
The cost of having the world's reserve currency
Back in the 1960s, French Finance Minister Valéry d'Estaing once referred to the United States' ability to issue the world's reserve currency as an 'exorbitant privilege.'
What did he mean by that? Being the reserve currency issuer has allowed the U.S. to borrow cheaply, run trade deficits indefinitely, and dominate global finance virtually unchallenged for the better part of a century.
Yet, there's a flip side; few consider the costs of having the world's reserve currency. In this article, we'll look at those costs, how they drive geopolitics and economics today, and whether there could be an alternative to the almighty USD.
The birth of the dollar's dominance—Bretton Woods
In July 1944, the Allies, led by the United States, designed a new financial system at Bretton Woods. According to the terms, the U.S. dollar would be pegged to gold at $35 per ounce, and all other currencies would be pegged to the dollar.
However, not everyone in attendance favored this system. Aside from the Soviet Union, which openly opposed it, economist John Maynard Keynes thought it was flawed and offered an alternative: the bancor. This was to be a supranational currency, not issued by any specific country, that would be used only for international trade.
Keynes also proposed the creation of a global institution called the International Clearing Union (ICU) to handle trade balances, a set of rules to penalize those running persistent trade surpluses, a mechanism to adjust and stabilize exchange rates, temporary overdraft facilities for countries to use, and national currencies would be pegged to the bancor.
However, it wasn't to be. Due to its leverage, namely gold and industrial might, the United States' proposal won out; the rest is history.
Triffin's dilemma means guaranteed instability
While the USA gained many advantages from having the global reserve currency, there are always tradeoffs in economics. Having a national currency act as the reserve currency introduces Triffin's dilemma, named after Robert Triffin, who introduced it in the 1960s.
Triffin's dilemma means that the United States has to run trade deficits to supply the world with dollars to use for reserves and trade. However, doing so guarantees long-term instability by undermining confidence in the USD's value.
In short, the world needs lots of dollars to trade with, so to provide liquidity, the USA runs trade deficits (exporting dollars). However, persistent U.S. deficits undermined confidence in the dollar in the long term as foreign countries began to doubt gold convertibility, which ended in 1971 with the Nixon Shock, or that the dollar would maintain its purchasing power.
The hidden price the USA has paid
While having the world's reserve currency allows the USA to dominate global finance and borrow cheaply, this comes at a cost. The financialization of the American economy, rising levels of personal, corporate, and public debt, and the hollowing out of the American manufacturing base are just some of the downsides. The consequences of all of this can be seen very clearly today.
As this system enters its later stages, political destabilization increases, and populism rises. The anti-globalization nationalist movements and the trade war with China are some signs that the system is breaking down and is no longer serving a large segment of the American people. The U.S. record debt levels and the interest paid on them are also becoming an unavoidable fiscal and political problem.
But let's not forget the benefits
Of course, having the world's reserve currency comes with lots of benefits. If it were all downsides, the U.S. never would have agreed to it in the first place.
The main benefit is being able to borrow at low rates. Global demand for USD and Treasuries means the U.S. can borrow at lower interest rates than almost any other country. Economists correctly say the USA has the strongest companies and the biggest consumer market, but both are due, in part, to the low interest rates that finance both.
Having the reserve currency also means that U.S. imports are cheaper. This increases the standard of living, allowing Americans to buy an abundance of goods from all over the world at a relatively affordable price. The goods may not be made in America, but they are cheaper, and most of the people who lost their manufacturing jobs have been absorbed into other, higher-paying industries further up the value chain. It also allows Wall Street to dominate global finance. Much of the surplus other countries earn by trading with America is recycled into Treasuries, corporate bonds, equities, and other assets. Essentially, America buys goods with cheap credit, and the world recycles the profits back through Wall Street, allowing it to dominate the global financial industry.
All of this combined gives the United States unrivaled geopolitical leverage. In addition to political power and influence, it can sanction enemies via SWIFT and even seize their USD central bank reserves.
So, we could say having the global reserve currency is a Faustian bargain with tremendous advantages and costs. Nonetheless, it's an advantage many countries would grab in a heartbeat.
Signs of stress—de-dollarization and rivals
It's no secret that the USD system is under stress: the President of the United States has said so. While America's 47th President doesn't say it directly, he has identified the trade deficits as unsustainable and has expressed a desire to close them and deal with the debt.
