By Eustance Huang
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The U.S. dollar has
been the world’s
major reserve
currency for
decades, but that
status could come
under threat as
“very powerful
countries” seek to
undermine its
importance, warned
Anne Korin, from the
Institute for the
Analysis of Global
Security.
-
One of those reasons
driving their shift
away from the dollar
is the prospect of
being subject to
U.S. jurisdiction if
they transact in
dollars.
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October 31, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" - The
U.S. dollar has been the world’s major reserve
currency for decades, but that status could come
under threat as “very powerful countries” seek
to undermine its importance, warned Anne Korin,
from the Institute for the Analysis of Global
Security.
“Major movers” such as
China,
Russia and the
European Union have a strong “motivation to
de-dollarize,” said Korin, co-director at the
energy and security think tank, on Wednesday.
“We don’t know what’s going to come next, but
what we do know is that the current situation is
unsustainable,” Korin said. “You have a growing
club of countries — very powerful countries.”
To be sure, the dollar is seen as one of the
safest investments in the world, and
it rises during times of economic or political
tumult.
But one factor curbing countries’ enthusiasm
for the greenback is the prospect of being
subject to U.S. jurisdiction when they transact
in dollars. When the U.S. dollar is used or
transactions are cleared through an American
bank, entities are subject to U.S. jurisdiction
— even if they have “nothing to do with the
U.S.,” Korin told CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”
Korin cited
Washington’s unilateral withdrawal from the Iran
nuclear deal in 2018, which was followed by
the
restoration of sanctions on Tehran. That
situation left European multinational companies
vulnerable to punishment from Washington if they
continued to do business with
Iran.
“Europe wants to do business with Iran. It
doesn’t want to be subject to U.S. law for doing
business with Iran, right?” she said. “Nobody
wants to be picked up at an airport for doing
business with countries that the U.S. isn’t
happy that they’re doing business with.”
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As a result, countries have a “very,
very strong motivation” to shift away
from using the greenback, she said.