New Delhi – In what could be a significant shake-up of the global financial architecture, BRICS nations – Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa – are actively working on a new trade settlement mechanism aimed at reducing dependence on the US dollar. The initiative, discussed extensively during the BRICS Summit 2023, marks a strategic pivot towards financial sovereignty and multipolar economic alignment.
The move comes amid rising geopolitical tensions, frequent economic sanctions imposed by the West, and a growing global desire to de-dollarize trade. Russia and China are already conducting over 80% of their bilateral trade in rubles and yuan, bypassing the dollar. Similarly, India and Russia have settled major oil deals, worth over $100 billion in 2023, using their local currencies.
The core idea is simple but revolutionary—enable BRICS countries to trade among themselves using a shared or regional currency, thereby insulating their economies from the volatility and geopolitical influence of the dollar-dominated system. Russia has already developed SPFS, an alternative to the SWIFT payment network, to minimize the impact of Western sanctions.
China, meanwhile, is pushing hard to internationalize the yuan, with 25% of its trade with Africa now being settled in yuan. Even energy-rich nations like Saudi Arabia have started accepting yuan for oil transactions, indicating a notable shift in global trade norms.
This wave of de-dollarization isn’t limited to BRICS. ASEAN countries are also exploring local currency trade models. According to an IMF report, the dollar’s share in global forex reserves fell from 71% to 58% over the past decade—a steep decline.
However, experts caution that while the idea is transformative, its implementation faces hurdles. The success of any common BRICS currency will depend on liquidity, transparency, regulatory frameworks, and, crucially, geopolitical cooperation—especially between rivals like India and China.
For Western powers and institutions like the IMF and World Bank, this move presents a direct challenge. The US Treasury Department in 2023 warned that rapid de-dollarization could lead to global financial instability. Europe, though currently neutral, is monitoring the BRICS initiative closely.
This is not just an economic shift—it’s a geopolitical rebalancing. A multipolar financial order may empower emerging economies in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. But whether BRICS can build long-term trust and a viable alternative to the US-led financial system remains to be seen.
One thing is certain: the age of unquestioned dollar supremacy is being tested, and the financial world is on the cusp of a new chapter.
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