KEY POINTS
  • Former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker is worried that political problems at home are threatening the U.S. position on the world stage.
  • Volcker is known for pulling the U.S. economy out of its inflation trap in the late 1970s and early '80s.
  • "Leadership by America is not taken for granted anymore, and I'm afraid that's been speeded up by what's happening in Washington and the country in the last four or five years," he told hedge fund magnate Ray Dalio.

Political divisiveness at home is threatening the position of the U.S. around the world, former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker said in an interview that painted a dour picture of the nation's future.

"It's different now," the head of the central bank from 1979-87 told hedge fund magnate Ray Dalio in a talk aired on the Bridgewater Associates founder's YouTube page. "We're still top dog, maybe, but the top dog isn't so readily recognized by others as it was."