BRICS nations announced a new currency designed to replace the dollar.The creation of this new gold and commodity backed currency will be discussed at the BRICS summit this August.

BT’s Kei Pritsker explains how this new currency could overturn the hegemony of the US dollar.

  • @KommandoGZD
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    3010 months ago

    I think this is the single most important development that’s come out of the whole Ukraine affair.

    The lack of national liberation struggles and proletarian revolutions since the fall us the USSR isn’t just happenstance and not simply due to the CIA, USAID, NED, not even due to US military pressure, it’s due to dollar hegemony and the US dominated global financial system.

    As the video correctly says “countries need the US dollar to function”. No access to the dollar - your country is fucked. Afghanistan is the prime example for this. This meant no proletarian movement ever had a chance these past 30 years, because it literally couldn’t have functioned in this global economy. US doesn’t like you, no dollar, no oil, country stops - material basis for national liberation gone. Possibly the only country in the world capable of extracting itself from the dollar and surviving is/was Russia because of its unique position in history (emerging from the USSR) and the globe. The biggest producer and exporter of critical commodities, a large manufacturing base, bordering China with good relations to the Global South inherited from the USSR.

    The US sanctions regime and especially the economic war on Russia since last year has essentially created dual power globally. The largest material force for counterrevolution - the US dollar system - is fading and only because of this can national liberation and proletarian movements even have a chance at success and survival again.

    So while history isn’t deterministic and it is not predetermined that socialism will emerge out of this, the singularity of US counterrevolutionary hegemony is dying and it can’t be replaced by anything remotely similar, because the conditions for the emergence of US hegemony (2 world wars, global position, etc) can’t be replicated. But we finally have the possibility of success again.

    But we should also be careful. As empire’s profits and ability to project power externally fades, class antagonisms and repression will heighten internally. We’re already seeing this and it will not decrease. Inflation and real-wage decreases are only the beginning. As the imperial core declines, the material necessity for lowering compensation of domestic workers to bare subsistence levels will increase and accordingly will repression.

    • @freagle
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      910 months ago

      I think there’s two things that we need to figure out.

      1. what happens in the imperial core when the middle class falls?

      2. what happens in the semi-industrialized 3rd world when the core can’t afford to buy consumer goods?

      • @KommandoGZD
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        510 months ago

        You definitely raise the right questions and it’ll be worrisome and interesting as hell watching this unfold. It’s critical we have some deep understanding of them going forward, but just from the top of my head:

        1.) Judging by history external military defeat, falling profits and the proletarization and pauperization in the imperial core lead to fascism. Without the USSR as a counterweight and much much weaker labour and communist movements than in the 20s this seems fairly likely.

        2.) Much more interesting and much more difficult to answer imo. Actually I can’t even give an offhand answer to that. The only good thing for those countries are those industrial capabilities. Unlike eg China and Russia on the eve of their revolutions, they already are at a much more advanced stage of development of the productive forces. Those aren’t just cashcrops either, so there’s value to them beyond Western consumption. As for their states, we can only hope a lack of imperial money and coercion as stabilizers would leave them ripe for revolution.

        • @freagle
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          510 months ago

          But what does “fascism” look like in this context? Does the USA invade Mexico and Canada? Does it invade Europe? Africa? Clearly it can commit mass atrocities on its own people, but there’s got to be a strategy in mind beyond just domestic cruelty.

  • alunyanneгs 🏳️‍⚧️♀️
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    10 months ago

    And so it begins.

    The start of a new world.

    Free from Western Oppression, Hegemony and Imperialism.

    After hundreds of years.

    It’s finally here.

    • @cayde6ml
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      1510 months ago

      I think the road ahead is still very long, and there is always a chance of this new currency becoming corrupted or misused. I can’t celebrate, but I understand the sentiment.

  • relay
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    1110 months ago

    If anyone is a commodity trader, please tell us where to buy this. Having a currency that is backed by gold, the BRICS countries and the loss of US petrodollar seems like a good thing to have rather than dollars or euros.

  • @Shrike502
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    910 months ago

    Why not just use national currencies?

    • Absolute
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      1110 months ago

      My understanding of the proposed “BRICS currency” is that it would be more of a Keynes-inspired bancor currency setup used in some kind of international bank (alternative to IMF, ect) to facilitate easier balance of payments settlement. As opposed to being a physical currency used in day to day life.

      I could also be way off the mark here, don’t think there is a lot of concrete info on this yet. Ideally we hear more at the upcoming summit.

    • @Inbrededcanadian
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      910 months ago

      Which national currency exactly, I don’t think BRICS like the idea of using RMB too much, it’s just weaponizing another currency to replace the current one.

      • @Shrike502
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        710 months ago

        Currencies, plural. National currencies of BRICS members

    • alunyanneгs 🏳️‍⚧️♀️
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      810 months ago

      Going to bet it’s to simplify things.

      Using national currencies would complicate matters a bit. Exchange Rates, and all that.

      • @Shrike502
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        510 months ago

        So now they have to invent a whole new currency, with exchange rate between it and every other currency?

          • @Shrike502
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            810 months ago

            That seems to be the intention, and that’s one of the reasons I’m worried. Switching to euro had benefited the EU core (Germany, France) quite well, while the newly joined others (Czech Republic, Greece) saw an increase in prices and overall economic issues. Now it is arguable that it was the intention back then with EU, and is not the intention here. However, I must remind you, that of the core BRICS members, only PRC is truly socialist, and it also has waaay more developed and advanced industry than the rest. Thus it will be profitable for the local bourgeoisie of other members to emphasize feeding said industry with natural resources and buying everything else. Single currency will help with this.

            • @Prologue7642
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              610 months ago

              Just a correction, Czech Republic doesn’t use Euro. Although it promised to do so many times, it uses its own currency Czech Crown.

              • @Shrike502
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                310 months ago

                Are you sure? I only been there in 2005 and I’m pretty sure we used euros already

                • @Prologue7642
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                  510 months ago

                  Pretty sure, I live here :). You can pay in most bigger shops and tourist spots in euros, but the main currency is Czech Crown.

    • @ICBM
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      610 months ago

      Weblibre seems to be down. Does the bot check current instances or is it going off an older one?