Tag: Currency War

A chess board featuring a US dollar bill and a Chinese yuan bill facing off with knight pieces.

Washington Is Building the Yuan’s Latin American Empire With Its Own Hands

This analysis examines how U.S. foreign policy—specifically the increased use of sanctions and unpredictable tariff threats—is incentivizing Latin American nations to diversify their reserves. By systematically transforming the dollar into a politically conditional instrument, Washington has created a vacuum that China is strategically filling with its own financial infrastructure, significantly altering the geopolitical landscape of the region.

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A close-up, blue-tinted macro shot of a United States one-hundred-dollar bill featuring the words "In God We Trust".

The Dollar Won’t Crash — But History Says It Will Fade

Drawing on the historical template of the British pound, this article examines why the dollar’s decline will likely be a prolonged, punctuated process rather than a sudden collapse. By analyzing shifting trade dynamics, reserve currency patterns, and recent market behavior during geopolitical stress, we explore how structural economic forces are gradually eroding the dollar’s global hegemony, even as it remains deeply embedded in current financial systems.

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Close-up of a person's hands counting United States dollar banknotes.

The Dollar Is Dying and The World Is Renegotiating Its Price

This analysis explores the structural and psychological erosion of the U.S. dollar’s role as the foundation of global finance. With U.S. federal debt exceeding critical thresholds and interest payments increasingly consuming the federal budget, the traditional framing of a “strong dollar” is facing unprecedented political scrutiny. We examine the tensions within Washington as policymakers weigh the benefits of currency depreciation to boost domestic manufacturing against the risk of alienating foreign creditors. This report details the global response—from diversified central bank reserves to the rise of non-dollar trade—and assesses whether the dollar can maintain its status as the world’s risk-free asset in a new era of managed currency competition.

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Exterior of a Russian currency exchange office with large dollar, pound, and yen symbols on the glass door.

Russia Wants the Dollar Back — and BRICS Should Be Worried

Russia is quietly considering a return to the dollar system, reversing years of anti‑dollar rhetoric. Economic strain, slowing growth, and dependence on China are driving the shift. If Moscow abandons de‑dollarization, the BRICS project looks less like an alternative order and more like leverage — exposing the limits of the bloc’s monetary ambitions.

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