
Tariffs: A Strategic Counter To BRICS' Currency Aspirations
Tariffs serve as an economic lever by imposing taxes on imported goods, increasing their cost and making domestic alternatives more appealing. By targeting imports from BRICS nations, the U.S. hopes to reduce trade dependency on these countries, weakening their economic influence and curbing their ability to dictate a new world reserve currency. Additionally, tariffs generate revenue that can be reinvested into strengthening the economy.
While tariffs offer a direct and immediate way to exert economic pressure, their effectiveness is limited without complementary strategies. The U.S. must carefully balance the use of tariffs to avoid unintended consequences, such as retaliatory measures, disruptions to supply chains, and increased costs for consumers.
Other measures include bolstering trade alliances with non-BRICS nations, enhancing the global adoption of the U.S. dollar through diplomatic and financial initiatives, and promoting innovation in the U.S. economy to maintain its competitive edge.
Ultimately, the U.S.'s efforts to protect the dollar's status as the world's reserve currency rely on a multifaceted approach that combines economic policies, strategic alliances, and global diplomacy. Tariffs are a tool in this arsenal, but they are most effective when used as part of a broader plan.
The U.S. dollar has long been the world's dominant reserve currency, a position that grants the United States significant economic and geopolitical advantages. However, losing this status could have profound consequences for the U.S. economy and society. Moreover, it will definitively have a spill over impact on all western nations that are reliant on the U.S. both economically and militarily.
The dollar's reserve currency status allows the U.S. to borrow money at lower interest rates and maintain a strong global demand for its currency. If this status were lost, borrowing costs would rise, leading to increased national debt and reduced government spending on critical programs. Inflation could surge as the dollar's value declines, eroding purchasing power and driving up the cost of goods and services.
On a societal level, the loss of reserve currency status could exacerbate economic inequality. Higher inflation and unemployment rates would disproportionately impact lower-income households, while reduced government spending would weaken social safety nets, removing many existing lower income government funded projects. The resulting economic instability could lead to further social unrest and overall diminished western influence of global trade and politics.
To pre-empt such a scenario, the U.S. leadership are implementing a multi-pronged approach to address fiscal challenges, strengthen the economy, and expand more trust in the dollar's stability. The stakes are high, and the consequences of inaction could reshape the not only the United States' but also all of the western nation's future.
The risks of a potential conflict between BRICS nations and the western democratic nations are multifaceted. The conflict will likely include both economic and military catalysts.
Economic: Disruption of global trade and financial systems, and supply chains, as well as energy markets, and international investments face instability.
Geopolitical Alliances: The world is now polarising into opposing blocs, with countries aligning themselves with either the U.S. or BRICS. This will likely lead to a new era of militarisation and a modern Cold War.
While these risks highlight the potential consequences of such a conflict, it's important to note that every nation would benefit from the prudence found in prioritising diplomacy and economic strategies to resolve disputes and avoid open warfare.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

1News
11 hours ago
- 1News
Netanyahu defends new Gaza military offensive, says it will be wider than announced
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu today defended a new military offensive in Gaza that's more sweeping than previously announced, declaring in the face of growing condemnation at home and abroad that Israel 'has no choice but to finish the job and complete the defeat of Hamas'. Even as more Israelis express concern over the 22-month war, Netanyahu said the security Cabinet last week instructed the dismantling of Hamas strongholds not only in Gaza City but also in the 'central camps' and Muwasi. A source familiar with the operation, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to talk to the media, confirmed that Israel plans it in both areas. The camps — sheltering well over a half-million displaced people, according to the UN — had not been part of Israel's announcement Friday. It was not clear why, though Netanyahu faced criticism this weekend within his ruling coalition that targeting Gaza City was not enough. Netanyahu said there would be 'safe zones," but such designated areas have been bombed in the past. Late Sunday (local time), heavy bombardment was reported in Gaza City. Shortly before midnight local time, broadcaster Al Jazeera said correspondent Anas al-Sharif was killed in a strike. Rami Mohanna, administrative director at the nearby Shifa Hospital, said the strike hit a tent for Al Jazeera journalists outside the hospital's walls. Along with al-Sharif, three other journalists and a driver were killed. Israel's military confirmed it, asserting al-Sharif had 'posed as a journalist' and alleging he was with Hamas. Al-Sharif had denied having any political affiliations. The Committee to Protect Journalists last month said it was gravely concerned for his safety and said he was a 'targeted by an Israeli military smear campaign'. ADVERTISEMENT Netanyahu spoke with Trump about plan Netanyahu's office late Sunday (local time) said he had spoken with US President Donald Trump about the plan and thanked him for his 'steadfast support'. Rejecting starvation in Gaza as well as a 'global campaign of lies," Netanyahu spoke to foreign media just before an emergency meeting of the United Nations Security Council, a platform for outrage but little action on the war. 