Other signs that the monetary order is under stress include de-dollarization, with oil contracts in yuan with BRICS nations pushing de-dollarization, digital currencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum offering alternatives, and the financial position of the United States itself; few would call it good.
Of course, this is somewhat inevitable; no reserve currency has lasted forever. While the USD is ubiquitous and could not be abandoned without anything short of a new Bretton Woods convention, there are increasing numbers of competitors and calls for independence from the American system, and there's increasing concern about the financial and political stability of the USA itself.
Scalable Bitcoin could potentially act as a new bancor
Where does all of this leave us? Are we doomed to go from one reserve currency to the next, burning through one monetary system after another with inevitable turbulent transitions as they come to an end? Not necessarily.
It's worth considering how Bitcoin (the scalable version) could be an alternative to Keynes' bancor idea. It has the following qualities to make it suitable: It's neutral, not tied to any particular nation-state.
The limited supply of 21 million means it is truly sound money.
It's decentralized, governed by a fixed protocol and distributed nodes.
This means that Bitcoin cannot be manipulated for political advantage by any nation-state and cannot be debased.
Bitcoin could also act as an automated version of Keynes's International Clearing Union: countries with persistent deficits would simply run out of Bitcoins. Likewise, countries that ran persistent surpluses would be incentivized to spend them or face deflationary pressures (HODLing would not be good). Essentially, this means a Bitcoin-based monetary order would have market-driven self-corrective rules that balance trade.
Unlike the current system, which the United States can wield as a political weapon, Bitcoin transactions cannot be controlled by any one party. There's no need for correspondent banking networks and the power they put in the hands of a few elites; transactions are peer-to-peer, and anyone can participate. Bitcoin would also avoid Triffin's Dilemma by eliminating the need for any country to supply it. It could serve as a neutral, apolitical, sound unit of account for international trade used by central banks, corporations, and people.
However, to serve this purpose, Bitcoin must scale. BTC's throughput capacity of seven transactions per second won't cut it, and second-layer solutions like the Lightning Network destabilize the economics of the system and introduce security vulnerabilities. Scalable versions, such as BSV, allow central banks and corporations to use it for settlements while making retail payments, remittances, and micropayments possible.
This is not to say Bitcoin is the sole answer or that the current dominant player would allow it without a fight. However, should the world look to the scalable electronic cash system Bitcoin was designed to be rather than the quasi-investment it has become, it could be a part of a potential solution to the current system's woes and could act as a neutral currency in the style of Keynes's bancor but with many other features, he couldn't have imagined back in 1944.
Watch | Mining Disrupt 2025 Highlights: Profitable trends every miner should know
title="YouTube video player" frameborder="0" allow="accelerometer; autoplay; clipboard-write; encrypted-media; gyroscope; picture-in-picture; web-share" referrerpolicy="strict-origin-when-cross-origin" allowfullscreen="">
Hashtags

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


Reuters
34 minutes ago
- Reuters
TRADING DAY Tech it down a notch
ORLANDO, Florida, Aug 19 (Reuters) - TRADING DAY Making sense of the forces driving global markets By Jamie McGeever, Markets Columnist Wall Street slumped on Tuesday, dragged down by weakness in some of the big tech companies that have led the charge to new highs this year, as investors hunker down ahead of a keynote speech by Fed Chair Jerome Powell later this week. More on that below. In my column today I look at the cagey dance between Donald Trump and Wall Street - the market knows it has the power to rein in some of the president's policy excesses, but isn't wielding it. Not yet, anyway. If you have more time to read, here are a few articles I recommend to help you make sense of what happened in markets today. Today's Key Market Moves Today's Talking Points: * Peace in our time? Investors digested the extraordinary summit between U.S. President Donald Trump, Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy, and a phalanx of European leaders in the White House on Monday. Did it move the dial much on the prospects of a Russia-Ukraine ceasefire, or a deal to end the war? Optimism around Trump's promise of security guarantees for Ukraine in the future buoyed European markets on Tuesday. But that evaporated as the U.S. session rolled on, as Trump told Fox News he thinks Russian President Vladimir Putin may not want to make a deal after all. There may be no immediate direct impact on major equity, bond, or currency markets from the conflict. But prolonged war on Europe's doorstep, fractured ties between the US and Europe, and a fickle relationship between Trump and Putin can't be good in the long term. * Retail therapy. Some of America's biggest retailers report second-quarter earnings this week, shining a light on the health of the U.S. consumer and, by extension, the economy at large. Home Depot reported on Tuesday; Lowe's, Target, and TJX release results on Wednesday; and Walmart is out on Thursday. There are conflicting signals coming from the U.S. consumer. By some measures, household consumption flat-lined in the first