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Currency reserve status

Anna Svahn
26. feb. 2021 | 3 Læsetid

Whilst leading economists around the world are worried about inflation looming around the corner, Federal Reserve chief Jeremy Powell says there is no hurry to raise interest rates. Despite the fact that the monetary base in the US expanded by almost 25 percent, the Fed believes that it is not yet visible in the consumer price index CPI and that until they have really started inflation, they will not raise interest rates.

Whilst leading economists around the world are worried about inflation looming around the corner, Federal Reserve chief Jeremy Powell says there is no hurry to raise interest rates. Despite the fact that the monetary base in the US expanded by almost 25 percent, the Fed believes that it is not yet visible in the consumer price index CPI and that until they have really started inflation, they will not raise interest rates.

The American ten year CPI marked a one year high on February 24 of 1.38 percent. Still very low historically, but a sign that the outlook for the US economy nevertheless looked better now than a few months ago. Had it not been for the fact that the market has been backwards ever since Ben Bernanke, in response to the financial crisis in 2008, switched up QE to lead the United States out of the crisis. The problem, however, was that the stimulus survived even after the crisis, and we have now become accustomed to a reality where QE is not only used as a tool in emergencies to slow down a recession, but to support financial markets and ensure whatever the reason that they do not fall more than a few percent.

In addition to the effects on prices of assets such as shares and most recently commodities, money printing obviously also affects the value of the currency in the country where the money is printed. In the long run, the outlook for the US dollar looks bleak, while for the Chinese renminbi, of which the Chinese central bank has not printed as much, the future looks all the brighter.

The greatest strength of the US dollar is its position as a reserve currency. This is primarily what distinguishes the USD from, for example, ARS. With high demand for dollars, it takes longer before the currency finally loses confidence and begins a spiral into the abyss. However, that is what’s happening right now.

Global foreign exchange reserves quarterly 1999 Q1 - 2020 Q4

Note: Past development is no reliable indicator of future development.

To understand why US reserve currency status is under threat, one must first understand why the dollar was given the pronounced role from the beginning of 1944. Previously, reserve currency status was only an expression of the currency in which the majority of global trade transactions were made. backed by gold, it can thus be said that until the United States gained reserve currency status, gold was a reserve currency. After World War I, however, Britain finally had to leave the gold standard to finance the war by printing money, and the United States, whose economic situation was better than most in the same period, stood as lenders and had debts repaid in gold. This eventually led to the majority of the world's gold reserves being in US vaults, and the USD was ultimately the only currency still backed by gold.

Since then, that has changed, and the United States has long since given up the stability of backing its currency, such as gold, and printing money at an ever-increasing rate. After the pandemic in 2020, they switched up further and now there is no return for the dollar.

Our Eastern superpower China chose to handle the pandemic somewhat differently and their goal is now to take an ever-increasing place in global central bank reserves. Despite the fact that the Chinese renminbi today only make up a few percent of global reserves, it is all the more interesting to look at the rate of change.

Rate of change quarterly 1999 Q1 - 2020 Q4

Note: Past development is no reliable indicator of future development.

The US dollar still accounts for the majority of global foreign exchange reserves, but the trend is clear. There is no longer just one currency that suits all needs, but central banks see the need to diversify their foreign exchange reserves. Therefore, it is not unreasonable to imagine that the 2 percent of Chinese renminbi today will climb to 10-15 percent by 2030.

If the trend points to increased diversification among reserve currencies rather than a single one, it would mean that demand for the USD falls while they continue to print money. In a few years' time, it will have devastating consequences for the world's largest economy today.

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