'Our goal is not to occupy Gaza, our goal is to free Gaza,' Netanyahu asserted. The goals, he said, include demilitarising the territory, the Israeli military having 'overriding security control' and a non-Israeli civilian administration in charge. Israel wants to increase the number of aid distribution sites in Gaza, he said, but in a later briefing to local media, he asserted: 'There is no hunger. There was no hunger. There was a shortage, and there was certainly no policy of starvation." Netanyahu also said he has directed Israel's military to 'bring in more foreign journalists' — which would be a striking development, as they haven't been allowed into Gaza beyond military embeds during the war. He again blamed many of Gaza's problems on the Hamas militant group, including civilian deaths, destruction and aid shortages. 'Hamas still has thousands of armed terrorists," he asserted, adding that Palestinians are 'begging' to be freed from them. ADVERTISEMENT Hamas responded with a lengthy statement that summed up Netanyahu's remarks as 'blatant lies'. The morning's headlines in 90 seconds, including dire state of our heart health system, where unspent charter school money might go, and thieves make off with a pricey haul of Labubu dolls. (Source: 1News) US defends Israel at Security Council meeting The United States defended Israel, saying it has the right to decide what's best for its security. It called allegations of genocide in Gaza false. The US has veto power at the council and can block proposed actions there. Other council members, and UN officials, expressed alarm. China called the 'collective punishment' of people in Gaza unacceptable. Russia warned against a 'reckless intensification of hostilities'. 'This is no longer a looming hunger crisis; this is starvation,' said Ramesh Rajasingham with the UN humanitarian office. 'Humanitarian conditions are beyond horrific. We have frankly run out of words to describe it.' ADVERTISEMENT Israel faces growing action even by its closest allies. Netanyahu said Chancellor Friedrich Merz of Germany had 'buckled under' the growing international criticism by stopping exports of military equipment to Israel that could be used in Gaza. Merz, for his part, told public broadcaster ARD that Germany and Israel were talking 'very critically' but Berlin's overall policies of friendship haven't changed. More Palestinians killed as they seek aid At least 31 Palestinians were killed while seeking aid in Gaza, hospitals and witnesses said. The Associated Press spoke to witnesses of gunfire in the Israeli-controlled Morag and Netzarim corridors and the Teina area in the south. All accused Israeli forces of firing at crowds trying to reach food distributions or waiting for convoys. Fifteen people were killed while waiting for trucks near the Morag corridor that separates the southern cities of Rafah and Khan Younis, according to Nasser hospital. The situation is a 'death trap,' said Jamal al-Laweh, who said Israeli forces opened fire there. 'But I have no other choice to feed the kids.' Six were killed while waiting for aid in northern Gaza near the Zikim crossing, according to Gaza's Health Ministry and Shifa hospital. In central Gaza, witnesses said they heard warning shots before fire was aimed toward crowds trying to reach a distribution site operated by the Israeli-backed and US-funded Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. The AP could not independently confirm who fired. Awda hospital said four people were killed by Israeli gunfire. ADVERTISEMENT Six other aid-seekers were killed while trying to reach GHF sites in Khan Younis and Rafah, Nasser hospital said. The GHF sites opened in May as an alternative to the UN-run aid system, but operations have been marred by deaths and chaos. Responding to AP inquiries, the GHF media office said: 'There were no incidents at or near our sites today.' Israel's military said there were no incidents involving troops near central Gaza aid sites. Hunger death toll among children hits 100 Israel's air and ground offensive has displaced most Palestinians and pushed the territory toward famine. Two Palestinian children died of malnutrition-related causes on Saturday, bringing the toll among children to 100 since the war began. At least 117 adults have died of malnutrition-related causes since June, when the ministry started to count them. The hunger toll is in addition to the ministry's war toll of 61,400 Palestinians. The ministry, part of the Hamas-run government and staffed by medical professionals, doesn't distinguish between fighters or civilians, but says around half of the dead have been women and children. The UN and independent experts consider it the most reliable source on war casualties.


