Special report | The dollar

China’s yuan is nowhere close to displacing the greenback

The only way the dollar will lose its supreme role is at America’s own hand

Dollar bill tip sits on a restaurant table filled with empty plates.
Photograph: Millennium Images

AFTER THE collapse of the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates in 1973 the prestige of the dollar looked gutted. America had devalued its currency twice in scarcely a year. “The dollar is regarded all over the world as a sick currency,” said a writer in the New York Times; predictions of falling use of the greenback were rife. Those views, notes Barry Eichengreen of the University of California, Berkeley, in his book “Exorbitant Privilege”, could not have been more wrong. America’s share of the global economy, measured at PPP, did fall from 27% to 23% by 2000. But as the rest of the world parked its growing wealth in New York and governments built up reserves with which to defend their currencies, demand for dollars grew.

This article appeared in the Special report section of the print edition under the headline “Default status”

From the October 19th 2024 edition

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