Of course. What I'm saying though is that money from area A, ends up in area B, and I am not in area B. Therefore that wealth is not available to me anymore, correct? What I'm speaking of is the private citizen's point of view of international wealth.
Eventually, once all the wealth is gone from A, where I am, to B, it doesn't matter what currency A uses as it will be deflated or something.
What a load of rubbish. Sorry, but that's plain nonsense. If it was true, the USA would be the poorest nation on Earth. Economics just doesn't work like that.
So you think people in exporter nations are very rich somehow?
First, in the first case it happened already. It was one of the reasons for the American Revolution. The British took all the gold currency away as they required payment for their imports which was imports >exports by the way for obvious reasons until early in the 1800s if I remember correctly when our exports started outpacing imports. That was the beginning of industry in America so at the time there was a lot of coastal trading from population centers where manufacturing was occurring at water mills and such.
EDIT: I forgot to mention that since we aren't tied to a gold standard anymore, we are likely to do things that will result in the eventual inflation of currency, since it won't have as much value due to that value still having been placed elsewhere. As such, if someone were secretly to still keep to the gold standard, like Glenn Beck (meant that sarcastically), then gold prices will go up compared to the dollar everyone uses.
Also, yes, exporter nations BECOME very rich over time, the British became extremely wealthy through passing laws requiring the colonies to only purchase British goods. This led the Americans to become smugglers as the French offered better prices for their goods in the West Indies. John Hancock was 90% smuggler if I remember correctly.
In addition, the Chinese economy is tailor made for export goods. This is due to having to take loans from the Soviet Russians to fund their Five Year Plans. They essentially sacrificed their consumer goods such as radios, TVs, cars, and such so they had goods to sell to the Russians, for about 50 years until they finally are starting to catch up as far as living conditions, and while I haven't been there my father and sister have. I'll stress starting to catch up in the previous sentence.