intalentive 3 hours ago

World reserve currency status follows the leader in manufacturing and trade. Maintaining dollar hegemony was never going to be feasible after de-industrialization, but short-sighted decisions like weaponizing SWIFT have accelerated its decline. As the dollar is gradually shunted out of world trade, the US will be less able to export its inflation abroad. The implications won’t be pretty.

  • atonse an hour ago

    For all of its current very high profile issues of uncertainty in the US, who would actually trust China in any way shape or form as an alternative?

    It’s a totalitarian state who has been jailing its wealthiest businesspeople on a whim, causing many to flee, and it’s about to embark on an invasion of its peaceful neighbor.

    Which part of any of that screams “that currency will be a stable place to store my money?”

    • scrubs 7 minutes ago

      I hear you on China loud and clear, however the balance of focus must be on us, the US, not shooting ourself in the face anymore. Debt, current account deficit, and interest payments have got to get in order. Our house needs to get in order by us for us.

    • rootsudo 12 minutes ago

      "It’s a totalitarian state who has been jailing its wealthiest businesspeople on a whim, causing many to flee, and it’s about to embark on an invasion of its peaceful neighbor."

      To be fair and very frank: the USA does the same things

      Peaceful neighbor: greenland or mexico (sure the cartel related violence but it isn't per se state.)

      Jack MA is the famous chinesse example, but it was close enough for bill gates, howard hughes and mark zuckerberg.

      Totalitarian state: It depends, as someone born in the USA, I've felt much freeer in China then USA. USA states and cities have been pushing things such as teens/kids can't be alone - yes it isn't federal.

      More recent, just look at the turning point usa assination - don't want to get to political since that's a black hole of political theater there but - that isn't common outside the USA.

      Credit system: USA's credit system is much more abusive then china's social credit system.

      While most of the issues are just present in the current administration, and should go away with the next administration - China has acted more responsibile and more consistent with it's policies while the USA is going all over the place lately.

      But for terms of currency, both are not great as of now - the rmb pegged to dollar will change soon, usd reserve currency is eroding everywhere.

      tl;dr buy gold I guess

    • mertbio an hour ago

      > who would actually trust China in any way shape or form as an alternative?

      Most of the Asian countries (except South Korea, Japan and Taiwan) and African countries. They’re already getting tons of investments and loans from China.

    • rdm_blackhole an hour ago

      > For all of its current very high profile issues of uncertainty in the US, who would actually trust China in any way shape or form as an alternative?

      People would trust China for the same reason people still trust the US after it invaded 2 countries in the middle east for no reason whatsoever and decided to imprison 2 million of it's citizens at any given time.

      If tomorrow there are better prospects of making money in China, then people will go to China and use the yuan to store their wealth. It's that simple. Morals have nothing to do in this equation.

  • tnt128 an hour ago

    Would you care to elaborate? Why does it have to follow the leader in manufacturing? shouldnt the world reserve currency also be the most available? If it’s not dollar then what’s the alternative? Yuan isn’t an open currency, impossible for it to replace dollars as the world reserve currency.

  • Nevermark 3 hours ago

    Yes, letting the Ukraine related sanctions chronically fester is a tremendous strategic error.

    The benefits of leverage are dramatically maximized and reinforced by using them as little as possible, on the fewest targets as possible, for the shortest intervals possible, to obtain the most decisive results as possible.

    Helping an ally interminably not lose on the battlefield (instead of supporting a win), is also a leverage destroying strategic error. There goes significant deterrence.

    And to triple down, the US has expanded its sanctions (er, tariffs) to all its enemies (uh, trading partners), giving everyone strong signals that no relief is coming, other than to back away from the US.

    Leverage that took a couple centuries to achieve is hemorrhaging.

    And we are living in a Kurt Vonnegut novel.

  • lisbbb 3 hours ago

    You're so defeatist. The US could turn things around and in fact, is. The problem with China is that you can't trust anything there--their bonds are garbage, their equities, same.

    • arunabha 2 hours ago

      The issue is, the current administration seems to be hell bent on speed running the course to a similar destination. The overt attempts to politicize the Fed and key govt institutions has sown the seeds to distrust in US govt data and monetary policy.

      Whether we water and fertilize the seeds, or let them dry and wither will decide the level of credibility we get in the future.

      Strong institutions are absolutely critical for long term economic success. Enforcement of the rule of law, accurate data and credible monetary policy are the bedrock on which long term economic prosperity is built. Right now, we seem to be taking a jackhammer to that foundation.

seanmcdirmid an hour ago

So is China going to finally let the Yuan fully float and get rid of exchange controls? That's when you know the yuan has really come of age...when you don't need special documentation to convert your yuan into dollars or euros.

But something really needs to replace the petro dollar, especially as chinese EV and clean energy tech production reduces or eliminates the need for having a petro dollar at all in most of the world.

nextworddev 3 hours ago

Whenever the economist writes a thesis, bet the other way

  • dh2022 2 hours ago

    I stopped reading the Economist a few years ago for this exact reason. It looks like it is still the case. Any article mentioning reserve currency without mentioning Triffin dilemma is not serious. Any article mentioning how US dollar will lose its reserve status without mentioning how the Euro (a large liquid currency with no capital controls and 3 decades of existence ) did not takeover is even less serious. Any reporter claiming RMB is the next world currency never tried to wire a dividend payment out of China.

nine_zeros 4 hours ago

Illuminating article. And if the yuan bonds information is real, it won't even take 4 years for a lot of global finance to move away from the dollar.

It might be tough for the US to accept the higher cost of global resources (and thus become a poorer country) but maybe this gradual decline in dollars status is what the administration hopes is the best case.

  • adamnemecek 4 hours ago

    Kinda like the UK.

    • mountainriver 3 hours ago

      Lots of similarities, almost like you could predict it by reading history

    • nine_zeros 3 hours ago

      Maybe like the UK but the problem with the US is that the US is a violent country. Lower standard of living is likely to cause violence. UK literally just lost all the colonial wealth but came together to build itself again.

      In many ways, the US is a spiral descent culture while the UK lost is all and ascended again but to lower levels.