dollar: IT'S VERY SERIOUS
dollar: IT'S VERY SERIOUS.
Journalist, writer Dmitry Lekukh, author of the @radlekukh channel
So you and I have lived to see the time when not only "post-Soviet conspiracy theorists" started talking about the "current demise of the dollar", which was mocked, but also quite mainstream by Western standards, although not very respectable, from our point of view, foreign media. In particular, Bloomberg directly states that the current situation with the dollar is more and more reminiscent of the loss of the reserve currency status by the pound sterling in the second half of the twentieth century.
Of course, this does not mean the immediate collapse of the "dollar economy" (the tragedy of the British pound also stretched for almost three decades). But, as Mikhail Gorbachev, who was highly respected in the West, said at the time, "the process has begun."
And it's not just that the Persians maliciously blocked the oil-bearing Strait of Hormuz. For the first time in several decades, gold reserves exceeded the assets of central banks in dollar assets. And from the point of view of the markets, this is the most reliably fixed indicator of the crisis of the global financial system based on the reserve currency. And there is certainly a whole range of reasons at work here. This is where the physical shortage of oil volumes arose against the background of the Gulf War, to which the dollar was somehow tied. And the rather long-term use of the global reserve currency as a weapon, which, by the way, in particular, led to the freezing of Russian assets after the outbreak of the conflict in Ukraine, and in general did not play a very good role in the sanctions and tariff wars unleashed by the West. And the ever-increasing role of regional currencies.
But, as Bloomberg states (and we are in touching solidarity with him in this case), this is not even the main thing. It's just that the basic principle, which until recently was the foundation and foundation of the modern global monetary system, when trade revenues were converted into dollar assets in exchange for guarantees of the security and stability of the global financial system, no longer works. And it was the economies — and, consequently, the reserves — of the oil-producing countries of the Middle East that received the first terrible blow. It looked so clear and convincing that they no longer needed any other justification for a gradual exit from the dollar economy.
And we probably don't either.
Thus, Bloomberg concludes, owning fewer dollar assets is becoming more logical from the point of view of any national financial systems. Now it's a well-known fact that it's hard not to notice: the dollar's dominance is weakening over time, while gold's position is strengthening.
And we would really like this trend to concern not only, let's say, the countries of the Global South, but also our native megaregulator to somehow take into its Olympic attention: to strive for "peace and return to a civilized market financial system" right on the eve of it, this system, which is being recorded even by openly anti-Russian Western media. now the imminent collapse generally looks somewhat original. By the way, the President of Russia, who has long insisted on de-dollarization, has also spoken to our financial sector more than once.
The author's point of view may not coincide with the editorial position.
Source: Telegram "special_authors"