half of the year, but other indicators show consumer spending is the biggest contributor to GDP growth. The rich are spending, but the bottom 50% are struggling. The S&P 500's consumer discretionary sector is flat this year, and the consumer staples index is up 6%. Both are lagging the broader index, which is up 8%, and the IT and communications sectors, which are both up around 13%. * Interest rate decisions. The central banks of New Zealand, Indonesia, and China announce their latest policy decisions on Wednesday. Two of the three are expected to stand pat, and one is expected to cut borrowing costs. The People's Bank of China is expected to keep benchmark one- and five-year lending rates unchanged for the third straight month at 3.5% and 5.5%, respectively. Although the economy needs more support, the central bank may want to explore structural policies aimed at specific sectors rather than broad-based monetary easing. For now. This has helped propel a recovery in the yuan, which was plumbing 17-year lows at the depths of the "Liberation Day" tariff turmoil in April. Since then, the PBOC has only lowered borrowing costs once, by 10 basis points, and has fixed the yuan higher in 16 of the last 19 weeks. Markets, Trump in delicate policy dance U.S. President Donald Trump has faced little opposition in his drive to rip up the global economic rulebook, whether from his fellow Republicans, political opponents, or institutional guardrails. The only exception has been "the market." But now even investors are holding their fire, enabling more risk to build up in the financial system. Wall Street's reaction to Trump's "Liberation Day" tariffs on April 2 was so ferocious that the president did something he had rarely done: he backed down. Trillions of dollars were wiped off the value of U.S. stocks amid a 10% nosedive from April 3-4. The only two-day selloffs since the 1930s that were bigger occurred during the Second World War, "Black Monday" in 1987, the Global Financial Crisis in 2008, and the pandemic in 2020. The stock market bottomed out on April 7 after Trump paused most of his country-specific tariffs. Wall Street has not looked back since, with the S&P 500 rebounding 35% to an all-time high. This episode suggests that "the market" is one of the few true checks on Trump's apparent pursuit to reshape the U.S. – and indeed the world – economy. The only problem is that the president has continued to pursue unorthodox policies in recent months - including challenging the independence of the Federal Reserve, firing statisticians, and slapping tariffs on countries for non-economic reasons – and investors have failed to tap the brakes. The so-called "Trump put" -- the idea that the president won't let the markets fall too far -- is essentially a funhouse mirror version of the famous "Fed put," the long-held belief that, in the event of a crisis, the central bank will step in to restore stability. Trump seemingly did just that in April, but it was to clean up a mess of his own making. And one could argue that it was actually investors who came to the economy's rescue by putting pressure on the president to reconsider policies considered ill-advised by most economists. Trump and markets are therefore now in a curious dance. Investors appear to believe that markets can ultimately stop Trump from pushing the envelope too far on tariffs or other policies. But as a result, investors are not overreacting – or reacting at all – to the latest controversies around the Bureau of Labor Statistics firing, his attacks on Fed Chair Jerome Powell, his pressure on Intel's CEO to resign, or the outsized tariffs slapped on Brazil and India. This, in turn, has powered the markets to new record highs, emboldening Trump to push the envelope even further. So even though the market has the power to rein in the president's economic policy excesses, it's not using it. Why hasn't the market pushed back? As the cliche goes, equity investors are paid to be optimistic. It's in their interest to keep the train hurtling along, provided there aren't any immediate obstacles to derail it. There are, of course, a few pretty large hurdles on the horizon for the U.S. economy, including the highest tariffs since the 1930s and some of the biggest budget deficits since World War II outside of crisis periods. But until these or other issues present an immediate economic threat, markets can choose to ignore them. By under-reacting to Trump's unorthodox policies, markets may not only delay the day of reckoning but also amplify the potential impact. Why? Genuine economic and geopolitical paradigm shifts are under way, and investors are not pricing in the attendant risk. Nobody knows what the ultimate impact of these shifts will be, but we do know that with greater uncertainty comes greater downside risk. Yet equity volatility is the lowest it has been this year, and even in the bond market – not known for its optimism – volatility is the lowest in three and a half years, while U.S. corporate bond spreads are the tightest since 1998. Ultimately, the market is unlikely to call Trump's bluff until something truly unexpected or extreme hits. In the meantime, investors can justify this nonchalance by saying that corporate earnings growth is solid, AI enthusiasm is high, economic growth remains decent, unemployment is low, and consumers are still spending. Wall Street is choosing not to put on the brakes, meaning this train will continue rolling on. Whether it's heading for a collision is an open question. What could move markets tomorrow? Want to receive Trading Day in your inbox every weekday morning? Sign up for my newsletter here. Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, opens new tab, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.


