Business Day

Dollar’s star is fading, but alternativ­es are now taking shape

• With the US currency’s hegemony weakening, Brics needs something viable and visible to put in its place

- Massimo Amato and Lucio Gobbi ● Amato is co-director: monetary innovation, new technologi­es & society at the Baffi-Carefin Centre of Bocconi University in Malan. Gobbi is assistant professor of economics at the University of Trento.

Last Saturday, the US Congress passed a foreign aid package that would permit the Biden administra­tion to confiscate Russian assets in US banks and transfer the proceeds to Ukraine.

This decision comes after the 2022 freezing of half of Russia’s central bank gold and foreign exchange reserves and the decision to disconnect Russian banks from the Belgian-based Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommun­ication (SWIFT).

Those actions drew angry responses from the leaders of Brics bloc countries, and led President Cyril Ramaphosa to protest that “global financial and payment systems are increasing­ly being used as instrument­s of geopolitic­al contestati­on”.

Other leaders of the Brics group began calling for alternativ­es to the dollar-based system.

At the April 2023 Brics summit, where Argentina, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) were invited to join the bloc, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva asked (to thunderous applause): “Why can’t we do trade based on our own currencies? Who was it that decided that the dollar was the currency after the disappeara­nce of the gold standard?”

Whatever the answer to this legitimate question, we must recognise that, despite appearance­s, the hegemony of the dollar has already begun to weaken. The fading of the dollar’s star brings to mind Thomas Mann’s comment in his novel Buddenbroo­ks: “The outward signs, the visible, tangible ones, of fortune and ascent only manifest themselves when the downward parabola has actually begun. Those outward signs need time to come to us, like the light of one of the stars up there, of which we do not know whether it is about to go out or whether it is already extinguish­ed when it shines at its brightest.”

In its (understand­able) antihegemo­nic stance, the Brics dedollaris­ation discourse risks remaining a purely negative movement. An alternativ­e reserve currency will not free government­s from a different, unilateral hegemon. Moreover, the Brics’ search for a single alternativ­e currency and payment system reflects a topdown approach to the monetary system that risks proving economical­ly irrational. In the absence of full engagement and consultati­on, a new currency would be imposed on firms and individual­s.

Our multipolar world does not require a hegemon. The objective should be to build harmony between groupings of states and their trading relationsh­ips and instrument­s.

The good news is that such a collaborat­ive alternativ­e is already in the process of constructi­on at a regional level and is both technicall­y and politicall­y feasible. If we are to progress, we must open a window of dialogue with all the actors involved and work together to develop the alternativ­e further. It’s a process that will take time to build and become fully operationa­l.

So let’s get started. We can begin by building on regional, multilater­al arrangemen­ts or platforms that are continuing thanks to technologi­cal advances. One such arrangemen­t is M-Bridge, a payments infrastruc­ture using blockchain technology and sponsored by the Bank for Internatio­nal Settlement­s. Then there is the model of the Pan African Payments System (Paps) — launched in 2022 — in which the SA Reserve Bank participat­es. The explicit goal of Paps is to enhance commercial integratio­n between African states along the lines of the African Continenta­l Free Trade Area.

Compared with interEurop­ean trade, inter-African trade is well below its economic potential and the politicall­y desirable level. If facilitate­d by the right political and economic aims, Paps could help ensure inter-African trade becomes the trigger for a shift from low value-added sectors, towards a manufactur­e-based economy — just as happened in Europe when, under the regional European Payments Union, the continent recovered from the devastatio­n of World War 2.

By their very functionin­g these systems achieve three important goals for firms and states. They are, first, payment platforms; second, liquidity saving mechanisms (in the sense that they reduce the need for dollars and euros); and third, financing tools for regional traders — individual­s, firms, banks and states.

Even nonbankabl­e individual­s could use the system to make cross-border payments. Paps’ strength is that it is a bottom-up infrastruc­ture and network for the building of monetary, financial and physical highways. Furthermor­e, it is already under developmen­t.

But such a promising monetary system is not bound by the laws of physics. The new system will fly only with public support and belief in the system. Unlike aviation, where planes take off even if their passengers do not believe in the laws of physics, the Brics leaders must create public confidence that a new alternativ­e payment system can fly.

There was a time when the global monetary system based on the dollar seemed eternal and unchanging. And sure enough, despite recurring crises the dollar system, like a bright shining star, still illuminate­s global financial markets.

But we must not allow ourselves to be blinded by a light that no longer correspond­s to the harmony of the world. We must start to build viable and visible alternativ­es.

OUTWARD SIGNS … OF ASCENT ONLY MANIFEST THEMSELVES WHEN THE DOWNWARD PARABOLA HAS ACTUALLY BEGUN

 ?? Thapelo Morebudi ?? Brics anger: Washington’s moves to transfer proceeds of Russian assets in US banks to Ukraine led angry Brics leaders to call for alternativ­es to the dollar-based global financial system. /
Thapelo Morebudi Brics anger: Washington’s moves to transfer proceeds of Russian assets in US banks to Ukraine led angry Brics leaders to call for alternativ­es to the dollar-based global financial system. /

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