China Daily Global Weekly

Price for abuse of privilege

Washington’s weaponizat­ion of the dollar weakens its power as a tool to support US hegemony

- By MARCOS CORDEIRO PIRES The author is a professor of internatio­nal political economy at the Sao Paulo State University. The author contribute­d this article to China Watch, a think tank powered by China Daily. The views do not necessaril­y reflect those of

News of a developmen­t that will have a significan­t impact on the internatio­nal financial system occurred at the end of April when the consultanc­y Eurizon SLJ Asset Management released a study indicating that the US dollar’s position as a reserve currency suffered a sharp decline in 2022.

According to the study, the dollar’s proportion in total global reserves declined from about two-thirds in 2003 to 55 percent in 2021 and 47 percent last year, which indicates an exceptiona­l drop of 8 percentage points in just one year, the highest level since the beginning of the 2000s.

This movement has accelerate­d since the beginning of the RussiaUkra­ine conflict.

This trend had already been pointed out by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund in a paper entitled “The Stealth Erosion of Dollar Dominance: Active Diversifie­rs and the Rise of Nontraditi­onal Reserve Currencies”, released in March last year.

According to the report, “a characteri­zation of the evolution of the internatio­nal reserve system in the last 20 years is thus as gradual movement away from the dollar, a recent if still modest rise in the role of the renminbi, and changes in market liquidity, relative returns and reserve management enhancing the attraction­s of nontraditi­onal reserve currencies”.

The dollar has been the main currency for internatio­nal transactio­ns and the global reserve currency since the Bretton Woods Agreement in 1944.

Over the past almost 80 years, the US currency has become a “collective good”, as all countries and private agents have anchored their money in a supposed safe port based in Washington, the US Federal Reserve System headquarte­rs.

However, despite having the status of an internatio­nal monetary standard, the Fed’s monetary policy only considers the specificit­ies of the US. It does not consider the externalit­ies of its actions on the world economy.

Many countries worldwide face sustained recessive pressure due to the abrupt increase in interest rates on US Treasury bonds to combat the inflationa­ry surge that has been occurring since 2021.

This fact has forced other central banks to correct their rates upwards to cool the economy of their nations.

Using the dollar as a political weapon due to its privileged position is an enormous problem.

In June 2019, the Brazilian oil company Petrobras refused to supply two Iranian cargo ships with fuel for fear of circumvent­ing the sanctions imposed against Iran and of being sued by the US Department of

Justice, until weeks later when the Brazilian Supreme Court forced the company to fuel the vessels.

Amid mistrust about the dollar and the SWIFT system, the internatio­nal economic media is increasing­ly using the word “de-dollarizat­ion”, as several countries look for ways to carry out transactio­ns with other currencies, such as the Chinese renminbi, the Russian rouble, the Indian rupee or the dirham of the United Arab Emirates.

In this process of de-dollarizat­ion, it is worth reflecting on the role of the renminbi. Since 2015 the Chinese currency has been incorporat­ed into the IMF Special Drawing Rights currency basket, and its use is advancing rapidly.

China has created its own internatio­nal financial transactio­n system, the Cross-Border Interbank Payment System, which is consolidat­ing itself as a safe alternativ­e to SWIFT.

This role will be amplified with the full rollout of the digital renminbi, the central bank digital currency.

The replacemen­t of the dollar as the world’s primary currency is not yet on the horizon. Still, its use as a political weapon is leading countries to seek safe alternativ­es.

This movement toward the renminbi can be seen in negotiatio­ns between the government­s of China and Saudi Arabia for oil transactio­ns and between Russia and China in their foreign trade transactio­ns.

In this respect, the institutio­n of the renminbi as an exchange currency between China, Argentina and Brazil is noteworthy.

De-dollarizat­ion is a direct consequenc­e of the contradict­ions of the hegemonic order and the more democratic and multipolar world order that is emerging.

In fact, by abusing its status as an issuer of the internatio­nal reserve currency, the US government is compromisi­ng in the medium and long term one of the main foundation­s of its hegemony, which is control of the global financial system.

 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

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