A currency's primary value comes from its reliability for savings, not just transactions. While countries are trading less in USD, the bigger threat is the Fed's inflationary policies eroding trust in the dollar as a safe asset for central banks and individuals to hold.
The danger to the U.S. dollar is not a dramatic replacement by the Euro or RMB, but a slow erosion of its primacy. This is visible in central banks increasing gold reserves, greater hedging activity, and China’s de-dollarization campaign. This gradual shift ultimately raises borrowing costs for the US government and American consumers.
America's ability to deficit spend relies on the world's appetite for US debt, which allows it to export inflation. If countries dump this debt, the US can no longer "tax the world," triggering immediate domestic austerity and creating a global power vacuum likely to be filled by China.
The US Federal Reserve's money printing functions as a global tax through the Cantillon effect. The first recipients of new money (government, large banks) benefit before inflation spreads. This silently dilutes the wealth of all other dollar holders, both domestically and internationally, effectively transferring purchasing power to entities closest to the money printer.
Current market chatter about reduced demand for U.S. assets is not a sign of a sudden de-dollarization crisis. Instead, it reflects a slow, rational diversification by global investors who are finding better relative value in other developed markets as their local interest rates rise.
The silver crisis, where paper claims became worthless without physical backing, is a direct analogy for the US dollar. Its value relies solely on global confidence, which is eroding due to massive national debt. This makes the dollar the ultimate fragile “paper asset,” susceptible to a similar rapid loss of trust.
The U.S. economy's ability to consume more than it produces is not due to superior productivity but to the dollar's role as the world's reserve currency. This allows the U.S. to export paper currency and import real goods, a privilege that is now at risk as the world diversifies away from the dollar.
The surge in gold's value isn't just about uncertainty; it's a direct signal that foreign central banks and major investors are losing confidence in U.S. treasuries as a safe asset. This shift threatens the global dominance of the U.S. dollar.
In a regime of fiscal dominance, where government spending dictates policy, the currency, not bond yields, becomes the primary release valve for economic pressure. While equities and yields may appear stable, the true cost of stimulus will be reflected in a devaluing dollar, a risk often overlooked by bond vigilantes.
Unlike the 2008 crisis, which was localized in housing and banking, the current problem is with the US dollar itself. Global central banks are now fleeing the dollar for assets like gold, signaling a systemic crisis, not a sectoral one.
The decline of the US dollar won't result in a simple replacement by the Chinese Yuan. Instead, its core functions are fracturing: 'store of value' is shifting to gold and Bitcoin, while 'medium of exchange' is moving to a multi-polar system of local currencies like the rupee and yuan.