From the moment the US weaponised the dollar to impose near-unprecedented financial sanctions on Russia after its invasion of Ukraine it was obvious that other countries, most notably China, would try to reduce their own vulnerability to similar sanctions.
A recent spate of agreements that China has struck to use its currency directly in trade deals, and similar efforts by less-developed economies to substitute their currencies for transactions that have more commonly been executed with dollars, have intensified discussion about the end of the US dollar’s dominance.
Since the invasion of Ukraine and their seizure of about half of Russia’s $US640 billion ($944 billion) of dollar-denominated foreign exchange reserves, China and Russia have been conducting most – about two-thirds – of their significantly increased trade in their own currencies. The yuan is now the most traded currency in Russia and Russia also now holds about a third of the world’s yuan-denominated foreign exchange reserves.
China has struck a deal with Saudi Arabia to pay for oil purchases in yuan – the first time in nearly half a century that the Saudis have been prepared to accept anything but the dollar in exchange for their oil. It is seeking similar deals with other Middle Eastern oil producers.
Last week, China’s China National Offshore Oil Company and France’s TotalEnergies struck the first deal for a LNG cargo denominated in yuan.
Also last week, China and Brazil announced they would use their own currencies to settle trade and that Brazil would connect to China’s fledgling international payment system, its alternative to the US-dominated SWIFT international payments and messaging system.
India is trying to do more direct deals that reduce its exposure to the dollar. And in Latin America and South-East Asia, countries are also trying to circumvent the use of the dollar by doing more deals in their own currencies.
There’s even been talk of the creation of a “BRICs” (Brazil, Russia, China and India) reserve currency, perhaps backed by a basket of commodities.
The sudden surge in interest in what has been a perennial topic, the erosion of the dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency and the global hegemony that confers, and China’s central role in most of the de-dollarisation that is occurring, has led some to believe that the end of the dollar’s post-war dominance is within sight.
While it is likely that, as has been the case since the turn of the century, the pervasiveness of the dollar in global trade and financial transactions will continue to wane, it is improbable that the end of dollar dominance will occur any time soon.That dominance is built on a number of critical foundations that no other economy has. The US runs large trade deficits and therefore creates more dollars than its domestic economy requires, it has very deep and liquid markets to absorb the savings of those countries with big trade surpluses, the dollar floats freely with very limited capital controls and it has a legal system that the rest of the world generally trusts.
Anonymous
When a product needs super hard selling; it means it's a piece of crap.
ReplyDeleteRight now we are seeing the 'inevitable' fracturing of global currency reserves...much of the planet is preparing for a future in which the U.S. dollar will be far less important than it is right now.
For decades, the U.S. dollar was the undisputed king of global currencies, but now dramatic changes are happening. China, Russia, India, Brazil, Saudi Arabia and other nations are making really big moves which will enable them to become much less dependent on the U.S. dollar in the years ahead.
#1 The BRICS nations account for over 40 percent of the total global population and close to one-fourth of global GDP. So the fact that they are working to develop a “new currency” should greatly concern all of us…
#2 Two of the BRICS nations, China and Brazil, have just “reached a deal to trade in their own currencies”…
#3 During a meeting last week in Indonesia, finance ministers from the ASEAN nations discussed ways “to reduce dependence on the US Dollar, Euro, Yen, and British Pound”…
#4 In a move that has enormous implications for the “petrodollar”, Saudi Arabia just agreed to become a “dialogue partner in the Shanghai Cooperation Organization”…
#5 The Chinese just completed their very first trade of liquefied natural gas that was settled in Chinese currency instead of U.S. dollars…
#6 The government of India is offering their currency as an “alternative” to the U.S. dollar in international trade…
#7 Saudi Arabia has actually agreed to accept Kenyan shillings as payment for oil shipments to Kenya instead of U.S. dollars…
The USD is not going to disappear; just be less and less relevant to international trade and losing importance as a reserve currency.
Link to article:
https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/here-are-7-signs-global-de-dollarization-has-just-shifted-overdrive
China is wise enough not to emulate the mistakes of the yanks --> Global Hegemony with its
ReplyDeleteUSd @robbery+sanctions,
Military activities@regime changes+destruction+mass killings, Media@propaganda+subterfuge+BS, Governance@BS+servingElitesOnly.
It does not require a PhD Econ to see the US will eventually lose 70-80% of its ability to print wealth, lose its market share on weapons exports, oil and gas exports, commercial aircraft exports, pharmaceutical products exports, etc, etc. The number of disgruntled folks will only increase exponentially when decent paying jobs become increasingly hard to come by, infrastructures deteriorating faster than those with ill health, the excess military personnel needing more food stamps to get by, etc, etc. The yanks in the Deep State will eventually have to learn the true art of governance for the people.
USA Has Screwed Itself
ReplyDeleteSen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) on last Wednesday's edition of 'Hannity' on FOX News warned U.S. sanctions will become impotent within the next 5 years as countries that deal with China will start using their own currency instead of the U.S. dollar.
"Just today, today, Brazil, in our hemisphere, the largest country in the Western hemisphere south of us cut a trade deal with China," Rubio said. "They're going to from now on do trade in their own currencies to get right around the dollar."
"They are creating a secondary economy in the world totally independent of the United States," Rubio continued. "We won’t have to talk about sanctions in 5 years because there will be so many countries transacting in currencies other than the dollar that we won’t have the ability to sanction them."
Regime change, aka invasion, coming to Brazil?
ReplyDeleteJust like the British Pound, the US$ will not disappear. But the days of unrestrained printing of US$ to export inflation worldwide is no longer possible.
ReplyDeleteEven now, inflation in the USA is all due to the money printing and less US$ held by other countries for trade that is creating excess liquidity in the economy and causing high inflation. And the Fed is increasing interest rates to try to soak up the excess liquidity. That on the other hand is causing big problems for businesses, real estate and the stock market.
The USA can continue to print, but inflation will not go down and interest rates will have to keep rising. But they are already talking of cutting interest rates. What the outcome is going to be, hard to imagine.
White House spokeswoman Karin Jean-Pierre was asked what the Biden regime was doing about countries switching away from US Dollars and using their own currency as settlement of foreign trade. Her response was stunning . . . .
ReplyDelete"Switching to national currencies is a violation of the rights of American citizens."
The White House then threatened with sanctions those countries that refuse the dollar in mutual settlements.
So, the Americans going to sanction all the OPEC countries?
ReplyDeleteIndonesia proposed all Asean states to use our own bank's credit card instead of VISA or Mastercard. So US going to sanction Asean states?
What about the rights of citizens of other countries? Using own currencies is violation of the rights of American citizens? Black lies, nothing else!
ReplyDeleteWhen US$ becomes banana notes, they can go and sanction the banana tree! Who cares?
ReplyDeleteThe Dollar's Major Reserve Status Is Not Etched in Stone.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tup-FZpLXYs
Losing the reserve status just like the British pound...