Techday NZ
14 hours ago
- Techday NZ
Exclusive: SAP's Ashley McGibbon on AI, data and the future of partner innovation
SAP is betting big on artificial intelligence, but only if it's built on a solid foundation of accurate data. Speaking to TechDay at the SAP NOW AI Tour in Melbourne, Chief Partner Officer for SAP Australia and New Zealand, Ashley McGibbon, said partners in the region were "pivoting to meet fast-growing demand for AI solutions". "In ANZ we have about 800 partners – from those building applications, to services partners, to those helping us sell and position our cloud solutions," she said. "The focus is no longer just on go-live. It's about continuous adoption." This vision is captured in SAP's "flywheel" model, which combines applications, data and AI to build momentum for ongoing innovation. Introduced this year, the concept draws on the physics principle where connected components generate increasing energy. For McGibbon, it's not just about clever technology – it's about feeding AI the right inputs. "We run mission-critical business processes, and those processes hold a treasure trove of business-critical data," she explained. "Our Business Data Cloud allows customers to harmonise SAP and non-SAP data, structured and unstructured, to feed AI with accurate business data." Without that accuracy, she warned, AI can go badly wrong. "If they can't trust the data feeding the AI, then the decisions will ultimately be wrong," she said. "It's far easier to achieve a harmonised platform with Business Data Cloud." McGibbon said SAP values partners who work quickly and with purpose, adopting a "minimum viable product" mindset to deliver rapid returns for customers. She noted a surge of AI interest at board level, with directors eager to explore how it can boost productivity, in line with the Australian Government's focus on data-driven efficiency. The response to Business Data Cloud since its February launch has been "the most reception to a new product" SAP has ever had in the region. The momentum is already visible in real-world deployments. SA Power Networks has built a generative AI app on SAP's Business Technology Platform that delivers mobile repair instructions directly to technicians in the field, saving the utility a million Australian dollars in its first year. Beverage company Lion built an app in just 10 days, a sign of how diverse industries are embracing AI. McGibbon pointed to Deloitte's recent CFO study, which found 80 per cent of CFOs in APAC prioritise automation through AI. "Everybody's talking about it," she said. For partners still making the shift to cloud and AI, McGibbon said enablement is key. SAP has opened its AI demo systems to partners, rolled out a new business AI certification, and launched "Joule for consultants" to speed up software build and implementation. She's also watching the market evolve through moves like DyFlex's acquisition of Bluetree, which expands into New Zealand and strengthens analytics capability. "It's a combination of a cloud-native partner with an analytics partner," she said. "I think they will bring AI strategy to life across all their existing cloud customers." Central to McGibbon's message is a change in how success is measured. "In the past we celebrated go-lives. For me, it's now go-begin – get the platform right, then continue that cycle of innovation," she said. Quarterly cloud updates mean partners must be ready to help customers adopt new capabilities quickly. "That's how we make the flywheel spin." She believes AI is also prompting customers to rethink design from the outset. "Customers are demanding we look at AI as part of the design, not just copying what was done before," she said. "This is the time to do it better." Early wins, she added, are often found in human capital management. "In SuccessFactors, you can use Joule to write your performance review and it makes you sound amazing," she said. "There's a lot of low-hanging fruit for existing customers." Her advice to organisations exploring AI in the SAP ecosystem is simple but firm: talk to your partners, identify the easy use cases, and above all, get your data strategy right. "You have to get that right first," she said. "Once you've done that, the world is your oyster."


Scoop
4 days ago
- Scoop
Māori Principals And Leaders Condemn Ministry Of Education's Decision To Remove At The Marae From Schools
Te Akatea Incorporated represents hundreds of Māori principals and leaders throughout Aotearoa. We express our collective outrage and deep disappointment at the Ministry of Education's decision not to reprint the small student reader versions of At the Marae, citing the book's high use of te reo Māori. This decision is a direct attack on our language, a dismissal of our culture, and an assault on our identity as Māori. Our members draw a direct parallel between this action and historic acts of colonisation, such as the Education Ordinance Act of 1847 and the Native Schools Act of 1867. Both acts were designed to eradicate te reo Māori in schools. Removing and resources that celebrate and normalise our language is no different; it is a continuation of those oppressive policies. The Treaty of Waitangi Act was introduced in 1975. This means that for 50 years, Māori and non-Māori educators have worked tirelessly to revitalise te reo Māori and embed it in our schools. This work aligns with Te Tiriti o Waitangi and anti-racist, equity-focused educational practice. Books like At the Marae are vital tools that allow children—97% of Māori in English-medium settings, and many non-Māori who embrace the opportunity—to see, read, and speak our language. We view this decision and the decision Minister Stanford made last year to remove $30 million worth of funding for Te Ahu o Te Reo Māori as acts of educational violence. These practices uphold white supremacist ideology, by sending the message that English is superior and te reo Māori is inferior. These are acts of racism, cultural suppression and are deliberate attempts to recolonise our education system. These acts cause immense harm. We call on the Ministry of Education and the Minister to immediately reverse this decision and reinstate the printing of the small reader versions of At the Marae. Our members would see the reversal of this decision as a reaffirmation of the Ministry's commitment to protecting and promoting te reo Māori as a taonga guaranteed under Te Tiriti o Waitangi.