The Reserve Status Of The USD?

in LeoFinance3 years ago (edited)

Many are questioning the reserve status of the U.S Dollar. It seems every couple weeks, someone is chiming in about the "death of the dollar". Sadly, like most things, it is not as simple as people make it out to be. In fact, it is compounded by the fact that very few understand what make it so in the first place.

To arrive at that conclusion, we have to travel back 100 years to see what took place. At that time, the British Pound was the reserve currency. The United States, relatively speaking, was still rather new, but was starting to step up on the global stage. Britain was threatened for the first time in a while.

So what happened?


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Reserve Currency

In that era, the United States economy surpassed Britain's. This was a very important moment that many attribute as the reason for the United States rise in this area. However, that is only a piece of the puzzle.

The other factor had to do with the banking system. Britain's was no where near as advanced as the U.S. This is a situation that still holds true today. When we look at large, international deals, not only do they almost always include a U.S. bank, they are most often headlined by one.

Right now the United States still has the most advanced banking system in the world. Thus, by the end of World War 2, when the U.S. was largely responsible for the victory there, the shift to the USD was obvious.

If we look at the situation through this same lens, what is going to step up to meet these criteria? We must keep in mind, the currency game is basically pitting one against another. So if the USD is going to be dumped as the reserve currency, that means something else has to step up under the present system.

Who meets the criteria that is outlined here?

There are forecasts that China will surpass the U.S. in economy size by the end of this decade. If that happens, one of the criteria is met. However, when we look at banking systems around the world, who can compete with the U.S.? Does the international community trust the Chinese and their banks? Hell, few can trust what they say about the numbers for their companies. It is unlikely that we will see that.

How about the trifecta of Germany, Russia, and China? Does that pose a threat?

If we look at it realistically, not really. The German banking system is a mess. As for Russia, they bring military might but can most of us even name a Russian bank? Thus, it is unlikely that anyone will trust the trio.

The same goes for the EU. This was set up to compete with the US as a major global power. It did not happen. The Eurozone is falling apart with situations that are worse than the United States. Whatever ailments that has, the EU has it worse.

Therefore, the USD will not lose its status as the reserve currency under the present system.

Networked Economy

We can seriously question what type of economy we are going to have in the next 15-20 years.

At present, we are still operating in a system that was established long before digitization. This means that geography played a large role in it. The institutions we deal with were designed to excel in a physical world. For example, governments were established to govern (rule/control) over people in a particular area. This means that all laws were written with that in mind.

Naturally, the world is changing rapidly. We are not only in a digital world, we are rapidly moving towards a virtual one. This means the existing system is not going to survive over the long-term. The problems it faces in the digital realm with subjects such as intellectual property and copyrights are just one example.

A company like Facebook is the epitome of what is taking place. Even though it is a siloed entity, it does wield enormous power over billions of people. This makes its influence larger than any government.

At the same time, if that company makes a change to its algorithm, it affects more people than most laws that Congress passes. Plus, the impact is felt immediately as opposed to the government taking months (or even years) for something to fully go into effect.

Here we see the power of a network.

Since we now have the ability to tokenize these, we are only enhancing the power. The result is we see the potential to instantly create an economy with a different currency as the base of operation.

What this likely means is a lack of standardization going forward. Instead, we are going to see the embracing of thousands of different tokens. Ultimately, people will interact using whatever tokens are in their wallets.

It is where technology enters the equation. Nobody is going to care about a reserve currency because there will not be many centralized hubs of activity. People are going to be cruising around the Metaverse doing whatever they do. Along the way, they will accumulate many different tokens. This is going to be the foundation for their financial existence.

We also see where most people get it wrong. They are still looking at things through the same lens as what is in place now. Decentralized and distributed create a completely different realm. We are witnessing the development of an extremely complex system with a lot more moving pieces. It has the ability to grow exponentially while extending in near unlimited directions.

Swapping

Presently, we see trillions of dollars move across borders through the SWIFT network. It is how we operate. However, we are seeing how important swapping is. This is going to replace a network such as this.

Instead of moving money from a bank in one geographic region to one in another, a swap simply moves an individual from one network to another. In short, it is simply changing the rules (code) that one operates under.

The key is going to develop the infrastructure that makes this almost immediate as well as having near zero cost.

This will end up being the foundation of all transactions. From this place, we will also see the construction of loans, collateralization, and insurance. Again, it will not be centralized nor standardized. We will see most economies (networks/communities) offer their own DeFi services.

Essentially people are going to be operating in whatever they have the most of.

It is a much different system than the one we presently operate under.


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I can see, potentially, the dollar losing its reserve status in practice, if not in an official way. We may still price things, Internationally, in dollars due to the “stability” of the currency compared to other national currencies. However, the transaction could be done in crypto, or stablecoin at the very least.

What this does is that it keeps the dollar relevant. However, it removes the currency controls in place by bypassing banking regulations and controls. So, we would be doing business in dollars, yet using dollar substitutes for the actual transactions. In this regard, dollar stablecoin might be more widely accepted for the lack of inefficiency that actual dollars have. This would be a perfect replacement for Eurodollars and other instances of foreign contracts denominated in dollars. DAI, for example, does not require actual dollars to issue new tokens. USDT claims to use a combination of dollars and other assets. In other words, a reserve currency without actually being used to transact. It only serves as a peg. This means that smart contracts are expanding and contracting the money supply, backed by assets, rather than the Fed, backed by “we said so”.

