News Today Logo

Posted 07 Dec 2024

2 min read

Recently, RBI Governor clarified that India has not taken steps toward de-dollarisation and is rather focused on de-risking its domestic trade from geopolitical upheavals. 

What is de-dollarization?

  • About: It aims to reverse dollarization (historical domination of US dollar in global market) causing a significant reduction of its use in world trade and financial transactions.
  • Recent Trends: Countries like India, Brazil, Russia, China and Indonesia are shifting to local currency trade to challenge US dollar dominance. 
    • India has allowed trade invoicing in Indian Rupees (INR) with various countries, including Russia. 
    • The recent BRICS Summit (Kazan, 2024) also discussed the potential for a common BRICS currency.

Why are countries moving towards De-dollarization?

  • Reduction of Exchange Rate Risk: It allows countries to trade in their local currencies, minimizing the risks associated with fluctuations in the US dollar's value.
  • Enhanced Monetary Policy Control: Countries can implement strategies suitable to their economic conditions without being influenced by US Dollar.
  • Geo-political benefits: Shift the balance of power challenging US dominance and its weaponisation of dollar through sanctions, etc. 

What are the challenges associated with De-dollarization?

  • Affect Financial Transactions: As many commodities, like oil, gold, etc. are currently priced and exchanged in dollars. 
  • Financial Instability: Abruptly abandoning dollar might expose domestic currencies with risks like fluctuating exchange rates, expensive debts, etc. 

 

Conclusion: In case of India, de-dollarisation can be complemented with internationalisation of Ruppeerupeefication, that would provide complete freedom over buying or selling of the rupee by an entity. 

  • Tags :
  • De-dollarization
  • Rupeefication
  • Financial Stability
Watch News Today
Width resize handle
Height resize handle

Search Notes

Filter Notes

No notes yet

Create your first note to get started.

No notes found

Try adjusting your search criteria.

Subscribe for Premium Features