img_pub
Rubriques

Has De-Dollarization Begun?

As the economic consequences of US President Donald Trump’s war against Iran become evident, policymakers around the world are running out of patience. The recent Spring Meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank in Washington made this abundantly clear, with UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves lamenting the “folly” of a war that is “not ours.”

Le 11 mai 2026 à 12h43

NEW YORK— But much of the cost will be borne by the United States itself. The immediate effects are visible: a sharp rise in gas prices, inflation climbing to a two-year high, and growing concerns that, as consumers cut back on spending to offset higher costs, unemployment will rise. While these short-term shocks are serious, a major risk that has received less attention is that the dollar could lose its status as the world’s primary trade and reserve currency.

The decline of a reserve currency is a slow process. The British pound ceded its dominance to the US dollar over roughly two decades, beginning in the 1920s. As Barry Eichengreen has noted, the Roman denarius—arguably the world’s first international currency—also unraveled over a long period, starting when Emperor Nero debased it in the first century CE.

Any international currency ultimately depends on trust. I witnessed this during my time as chief economic adviser to the Indian government under Prime Minister Manmohan Singh. On August 5, 2011, S&P downgraded the US long-term credit rating from AAA to AA+, fueling fears of immediate capital flight. Instead, the opposite happened: money flowed into the US economy. In the face of global turbulence, investors trusted that the US would honor its obligations, no matter the cost.

That trust, a cornerstone of soft power, is rapidly eroding. Samantha Power, the former administrator of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), highlighted this in a recent lecture at Cornell University, where she criticized the Trump administration’s decision to dismantle the agency. The abrupt and “heartless” manner in which it was shut down, she said, halted humanitarian aid without warning, leading to immense suffering among populations around the world that had depended on its continuity.

The closure of USAID, alongside Trump’s military adventures in Iran and Venezuela and relentless attacks on long-standing allies like Canada and Denmark, has cast a shadow over America’s global standing and trustworthiness. This, in turn, puts the dollar’s hegemonic status at risk.

To understand the potential cost, consider seigniorage: because the dollar is globally trusted, the Federal Reserve can print a $10 bill for less than seven cents, and it will be accepted at full value around the world. As empires from Rome to Britain have shown, issuing the world’s leading currency allows a country to create value almost out of thin air. Losing that capacity would slow economic growth.

Unless US policy reverses course, this year may go down in history as the moment the US dollar began to lose its status as the world’s currency.

This raises the question: Which currency will replace the dollar? The renminbi appears to be the strongest candidate. A decade ago, the Chinese currency gained credibility when the International Monetary Fund included it in the basket of global currencies underpinning Special Drawing Rights (the Fund’s reserve asset), but it was still widely dismissed as “no match” for the greenback. Today, the prospect of renminbi primacy no longer seems unthinkable.

Yet China’s ability to assume that global role is far from assured. As economist Qiao Liu observed in his 2016 book Corporate China 2.0, the country combines an “authoritative political regime” with more flexible institutional arrangements in which “relationships still matter,” a hybrid that does not readily inspire the kind of global confidence a reserve currency requires.

Chinese President Xi Jinping appears to understand this dynamic. In a 2024 speech, Xi emphasized the need to internationalize the renminbi to bolster China’s soft power, calling for a “powerful currency that can be widely used in international trade, investment, and foreign-exchange markets and attain reserve currency status.” But the main obstacle to reserve-currency status for the renminbi—the maintenance of capital controls—remains firmly in place.

The strongest rebuke of Trump’s policies over the past year came from an unexpected source: King Charles III. His address to Congress on April 28, delivered with characteristic British wit and restraint, sent a clear message that the US is on the wrong path, one that could destroy its global standing.

There was, however, cause for optimism. The repeated bursts of bipartisan applause Charles received from members of Congress suggested they were already aware of America’s predicament.

© Project Syndicate 1995–2026

Par
Le 11 mai 2026 à 12h43

à lire aussi

Alerte météo : neige et fortes pluies attendues du 15 au 16 mai dans plusieurs provinces
Quoi de neuf

Article : Alerte météo : neige et fortes pluies attendues du 15 au 16 mai dans plusieurs provinces

La Direction générale de la météorologie annonce, dans un bulletin d'alerte de niveau de vigilance orange, que des chutes de neige à partir de 2.000 m sont prévues du vendredi 15 à 18h au samedi 16 mai 2026 à 10h, dans les provinces de Ouarzazate, Azilal, Midelt, Tinghir et Al Haouz.

Prêt-à-porter : Ara Blanco distinguée au salon de la franchise 2026
Communication d'entreprise

Article : Prêt-à-porter : Ara Blanco distinguée au salon de la franchise 2026

L’enseigne marocaine, filiale du groupe Agof, a été primée à Casablanca lors de l’événement organisé du 15 au 17 avril 2026 à l’Office des foires et expositions. Forte de plus de 30 points de vente et de 300 collaborateurs, elle veut accélérer son développement en franchise au Maroc et à l’international.

Coupe du monde 2026. Ayyoub Bouaddi se rapproche du Maroc
Football

Article : Coupe du monde 2026. Ayyoub Bouaddi se rapproche du Maroc

En attendant l’officialisation de la Fédération royale marocaine de football, différentes sources médiatiques affirment que le milieu de terrain lillois a choisi de défendre les couleurs de l’équipe nationale. En cas de confirmation, ce sera un renfort de poids pour le présent et le futur des Lions de l’Atlas.

Prévisions météorologiques pour ce vendredi 15 mai 2026
Quoi de neuf

Article : Prévisions météorologiques pour ce vendredi 15 mai 2026

Voici les prévisions météorologiques pour le vendredi 15 mai 2026, établies par la Direction générale de la météorologie (DGM) : - Averses locales sur les […]

Vendredi 15 mai 2026 : le dirham se déprécie face au dollar
Marché de change

Article : Vendredi 15 mai 2026 : le dirham se déprécie face au dollar

Ce vendredi 15 mai 2026, vers 8 h 30, la première cotation centrale USD/MAD de la journée, telle que publiée par Bank Al-Maghrib (BAM), fait […]

Rabat, nouvelle destination de luxe ? Le patron du Waldorf Astoria y croit (entretien)
TOURISME

Article : Rabat, nouvelle destination de luxe ? Le patron du Waldorf Astoria y croit (entretien)

Longtemps restée à l’écart des grands circuits du tourisme haut de gamme, Rabat voit émerger une nouvelle ambition hôtelière, portée par la Tour Mohammed VI, l’arrivée de nouvelles liaisons aériennes et l’installation de marques internationales. À la tête du premier Waldorf Astoria du Maroc, Guy Bertaud défend l’idée d’un marché encore embryonnaire, mais prometteur : celui d’une capitale sûre, verte et peu équipée en hôtellerie de luxe, où les grands groupes peuvent encore contribuer à fabriquer la destination qu’ils entendent vendre.

Médias24 est un journal économique marocain en ligne qui fournit des informations orientées business, marchés, data et analyses économiques. Retrouvez en direct et en temps réel, en photos et en vidéos, toute l’actualité économique, politique, sociale, et culturelle au Maroc avec Médias24

Notre journal s’engage à vous livrer une information précise, originale et sans parti-pris vis à vis des opérateurs.

Toute l'actualité