Donald Trump said he wanted to save the dominance of the US dollar as the global reserve currency, but his aggressive tariff threats and trade war are accelerating dedollarization. Countries and foreign investors are selling US stocks and bonds (Treasury securities, ie, US government debt), seeking alternative reserve assets. Ben Norton explains.
As predicted:
Concerning China, Trump's move may
have some negative impact on its economy for a while, since China has
chosen to partially play by the rules of the Western neoliberal system
in order to benefit from it. However, the stupid US strategy of
over-sanctioning countries that are considered a threat to the US global
hegemony - among them China - pushed those countries to seek an
alternative, accelerating their de-dollarization.
This
means that Trump's latest action is of very high risk, because it may
boost further the de-dollarization process and trigger a new round of
BRICS expansion.
Comments
Post a Comment