Apr 16 , 2022
By Gene Frieda
The US-China trade war and the recent freezing of much of Russia’s official foreign-exchange reserves have again raised fears of an exodus from the dollar. But no one should write the greenback’s obituary just yet, writes Gene Frieda, global strategist at PIMCO and senior visiting fellow at the London School of Economics.
The freezing of much of Russia’s official foreign reserves has inevitably led some again to predict the imminent demise of the dollar’s “exorbitant privilege” as the world’s reserve currency of choice. But we should not write the greenback’s obituary just yet.
On its own, the sanctioning of Russia’s reserves will likely reinforce the primacy of the dollar as the backbone of the fiat currency system. Only if the United States were regularly to use such financial sanctions as an offensive foreign-policy weapon might a more rapid erosion in the dollar’s status occur.
True, in the past four years, a period marked by a US-China trade war and the COVID-19 pandemic, the dollar has accounted for only 40pc of new reserve accumulation, compared to 23pc for the euro. The Chinese renminbi’s share of new reserves has jumped to 10pc, while the Japanese yen and British pound have gained ground as well.
Despite this, it is far from clear that confidence in the dollar is waning. First, global reserve growth over the past four years was a fraction of the rapid growth seen in the five years before and after the 2008 global financial crisis, reflecting reduced global imbalances. The dollar’s share of reserves has fallen from 73pc in 2001 to 59pc last year. But most of this decline took place in the 2000s, when reserves surged by 8.1 trillion dollars (compared to 2.6 trillion dollars in the last decade).
Second, the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) new allocation last year of 650 billion dollars in special drawing rights (SDRs, the IMF’s reserve asset) artificially deflated the dollar’s share of global reserve growth during the pandemic. SDRs are based on a currency basket in which the dollar’s share is only 42pc, while those of the euro, renminbi, yen, and pound are 31pc, 11pc, eight percent and eight percent, respectively. As SDRs accrue principally to advanced economies that never use them, these shares effectively inflate the shares of non-dollar foreign reserves.
Finally, countries with strong security relationships with the US, including the vast majority of states with the largest holdings of foreign-exchange reserves, typically maintain a larger-than-average share of their reserves in dollars. As long as America’s Asian and European allies deem US security guarantees to be credible, these countries have little incentive to shift away from the dollar.
Reserve freezes are not new, but the measures against Russia mark the first time that they have been applied to a G-20 country with a high degree of global trade and financial integration. For foreign investors, reserve freezes that aim to create a financial panic pose an existential threat, in terms of the potential for capital to be either lost or trapped onshore.
The potency of the sanctions imposed on Russia’s reserves stemmed not from US actions alone, but rather from the concordant steps taken by Europe and Japan. Their participation ensured de facto near-unanimity, because Chinese banks became reluctant to deal with Russia for fear of being sanctioned in turn.
But for now, the sanctions risk premium on foreign-exchange reserves realistically applies only to countries at high risk of globally coordinated measures, namely China. For the vast majority of other countries, sanctions risk should remain low. Reserve diversification will continue to make sense, but it is likely to benefit currencies of countries deemed to be “sanctions-remote.”
And while the US trade war with China and the freeze of Russia’s reserves have again raised fears of an exodus from the dollar, the question is “where to?” Strong network effects underpin the dollar’s “exorbitant privilege”, and the Russia sanctions have arguably reinforced its anchor status. All things considered, a 60/40 reserve split between the dollar and other currencies looks appropriate.
While the renminbi should continue to benefit from China’s strong trade linkages with smaller countries and commodity exporters, its challenge to the dollar is likely to suffer from greater uncertainty regarding the rule of law and the sanctions risk premium. Larger central banks may be more reluctant to hold renminbi due to Western sanctions risk and the corresponding risk that China would be forced to reimpose capital controls on foreigners. The Chinese currency should therefore remain a fractional share of global reserves.
The euro’s share of global reserves should rebound if yields return to positive territory. Recent progress in reducing the risk of a eurozone breakup is the precondition for both higher rates and a larger share in global reserves. Nonetheless, Europe still must address the issues that kept the euro’s share of reserves below 30pc prior to the eurozone crisis: Fragmented domestic capital markets and flawed countercyclical stabilisation mechanisms.
Other countries have some risk-diversification value. But they are both individually and collectively too small to offer a credible alternative to the US, China, and Europe as a destination for reserves.
That said, one can expect lingering fallout from the freezing of Russia’s reserves. China will seek to insulate its existing reserves from potential sanctions. Commodity exporters will consider how to invest freshly minted foreign-exchange reserves stemming from the current commodity boom. And foreign investors, both public and private, will assess possible collateral damage from financial sanctions that might affect the convertibility of renminbi assets onshore.
What might eventually upend the dollar’s continued dominance?
If history were to rhyme with the United Kingdom’s experience of a century ago, it would involve some combination of US financial sanctions overreach, further economic stagnation at home, and an erosion of credible security guarantees abroad. Such a scenario looks less remote than it did five years ago. But do not bet on it happening anytime soon.
PUBLISHED ON
Apr 16,2022 [ VOL
23 , NO
1146]
Sunday with Eden | Aug 22,2020
Radar | Apr 16,2022
Editorial | Feb 10,2024
Viewpoints | Sep 10,2021
Radar | Dec 05,2018
Radar | Dec 05,2018
Fortune News | Sep 03,2022
Fortune News | Mar 13,2020
Radar | Jun 04,2022
Commentaries | Oct 28,2023
My Opinion | 115380 Views | Aug 14,2021
My Opinion | 111428 Views | Aug 21,2021
My Opinion | 110387 Views | Sep 10,2021
My Opinion | 108242 Views | Aug 07,2021
Agenda | Nov 16,2024
Aug 18 , 2024 . By AKSAH ITALO
Although predictable Yonas Zerihun's job in the ride-hailing service is not immune to...
Jul 13 , 2024 . By AKSAH ITALO
Investors who rely on tractors, trucks, and field vehicles for commuting, transportin...
Jul 13 , 2024 . By MUNIR SHEMSU
The cracks in Ethiopia's higher education system were laid bare during a synthesis re...
Jul 13 , 2024 . By AKSAH ITALO
Construction authorities have unveiled a price adjustment implementation manual for s...
Nov 16 , 2024
In the realm of public finance, balance sheets speak louder than rhetoric. In such do...
Nov 9 , 2024
Ethiopia's foreign exchange debacle resembles a tangled web of contradictions and con...
Nov 2 , 2024
Addis Abeba, fondly dubbed a 'New Flower,' is wilting under the weight of unchecked u...
Oct 26 , 2024
When flames devoured parts of Mercato, residents watched helplessly as decades of toi...
Nov 16 , 2024
Malaria, a persistent threat in rural areas, is resurging with alarming intensity in...
Nov 16 , 2024 . By AKSAH ITALO
A bidder stunned land auction participants by offering a record-breaking offer for a...
Nov 16 , 2024 . By AKSAH ITALO
The establishment of a monetary policy committee within the National Bank of Ethiopia (NBE) was added to the proposed re...
Nov 16 , 2024 . By Michael Girma
A three-day summit last week set the stage to launch the long-awaited Ethiopian Secur...