Russia and China: The
Dawning of a New Monetary System?
By Peter Koenig
January 10, 2015 "ICH"
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The statement by
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on 22
December 2014: “If the Russian side needs
it, we will provide necessary assistance
within our capacity” – is a clear testimony
that Russia and China have entered into an
economic alliance which will be stronger
than the incessant ruble and petrol
devaluation manipulations by Washington,
aided by the European puppets.
China, leading member of
the BRICS, is lining up the bloc of the
BRICS and that of the SCO – and their
currencies – to support Russia in need.
Currency swaps between Russia (ruble) and
China (yuan) for an initial US$ 25 billion
equivalent have already been implemented, to
allow direct transactions between the two
countries. Similar swaps are under way
between China and Russia with other
countries, primarily the BRICS and the SCO
(Shanghai Cooperation Organization) members
– including the soon to become new members –
Iran, Pakistan, India (also a BRICS member)
and Mongolia – and possibly in some not too
distant future also strategically located
NATO member Turkey.
In other words, a large
junk of hydrocarbons will as of immediately
no longer be traded in US (petro) dollars,
but in rubles and yuans and their partners
respective local currencies. This will
reduce worldwide demand for the petro
dollar.
The US is able to maintain
pressure on other currencies, currently the
ruble, only as long as the petro dollar
remains the major world reserve currency.
This is the main reason why Washington gets
away with a seven-fold indebted dollar (i.e.
total outstanding and uncovered commitments
are currently more than 7 times higher than
the US GDP (US$ 17.6 trillion, 2014 est. –
vs. US$ 128 trillion of unmet obligations);
making the US worldwide the most indebted
country – by far.
Once the demand for the
(petro) dollar fades – as hydrocarbons are
no longer dealt in dollars – the value of
the dollar will decline and at worst may
result in hyperinflation in the dollar
economies, including those closely linked to
the US economy.
In the meantime, Russia
has nothing to fear, since the ruble is
really not traded anywhere, except sold by
western central banks to go along with
Washington’s criminal scheme of attempting
to destroy the Russian economy by flooding
an imaginary ‘market’ with the Russian
currency – which they will not achieve.
The Russian central bank
is basically not interfering. Why? – Because
Russia eventually will need rubles for its
new trading alliance – and will buy the
rubles back from the flooded market at
rock-bottom prices, for artificially boosted
dollars and euros and other western linked
currencies. In a future Russia-China based
monetary system these currencies would at
least initially be of secondary or tertiary
importance.
Letting the ruble
‘collapse’ is a superb strategy by the
Maestro Chess player, Vladimir Putin.
Western investors in Russian shares, mainly
but not exclusively of hydrocarbon
corporations, dropped also. Western
investors became afraid and released their
shares on the market – Russia’s treasury
bought them back at low market prices,
increasing their value instantly and – and
on top of it Russia reaped the dividends of
the newly Russian owned shares. According to
a Spiegel Online article, Russia made at
least 20 billion dollars’ worth of profit
with this little gambit alone, plus she
repatriated about 30% of foreign-held
Russian petroleum shares.
Russia has foreign
exchange reserves of close to half a
trillion dollars equivalent, more than two
times the rubles in circulation. Russia’s
economy shows a pristine balance sheet with
only about 15% debt to GDP, whereas the EU’s
debt-GDP ratio is close to 100%.
Here comes the link to the
US-Saudi manipulated oil price. It just fell
to below US$ 50 / barrel, less than half of
what it was in June 2014 (US$ 105 – WTI
Crude). This criminal act of attempting to
destroy sovereign nations’ economies is
foremost directed at Russia, but is also
meant to ‘punishes’ other non-aligned oil
producers, like Venezuela and Iran.
‘Aligned’ oil producers’ suffering might be
written off by the empire as collateral
damage.