In fact, now that I think of it, there is somewhat of a gold standard when you use stablecoin and tokenized gold. They are easily convertible from one to the other. In addition, with services such as Celsius, you can borrow against your gold tokens. Can there really be a run on the bank for gold if it dynamically prices itself according to demand?

You got me thinking.

Can there really be a run on the bank for gold if it dynamically prices itself according to demand?

Presuming gold is going to be a valued commodity in the future which I highly doubt. That goes against the technological advancement we have plus as we enter the abundance of the virtual world, something in the physical is going to have less value. I could see what you state as being done with Bitcoin though since that was designed for the world we are entering.

That is going to take a while to get there though. So what happens in the meantime will be very interesting.

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Europe has its troubles but I don't see it falling apart any time soon. Britain may have shortsitedly left for their own reasons but they were not using the euro currency anyway. I think brexit will actually make the trading block even stronger. As you say it is about network effect and as a frequent traveller having the Euro is great. If someone pays me dollars it feels like Etherium as I need to pay high fees to turn it into something I can actually use day to day.

The Eurozone is not falling apart, Britain might if Scotland will go through with they referendum

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LOL Well I guess we have difference definitions of falling apart. The Eurozone is crashing and hard.

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Because of the Petrodollar, countries have had to have USD reserves. When the Petrodollar system collapses, the dollar won’t be far behind. More and more international settlements are Euro-denominated. And I wouldn’t underestimate the Yuan/Renminbi.

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The USD is much bigger than the Petrodollar. There is a couple hundred billion in debt that is written in USD and will be repaid in that currency. So unless it all goes back, it is not likely that the USD is going anywhere soon.

Plus all commodities are priced in dollars internationally.

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Plus all commodities are priced in dollars internationally.

That’s no longer true. The Shanghai Commodity Exchange has had huge volume recently, all denominated in Yuan.

When there are issues, people will definitely flock to the dollar so I don't see the US losing the reserve status.

I also think the other countries do not want the reserve status because it comes with a ton of problems. The only reason why we don't really see inflation is because we send a bunch of dollars overseas.

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I think that was proven out last March when things went to crap.

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I think that some day when Dollar loses its reserve currency status, the USA will issue their own crpyocurrency, saying it is the reserve cryptocurrency.

Another simpler point is the overall health of the currency and the U.S. economy in general. While it can certainly be argued we've been moving in the wrong direction for a long time (greater debt, printing more dollars, etc.), the fact of the matter is that if you look at other currencies, they are in an even worse position. The U.S. dollar could fail but the problem is that there really isn't another currency that could take its place today.

That is very true. We do have a bit of the "best house on the worst block" scenario. A lot of economies are struggling more than the US. When you look at the top ones, Germany and Japan have major issues. The US and China are battling things out with each having their own headwinds.

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It really makes you see how important it is that the US get their act together and start to come up with a plan for crypto. As you said, it isn't like they are going to lose their dominance, but how cool would it be to be the leader in something as revolutionary as this. We have the opportunity for other countries to use us as a roadmap for their crypto plans. Sadly, there is so much fighting that it may slip through our hands. At the very least it will not be done as perfectly as it could be.

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Ultimately, the key will be for crypto to take power away from the present system including the governments. We are going to see a new system erected. The trust factor isnt there anymore I dont believe.

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I think you are certainly right about the trust factor. I expect a lot of kicking and screaming from the old guard in terms of the new system though.

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70% among reserve currencies of the US dollar. Some people say the Chinese yuan can be a strong reserve currency against the US dollar. But the problem is, a strong economy is not the only requirement for a country's currency to be reserve. Here you have explained it very well.


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From this place, we will also see the construction of loans, collateralization, and insurance. Again, it will not be centralized nor standardized. We will see most economies (networks/communities) offer their own DeFi services.

This is where the real yield is going to be made.

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I can see the entire legacy system possibly encountering a reboot of some sort. Of course most of these governing bodies will wait for a “crisis” to occur. The “Fed Note” may not exist in it’s current iteration. This is why hodling in crypto is so crucial in 2021. These discussions have been ongoing for those who are paying attention. At this point I’m not willing to bet my life savings on this system. It is a trust factor for me…and frankly I don’t trust any of them.

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Very insightful post...well it looks like everything will movee towards decentralization but my fear is enforcement by the government. Then bans and what nots.

China has a place in being the next world reserve despite their poor banking system although it will take investing into the workforce of the banking system and upping their game. I actually see china doing that

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A company like Facebook is the epitome of what is taking place. Even though it is a siloed entity, it does wield enormous power over billions of people. This makes its influence larger than any government.

I think comparing the influence of Facebook to the influence of governments is comparing apples to oranges. Facebook's influence is much more diffuse than that of anyone's national, state/regional or local government. While two random people picked out of the entire world population are unlikely to be under the same jurisdiction, their respective governments wield considerable coercive power over them. Removing Facebook's direct influence one any individual entirely is a matter of deleting a single app from a smartphone or a PC. Nothing and no one can stop any individual from doing that if they so choose.

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I can't see the US not being the reserve currency for a long time (and that's coming from a non-US resident). I'm not sure if it is a good or bad thing for the US, because currency movements can be a key tool in economic management, and being a reserve currency usually means in times of uncertainty and economic downturn the US currency appreciates. This means its exports are more expensive and imports are cheaper.. not soo good for its local economy. on the flip side, being the reserve currency attracts capital and investment, and that has helped the US be at the forefront of innovation in many fields.

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