an executive order on March 20, 2003 ,
instructing U.S. banks to relinquish Saddam’s frozen dollars. From that money,
237.3 tons in $1, $5, $10, and $20 bills were sent to Iraq . During April, U.S. Treasury officials in Baghdad
worked with the military and Iraqi Finance Ministry officials—who had
painstakingly kept the payroll records despite the looting of the ministry—to
make sure the right people were paid. The Iraqis extensively documented each
recipient of a pension or paycheck. Treasury officials who watched over the
payment process in Baghdad in those first few weeks reported a culture of good record
keeping.
On April 29, Jay Garner, the retired lieutenant general who
headed the reconstruction effort in Iraq at the time, reported to Washington that the payments had lifted the mood of people in Baghdad
during those first few confusing days. Even more important, a collapse of the
financial system was avoided.
This success paved the way for the second stage of the plan. In
only a few months, 27 planeloads (in Boeing 747 jumbo jets) of new Iraqi
currency were flown into Iraq from seven printing plants around the world. Armed convoys
delivered the currency to 240 sites around the country. From there, it was
distributed to 25 million Iraqis in exchange for their old dinars, which were
then dyed, collected into trucks, shipped to incinerators, and burned or simply
buried.
The new currency proved very popular. It provided a sound
underpinning for the financial system and remains strong, appreciating against
the dollar even in the past few months. Hence, the second part of the currency
plan was also a success.
The story of the currency plan is one of several that involved
large sums of cash. For example, just before the war, Saddam stole $1 billion
from the Iraqi central bank. American soldiers found that Iraqi money in his
palaces and shipped it to a base in Kuwait , where the U.S. Army’s 336th Finance Command kept it safe. To
avoid any appearance of wrongdoing, American soldiers in Kuwait wore pocket less shorts and T-shirts whenever they counted the
Iraqi money.
A 2003 presidential order instructed U.S. banks to hand over Saddam Hussein’s frozen dollars. From that
money, 237.3 tons in $1, $5, $10, and $20 bills was shipped to Iraq . Later, U.S. forces used the found cash to build schools and hospitals, and
to repair roads and bridges. General David Petraeus has described these
projects as more successful than the broader reconstruction effort. But that
wasn’t the only source of dollars. Because the new Iraqi dinar was so popular,
the central bank bought billions of U.S. dollars to keep the dinar from appreciating
too much. As a result, billions in cash accumulated in the vaults of the
central bank. Later, with American help, the Iraqi central bank deposited these
billions at the New York Federal Reserve Bank, where they could earn interest.
Finally, when Iraq started to earn dollars selling oil, the United States transferred the cash revenue to the Finance Ministry, where it
was used to finance government operations, including salaries and
reconstruction. Many of these transfers occurred in 2004, long after the
financial stabilization operation had concluded. Iraqi Finance Ministry
officials had already demonstrated that they were serious about keeping the
controls they had in place. The 360 tons mentioned by Henry Waxman includes
these transfers as well as the 237.3 tons shipped in 2003 during the
stabilization.
The new Iraqi currency proved to be very popular. It gave a
sound underpinning to the financial system and remains strong. One of the most
successful and carefully planned operations of the war has been held up for
criticism and even ridicule. As these facts show, praise rather than ridicule
is appropriate: praise for the brave experts in the U.S. Treasury who went to
Iraq in April 2003 and established a working Finance Ministry and central bank,
praise for the Iraqis in the Finance Ministry who carefully preserved payment
records in the face of looting, praise for the American soldiers in the 336th
Finance Command who safeguarded the found money, and, yes, even praise for
planning and follow-through back in the United States.
This essay appeared in the New York Times on February 27, 2007 . Available from the Hoover Press is Strategic Foreign
Assistance: Civil Society in International Security, by A. Lawrence Chickering,
Isobel Coleman, P. Edward Haley, and Emily Vargas-Baron.
To order, call 800.935.2882 or visit www.hooverpress.org.
John B. Taylor is the Bowen H. and Janice Arthur McCoy Senior
Fellow at the Hoover Institution and the Mary and Robert Raymond Professor of
Economics at Stanford University . He was previously the director of the Stanford Institute for
Economic Policy Research and was founding director of Stanford’s Introductory Economics Center .
He has a long and distinguished record of public service. Among
other roles, he served as a member of the President’s Council of Economic
Advisors from 1989 to 1991 and as Under Secretary of the Treasury for
International Affairs from 2001 to 2005.
He is currently a member of the California Governor’s Council of
Economic Advisors.
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