EDITOR NOTE: The fear of SDRs (Special Drawing Rights) usurping the US dollar’s status as the world’s reserve currency has always been on the margins, typically the domain of conspiracy theorists and dollar perma-bears. But given the federal response to COVID-19’s economic fallout, with money printing and borrowing on overdrive, the dollar’s decline in the eyes of the world is quickly becoming an economic reality. China has been anticipating this for some time. And although its attempt to replace the dollar with SDRs has failed in the past, they have a much stronger case now than before. A warning that’s more “realist” than “alarmist”: the dollar is going to plunge sooner or later. How you hedge your wealth with “sound money” is going to define how well you fare economically in the future.
As excerpted from Bloomberg macro commentator Ye Xie
Beijing Sounds Alarm About Demise of Mighty Dollar
With all the money printing and borrowing, is this the beginning of a long decline for the dollar?
Clearly this is on the minds of some senior Chinese officials. Guo Shuqing, chairman of the China Banking and Insurance Regulatory Commission, delivered a strong warning on the U.S. currency this week.
He made four points in a speech at the Lujiazhui Forum in Shanghai:
“Some people say: ‘Domestic debt is not debt, but external debt is debt. For the United States, even external debt is not debt. This seems to have been the case for quite some time in the past, but can it really last for a long time in the future?”
What will China do?
“China cherishes the conventional monetary and fiscal policies very much. We will not engage in flooding the system, nor will we engage in deficit monetization and negative interest rates.”
It’s not the first time China vented frustration against the “exorbitant privilege” of the dollar. After the financial crisis, then-PBOC Governor Zhou Xiaochuan proposed using the SDR to replace the dollar as the main reserve currency.
It went nowhere. But this time, China seems to be determined to enhance its reserve-currency status by avoiding unconventional policies. It won’t dislodge the dollar tomorrow, but its attractiveness is clear in the foreign flows to its bond market.
Originally posted on ZeroHedge
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