http://albertpeia.com/whichcurrencythecomingdollarreplacement.htm
By Michael Snyder, on October 5th, 2012
‘Most Americans have no
idea what a tremendous advantage the United States possesses by having the
primary reserve currency of the world, and most Americans also have no idea how
close the U.S. dollar is to losing that status. For the past 40 years,
the vast majority of all global trade (including the buying and selling of oil)
has been done in U.S. dollars. That is still the case today, but things
are starting to shift. All over the globe international agreements are
being made to move away from the U.S. dollar and to use other currencies in
global trade. The second largest economy in the world, China, has been
particularly aggressive in seeking to change the existing financial
order. As you will see below, China has been running all over the planet
making agreements with other nations to start conducting an increasing amount
of trade in currencies other than the U.S. dollar. And of course the
Chinese are heavily promoting their own currency - the renminbi. So why
is this happening? Well, for one thing, the truth is that the United
States is not the only superpower in the world anymore. The Chinese
economy is actually projected to become larger than the U.S. economy by 2016,
and by some measurements the Chinese economy is
already larger. So Chinese leaders have been very open about the fact
that they believe that it just doesn't make sense that the vast majority of all
global trade should continue to be conducted in U.S. dollars, especially
considering the reckless money printing that the Federal Reserve has been
doing. At a time when the status of the U.S. dollar is already slipping, QE3
is deeply undermining confidence in U.S. currency. And when the U.S.
dollar does lose reserve currency status, the consequences for the United
States are going to be absolutely catastrophic.
Sadly, most Americans
don't even know what a "reserve currency" is or that the U.S. dollar
is under attack.
The Chinese have not only
been talking about cutting the legs out from under the U.S. dollar - they have
been actively doing it. The following is an excerpt from a recent story by
Alan Wheatley, a global economics correspondent for Reuters....
Fed up with what it sees
as Washington's malign neglect of the dollar, China is busily promoting the
cross-border use of its own currency, the yuan, also known as the renminbi, in
trade and investment.
The aim is both narrowly
commercial - to reduce transaction costs for Chinese exporters and importers -
and sweepingly strategic.
Displacing the dollar,
Beijing says, will reduce volatility in oil and commodity prices and belatedly
erode the ‘exorbitant privilege' the United States enjoys as the issuer of the
reserve currency at the heart of a post-war international financial
architecture it now sees as hopelessly outmoded.
The mainstream media in the
United States is almost entirely ignoring these developments, but the truth is
that all of this is a very, very big deal.
The following are just some of
the international currency agreements that China has made in the last couple of
years....
-China
and Germany (See
Here)
-China
and Russia (See
Here)
-China
and Brazil (See
Here)
-China
and Australia (See
Here)
-China
and Japan (See
Here)
-China
and Chile (See
Here)
-China
and the United Arab Emirates (See
Here)
-China,
Brazil, Russia, India and South Africa (See
Here)
Most U.S. economists dismiss
this threat by pointing out that China has stockpiled so many U.S. dollars and
so much U.S. debt that if anything happens to the U.S. financial system China
would be significantly damaged as well.
That may be true to a certain
extent, but what is also true is that most Americans fundamentally
misunderstand our relationship with China.
Most Americans believe that we
are "friends" with China just because they are conducting massive
amounts of trade with us.
Sadly, that is not how the
Chinese see us. They see us as "the competition", and they very
much plan on coming out on top in the end.
Right now, the Chinese are
stockpiling mind blowing amounts of gold. They are preparing for the day
when the U.S. dollar crashes and when hard assets will be the place to be.
And some are even speculating
that the Chinese may be planning to back their own currency with gold at some
point.
The following is an excerpt from
a recent article by
Christopher K. Potter, the president of Northern Border Capital
Management....
For three thousand years China
has been at the forefront of monetary innovation. It was the first to
legalize gold money in the tenth century BC and two millennia later it issued
the world’s first paper currency. Fast forward to 2012 and China is at it
again, eclipsing Australia as the largest producer of gold and increasing its
monetary gold reserves at an alarming rate. Five years ago China
surpassed the US in gold production and five years from now it will own more
gold than the US Federal government.
Do not dismiss this as just
another example of China’s insatiable appetite for natural resources. It
is not. China is preparing for a world beyond the inconvertible paper
dollar, a world in which the renminbi, buttressed by gold, becomes the dominant
reserve currency.
Lest anyone doubt China’s
resolve, just consider the following: The Chinese government has recently
removed all restrictions on personal ownership of gold; legalized domestic gold
exchange traded funds; is currently purchasing 100% of domestic gold mine
production; has imported over 750 tons of gold (27% of global output) in the
last 12 months; stated publically its intention to add 1,000 tons per year to
its central bank gold reserves; and is buying major stakes in foreign gold
mining companies. The scale of this initiative is extraordinary.
When the U.S. financial system
crashes, what do you think the rest of the world is going to want - paper U.S.
currency that is rapidly becoming worthless or renminbi backed by gold?
China is very serious about this
effort to hoard gold. Reportedly, the amount of gold that China has
imported in
2012 alone is greater than the total amount of gold that the European
Central Bank is officially holding.
And China is gobbling up gold
mining operations all over the planet at a staggering rate. I discussed
this extensively in a previous article that
you can find here.
Okay, so what happens if the
rest of the world starts rejecting the U.S. dollar as a reserve currency and
starts moving to other currencies such as the Chinese renminbi?
The change would potentially be
dramatic.
Up until now, there has been a
constantly growing demand for more dollars from the rest of the globe.
They have needed dollars to buy oil and to trade with one another.
All of this demand has kept the
value of the U.S. dollar up. But if the rest of the globe started
rejecting the dollar, it would drop like a rock.
When the value of the dollar
declines, imports become more expensive.
So the price of oil would go
higher and you would pay more for gasoline at the gas pump.
And since just about everything
is made outside the country these days, just about everything you buy at
Wal-Mart would become significantly more expensive.
The era of endless super cheap
imports would be over and our standard of living would experience a massive
adjustment.
So just how bad could things
get?
Well, how would your life change
if you went to the store a couple of years from now and the cost of everything
was double or triple what it is today?
Yes, I know that sounds
dramatic, but a major currency crisis coupled with reckless money printing by
the Federal Reserve could actually produce such an outcome.
So enjoy those cheap imports
while you still can. The days of the U.S. dollar being the sole primary
reserve currency of the world are numbered, and when the dollar dies it is
probably going to happen very rapidly.’