You are correct, and so is @Billy Moat.
You're not really gaining anything by explicitly declaring the 16px value on the HTML element - browsers tend to do that anyway.
Another trick that you can use is the "62.5%" trick.
If you declare:
body { font-size: 62.5% }
You can make further declarations in em's that map neatly to pixel measurements. e.g.:
h1 { font-size: 3em; /* equals 30px */ }
h2 { font-size: 2.4em; /* equals 24px */ }
.nav { width: 50.5em /* equals 505px */ }
That's because 10/16 = .625. So with this trick, you can rebase your measurements and not have to do the math later of dealing with a 16px base.
The only trick of this method is that once you declare a font size for an element, all children elements have to have their em values based on that parent's value (this is true of all relative units of measurement).