Given this situation, is it wise for US policymakers to weaponise the dollar and the US financial and banking systems for geopolitical purposes? Should they not instead preserve the sanctity of financial contracts and financial markets and protect them from pernicious influences?
The freezing of Russian foreign exchange reserves, for example, was a “bridge too far” in the view of some panellists that “sets in train processes around the world that ultimately could lead to an erosion of the dominant position of the dollar”.
During the past 20 years, the US dollar has declined as a share of global foreign exchange reserves, according to an Atlantic Council paper. This has not benefited any other major currency but rather a group of smaller currencies including the Canadian and Australian dollars and the yuan.
The International Monetary Fund monitors the composition of currencies in global foreign exchange reserves, and its most recent survey shows the share of the US dollar at 58 per cent of total official foreign exchange reserves at the end of the first quarter of 2024, a noticeable fall from 71 per cent in 2000. If gold is included in the reserves, the dollar’s share drops to 48 per cent.
As geopolitical confrontation deepens, the declining share of the US dollar in global reserves is likely to persist. In short, there is no need to talk down the dollar. The conversation is already well advanced among central banks, markets and investors, and it seems that gold has nowhere to go but up.
Anthony Rowley is a veteran journalist specialising in Asian economic and financial affairs