Russia and China have launched another attempt to develop a “new global reserve currency.” In other words, they’re again attacking the dollar.
Hold the “shift” language. There’s only one country that can dethrone the dollar, and it isn’t a BRICS nation. It’s the United States. President Joe Biden is China and Russia’s biggest ally in “dedollarizing” the world.
The BRICS currencies are weak. Russia’s ruble, although showing surprising strength of late, is tied to a country in long-term—and seemingly irreversible—decline. Moreover, the Russian Federation, thanks to its aggression and barbarism in Ukraine, is cementing its role as a pariah.
South Africa is a country going into reverse. Brazil, where a leftist is leading in the polls ahead of October’s presidential election, also isn’t bound for economic glory. India, certainly large and arguably headed for riches, just isn’t ready for economic or financial leadership.
The success of the BRICS reserve currency, therefore, depends on the Chinese renminbi.
Yes, May usage was up. In April, the comparable figure was 0.01 percent lower.
There’s a reason the renminbi is an international pipsqueak. What China especially lacks is the most important attribute for reserve currency status: free convertibility into other currencies.
Chinese leaders have consistently failed to make their money freely convertible. Before the Asian financial crisis of 1997, they promised to do so by the turn of the century. In January 2011, Yi Gang, then chief of the State Administration of Foreign Exchange, promised China would make the renminbi convertible on the capital account—in other words, allowing the free repatriation of investment capital—in five years.
At the end of 2015, it was widely believed the Communist Party’s Fifth Plenum would announce the abolition of all capital controls by 2020, the end of the country’s 13th Five-Year Plan. The Party failed to make that promise, however. China is no closer to free convertibility now.
There have been, during the course of decades, small liberalizations in China, but the advances have often been formally reversed or not implemented. Beijing, for instance, in 2015, stopped outbound transfers of cash that were permitted by Chinese law, a move to reduce capital flight.
China under the Communist Party rule can’t allow free convertibility. Beijing’s economic model is dependent on cheap cash for state enterprises and state banks, which means the central bank severely depresses interest rates on deposits. If depositors had a choice, they would chase higher returns outside China. The country couldn’t withstand the resulting stampede of cash leaving.
Furthermore, Xi Jinping, the Chinese leader, believes in “absolute” control of every aspect of society. The idea of free convertibility, therefore, is almost certainly anathema to him. So until China completely abandons its model of economic development and removes Xi as leader, the renminbi cannot dethrone the dollar. The Chinese failure to make their currency widely acceptable means that, as a practical matter, the BRICS currency will never get off the ground.
The Russians and Chinese have been wanting to attack the dollar for decades, but now, despite everything, they see a real opportunity to succeed.
What are the attributes of a global reserve currency? It must be stable, it must be underpinned by a large and strong economy, it must be freely convertible, and it must be used widely.
Biden’s policies undermine these attributes of the U.S. currency. His insane spending plans will eventually weaken the dollar and therefore undercut its attractiveness as a store of value. That spending is made possible by issuing debt. The U.S. national debt is now a staggering $30.64 trillion and climbing fast. Eventually, investors will turn their back on an ailing dollar. No one wants to keep their wealth in a currency constantly losing value.
Moreover, Biden has already pushed the U.S. economy into two quarters of negative growth, a “recession,” and his policies seem designed to continue and deepen the downturn.
Also, his imposition of dollar sanctions on Russia undercut one of the main advantages of the greenback: its near-universal acceptance and usability for transactions. As a result, the Chinese and Russians are trying to trade with each other in renminbi. Furthermore, the Chinese are working to get Saudi Arabia to accept the redback in payment of oil.
Americans shouldn’t remain overconfident. The only reason the greenback is still the world’s reserve currency is because there’s no practical alternative. China and Russia, however, are busy trying to figure out how to engineer a replacement. That’s why they are at this moment pushing for a BRICS currency.