j_hungary
Professional
This is COMPLETELY wrong......The question of whether to end the dollar system has nothing to do with India.
The dollar derives its status from its ability to buy industrial goods and resources, and the dollar system will end only if a few of the most powerful industrial and resource countries stop accepting dollars.
Of the BRICS countries, the ones that can threaten the dollar's position are countries like China, Russia, and Saudi Arabia, not India. What does India threaten the dollar with? Getting Indians in telephone call centers to not accept dollars as wages?
Indian netizens should consciously stop discussing this topic, it has nothing to do with India.
The strength of dollar is itself as a commodity, you can literally trade dollar into value (And I don't mean you can buy stuff with USD) which itself is the value.
Look at it like a baseball card, the value of the baseball card is the card itself, not the piece of paper that make the card, it worth nothing like 20 cents, then you come to the term with the player, the rarity of the card and the edition, just taking one factor out won't give that card its value. That's why a 1st edition original Babe Ruth card printed in 1930 worth a dime in 1930, and 6 million in 2022
Take your highlighted example, if industrial power stop accepting USD, you still need to convert whatever currency you use to whatever currency the other country is buying, saying Brazil is buying a bunch of TCL TV from China, even if China and Brazil both refused to use USD to settle the transaction, they can't give you Lira directly and you pay off your worker in factory in China, you need to convert Lira into RMB, and that conversion WILL go thru USD because both bank in Brazil and China don't have enough Lira and RMB to make that conversion (Well, they probably will have enough if we are just talking about THIS particular transaction, but won't be if we are getting them all completely), you will still be paying USD.
In fact, that alone is the reason why USD is so dominant, you are talking about 7 Trillion of Dollars being processed a day (7.506 trillion daily turn over) in forex alone.

You don't get remotely 1/10 of this daily turnover for combined industrial output for the ENTIRE WORLD.....The world COMBINED GDP is roughly 100 trillion a year, that's 0.27 Trillion a day

The volume and the convertibility ARE the strength of the USD, not their purchasing power. In economic term, any transaction is basically an economic hostage held by US Federal Bank for 36 hours (The time it needs to clear an international transaction). And you know why the world are willingly being held hostage for 36 hours? That's because if this is done in any other currency, it will take weeks, if not month, are you going to be okay if you sold something and only get the payment month later?
You want to destroy USD? Get a currency that can convert more easily and more abundant than USD that you can use for international transfer, then you will be able to dethrone the USD.
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