Is the U.S. Dollar Dead? Not So Fast

 | Apr 12, 2023 12:04

Headlines like the ones below lead some to believe that the U.S. dollar’s death may be coming soon.

  • China, Brazil Strike Deal to Ditch Dollar for Trade- Barron’s 3/2023
  • China Completes First Yuan-Settled LNG Trade – Reuters 3/2023
  • The U.S. Dollar Loses its Crown – Financial Times 2/2023

Don’t hold your breath. Headlines forecasting the dollar’s death as the world’s reserve currency have been around for a long time.

  • The Disappearing Dollar – Economist 12/2004
  • Why the Dollar’s Reign is Near an End Wall Street Journal 3/2011
  • Dollar Seen Losing Global Reserve Status – CNBC 9/2013

For those losing sleep that the Chinese yuan, Bitcoin, or some other currency will commandeer the dollar’s throne as the world’s reserve currency, sleep tight. That day is not coming anytime soon.

There are four critical reasons why the dollar will not lose its global reserve status anytime soon.

We share details of those in Part 2. First, it’s worth a brief history of reserve currencies and what they portend. The background will allow you to better appreciate the problem with the dollar and why the dollar’s death is unlikely in the near future.

h2 History of the Dollar and Reserve Currencies/h2

When explorers began sailing around the globe in the 1400s, demand for a common currency multiplied to facilitate global trade. Since then, international trade networks have flourished, and the need for one currency that all trade parties accept has become commonplace.

One currency accepted by trade partners alleviates the need for barter. Barter only works if both parties have something of value the other party wants. If not, one partner must then offload the goods they received in barter to another trade partner. Such can be awkward and expensive when dealing with large or cumbersome goods. It is also fraught with risks such as spoilage, theft, and fire, among other problems.

A reserve currency usurps barter trade by allowing a seller to accept currency in exchange for goods, hold the currency easily and safely, and then use it at their convenience to purchase goods from another party.

As the graph below shows, eight reserve currencies have existed since 1250. Each one before the dollar saw its reign end due to financial negligence. The dollar has been the world’s reserve currency for a relatively short time.