
Above Photo: BRICS summit in 2014 (left) and Chinese President Xi Jinping meets with the Arab League in Saudi Arabia in December 2022 (right)
BRICS is âdeveloping a fairer system of monetary exchangeâ to challenge the âdominance of the dollarâ, South Africa revealed. Saudi Arabia is considering selling oil in other currencies. Economist Zoltan Pozsar says the US âunipolar eraâ is over.
The international economic system had been dominated for decades by the United States, but this financial architecture is rapidly fracturing with the creation of new institutions in the Global South.
The BRICS bloc of Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa is working âto develop a fairer system of monetary exchangeâ, to challenge the âdominance of the dollarâ, South Africaâs foreign minister has revealed.
Saudi Arabia publicly confirmed that it is considering selling its oil in other currencies.
Chinaâs President Xi Jinping said Beijing will buy energy from the Persian Gulf states in its own currency, the renminbi.
Prominent economist Zoltan Pozsar, of the Swiss investment bank Credit Suisse, has observed that the âunipolar eraâ of US hegemony is quickly being replaced with a new âmultipolarâ order of âone world, two systemsâ.
âChina is proactively writing a fresh set of rulesâ and âcreating a new type of globalisationâ, Pozsar wrote, describing how this transition threatens âthe âexorbitant privilegeâ that the dollar holds as the international reserve currencyâ.
BRICS Works To âDevelop A Fairer System Of Monetary Exchangeâ As Alternative To âDominance Of The Dollarâ
South Africaâs Foreign Minister Naledi Pandor told Russiaâs state media outlet Sputnik that the BRICS bloc is working to âdevelop a fairer system of monetary exchangeâ, to weaken the âdominance of the dollarâ.
Pandorâs comments were ignored by Western media outlets, but widely reported in the Indian press.
âWe have always been concerned by the fact that there is a dominance of the dollar and that we do need to look at alternative [systems]â, she said.
âThe systems currently in place tend to privilege very wealthy countries and tend to be really a challenge for countries, such as ourselves, which have to make payments in dollars, which costs much more in terms of our various currenciesâ, Pandor continued.
âSo I do think a fairer system has to be developed, and itâs something weâre discussing with the BRICS ministers in the economic sector discussionsâ, the South African foreign minister added.
In 2014, the BRICS countries created the New Development Bank (NDB) as an alternative to the US-dominated World Bank.
Pandor explained, âWithin the economic context we are looking at how the NDB and other institutional formations may assist us to develop a fairer system of monetary exchangeâ.
The South African foreign minister also criticized the United Statesâ imposition of unilateral sanctions, which are illegal under international law.
She told Sputnik, âWe always have a problem with unilateral sanctions and their impact on many countries that fall outside a particular conflict, so we have indicated to our friends in the United States that we really want them to relook at this imposition of unilateral sanctions, which is often not very helpful a strategy in resolving problemsâ.
Saudi Arabia Considers Selling Oil In Other Currencies
While the BRICS is gradually moving toward de-dollarization, one of Washingtonâs most important historical allies is doing the same.
The worldâs largest oil exporter, Saudi Arabia, has publicly acknowledged that it is considering selling its crude in other currencies, not just the US dollar.
Saudi Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan told Bloomberg TV, âThere are no issues with discussing how we settle our trade arrangements, whether it is in the US dollar, whether it is the euro, whether it is the Saudi riyalâ.
âI donât think we are waving away or ruling out any discussion that will help improve the trade around the worldâ, he said.
In 1974, Saudi Arabia agreed to sell its crude in the dollar and invest its oil revenue in Treasury securities, in return for US government protection.
This petrodollar system helped undergird the status of the greenback as the global reserve currency, after US President Richard Nixon ended the convertibility of the dollar to gold in 1971.
But the petrodollar now has direct challengers.
The Wall Street Journal reported in March 2022 that âSaudi Arabia [was] in active talks with Beijing to price some of its oil sales to China in yuanâ. Riyadh did not publicly confirm this at the time.
Chinese President Xi Jinping then visited Riyadh in December, where he held a historic meeting with the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and the 21 member states of the Arab League.
Xi said he and top officials from Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Qatar, Kuwait, Bahrain, and Oman discussed purchasing Persian Gulf energy with Chinaâs own currency, the renminbi.
The Chinese president explained, in comments reported by Reuters: âChina will continue to import large quantities of crude oil from GCC countries, expand imports of liquefied natural gas, strengthen cooperation in upstream oil and gas development, engineering services, storage, transportation and refining, and make full use of the Shanghai Petroleum and Natural Gas Exchange as a platform to carry out yuan settlement of oil and gas tradeâ.
China is already Saudi Arabiaâs top trading partner, and Beijing, Riyadh, and the GCC pledged to deepen their multilateral trade.
Prominent Credit Suisse Economist Describes New Multipolar Order Challenging US Dollarâs âExorbitant Privilegeâ
These historic developments in the BRICS and Saudi Arabia are part of an international shift to a multipolar economic order.
Prominent economist Zoltan Pozsar, global head of short-term interest rate strategy at Swiss investment bank Credit Suisse, described this transition in a January 20 op-ed in the Financial Times, titled âGreat power conflict puts the dollarâs exorbitant privilege under threatâ.
Pozsar, who is something of a celebrity in contemporary economics and has been described as a âsuperstarâ by the financial press, wrote that the âunipolar eraâ following the end of the first cold war, in which âthe US was the undisputed hegemonâ, is now coming to an end.
In this increasingly multipolar world, âChina is proactively writing a fresh set of rulesâ, he said, âcreating a new type of globalisation through institutions such as the Belt and Road Initiative, the Brics+ group of emerging economies and the Shanghai Cooperation Organisationâ.
We are seeing a bifurcation of global economic and political institutions, in what âmay eventually lead to âone world, two systemsââ, Pozsar explained, referencing Chinaâs model for Hong Kong of âone country, two systemsâ.
He wrote that the âdollar-based monetary order is already being challenged in multiple waysâ, in particular by âthe spread of de-dollarisation efforts and central bank digital currencies (CBDCs)â.
âRecently, the pace of de-dollarisation appears to have picked upâ, he observed.
Pozsar pointed out:
China and India have been paying for Russian commodities in renminbi, rupees and UAE dirhams. India has launched a rupee settlement mechanism for its international transaction while China asked GCC countries to make full use of the Shanghai Petroleum and Natural Gas Exchange for the renminbi settlement of oil and gas trades over the next three to five years. With the expansion of Brics to beyond Brazil, Russia, India and China, the de-dollarisation of trade flows may proliferate.
Major countries like China, Russia, and Saudi Arabia are exporting more than ever, which means they have record current account surpluses, Pozsar noted. But their central banks are not buying US Treasury securities; instead they are investing in gold, commodities, and projects like the Belt and Road Initiative.
âIf less trade is invoiced in US dollars and there is a dwindling recycling of dollar surpluses into traditional reserve assets such as Treasuries, the âexorbitant privilegeâ that the dollar holds as the international reserve currency could be under assaultâ, the Credit Suisse economist concluded.
Source: Popularresistance.org