Reuters
34 minutes ago
- Reuters
Delta, United sued for selling windowless 'window seats'
NEW YORK, Aug 19 (Reuters) - Delta Air Lines (DAL.N), opens new tab and United Airlines (UAL.O), opens new tab were sued on Tuesday by passengers who claimed they paid extra money to sit in "window" seats, only to find themselves placed in seats next to a blank wall. Proposed class actions were filed against United in San Francisco federal court and against Delta in Brooklyn, New York federal court, seeking millions of dollars of damages for more than 1 million passengers at each carrier. The complaints say some Boeing 737, Boeing 757 and Airbus A321 planes contain seats that would normally contain windows, but lack them because of the placement of air conditioning ducts, electrical conduits or other components. Passengers said Delta and United do not flag these seats during the booking process, unlike rivals such as Alaska Airlines (ALK.N), opens new tab and American Airlines (AAL.O), opens new tab, even when charging tens or occasionally hundreds of dollars for them. The lawsuits say people buy window seats for several reasons including to address fear of flying or motion sickness, keep a child occupied, get extra light or watch the world go by. "Had plaintiffs and the class members known that the seats they were purchasing (were) windowless, they would not have selected them — much less have paid extra," the United complaint said. The Delta complaint contained similar language. Delta is based in Atlanta, and United in Chicago. Neither immediately responded to requests for comment. Ancillary revenue from seat selection, baggage fees, cabin upgrades, airport lounges and other services help carriers generate more cash when they fly while keeping base fares lower. The Delta lawsuit is led by Nicholas Meyer of Brooklyn, and the United lawsuit is led by Marc Brenman of San Francisco and Aviva Copaken of Los Angeles. Copaken said United refunded fees for her windowless seats on two flights, but not a third. Passengers can use websites such as SeatGuru to find pluses and minuses of specific seats, including those lacking windows. Carter Greenbaum, a lawyer whose firm filed the two lawsuits, said the ability to find information from third party websites doesn't excuse Delta's and United's conduct. "A company can't misrepresent the nature of the products it sells and then rely on third party reviews to say a customer should have known that it was lying," he said in an email. The cases are Meyer v Delta Air Lines Inc, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of New York, No. 25-04608; and Brenman et al v United Airlines Inc, U.S. District Court, Northern District of San Francisco, No. 25-06995.


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
US to hold more than 30 offshore oil and gas auctions through 2040
Aug 19 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump's administration on Tuesday unveiled a comprehensive schedule to hold more than 30 offshore oil and gas lease sales in the Gulf of Mexico and Alaska's Cook Inlet over the next 15 years. The plan fulfills a directive in Trump's One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which passed last month, and is aligned with his administration's energy dominance agenda to boost domestic fossil fuel production. The schedule marks a significant departure from former President Joe Biden, whose administration had planned for a historically small number of drilling rights auctions as part of its efforts to address climate change. "The One Big Beautiful Bill Act is a landmark step toward unleashing America's energy potential," Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said in a statement. "Under President Trump's leadership, we're putting in place a bold, long-term program that strengthens American Energy Dominance, creates good-paying jobs and ensures we continue to responsibly develop our offshore resources." The schedule includes 30 lease sales through 2040 in the Gulf of Mexico, which Trump has renamed the Gulf of America. The first Gulf sale is set for Dec. 10 of this year. Starting next year, there will be two sales in the Gulf annually through 2039 and one in 2040. Six lease sales are planned for Alaska's Cook Inlet through 2032. The first will be held in March of 2026.