But not only. That’s
perhaps where Obama miscalculated by
shooting his own foot. At these prices
domestic unemployment will soar especially
in petrol producing states, like Texas and
North Dakota. Hardest hit will be Texas.
Last week, JPMorgan Chief Economist Michael
Feroli, predicted, “We think Texas will, at
the least, have a rough 2015 ahead, and is
at risk of slipping into a regional
recession.”
According to Zero
Hedge, the US hydrocarbon industry and its
nationwide ramification produce almost US$
1.2 trillion of GDP (7%) and generates more
than 9.3 million well-paying permanent jobs
throughout the nation. Most affected by the
free fall of petrol prices will be the
higher cost shale production – the new
source that gave the impetus to the oil
renaissance 5 years ago. Texas and North
Dakota will be the main losers, in terms of
job losses and recession. But repercussions
will be felt countrywide, as almost all
industries are linked to hydrocarbon energy.
Obama may feel that the
hike in unemployment may be a small
collateral price to pay for ruining other
economies around the world. Besides, overall
the US economy may profit from lower prices
– letting the rich get richer and the poor –
well, we know that.
However, there is another
element that Obama’s and his cronies’
shortsightedness did not foresee. The
petro-dollar is highly dependent on trading
hydrocarbons in dollars – following the
40-year old agreement with the Saudis as
head of OPEC in turn for US military
security and protection. This alone, the
constant demand for US dollars by all
nations who needed to trade hydrocarbons,
propelled the dollar into a ‘permanent’
reserve currency – allowing Washington to
print dollars at will and to become a
financial hegemon.
No longer. These times are
gone. Washington’s evil attempt to destroy
all those who ‘are not with us’, catalyzed
the transition. More than a year ago, Russia
started selling her hydrocarbons in rubles
and local currencies of her trading
partners, like China and other BRICS
countries. Today Russia is selling her
hydrocarbon in gold – yes, in physical gold.
The west did not count with the quick
analytical thinking of Mr. Putin’s. He will
accept artificially inflated dollars and
then immediately exchange them for gold,
thereby increasing Russia’s gold reserves
dramatically. Already today, the ruble is
backed by gold – a reality the west with its
casino currencies is quiet about.
By artificially boosting
the value of the dollar against the Euro and
lowering the price of gold, the FED and its
Wall Street mobsters intend to make the
dollar more attractive, say, as the euro
which, after all its MSM propagated economic
mediocrity, is backed by a much more solid
and stable economy than is that of the
United States; especially in view of its
huge potential to be able to deal with the
east – Russia and the Xi Jinping’s announced
new economic Silk Road, all the way from
Frankfurt to Shanghai. – But this would be
Europe’s call; a sovereign call by a
sovereign union and by new leaders with
backbone and common sense.
This is still an open
decision. Although, it looks like – or
should logically appear – that Europe is
waking up. Even the most stubborn stooges of
Washington are gradually seeing the light.
Hungary and Poland, historically not great
friends of Russia, are wondering whether
they might not be better off with the east,
rather than licking Obama’s boots. German
business is angry about Merkel’s
obsessiveness with Washington imposed
‘sanctions’. They see Russia as the trading
partner of the future, as it has been until
Washington didn’t succeed in Ukraine – today
an almost hopeless but still murderous
basket case – and wanted to crush Vladimir
Putin and his country. Even the spine and
brainless Hollande is responding to France’s
business – ‘sanctions’ – enough is enough.
Where does that leave
Washington? – One move away from checkmate.
Washington’s criminal attempt to destroy
Russia’s economy has been largely irrelevant
and self-destructive. In the meantime and as
Russia’s gold reserves increase, Russia has
established an alternative SWIFT system. It
is currently being tested internally but
could go global within a few months – so
that any country wanting to avoid the
corrupt dollar casino scheme could use the
new system for international monetary
exchanges.
That combined with ever
more countries willing and daring to trade
their hydrocarbons in their own currencies
or currencies other than the dollar, will
further lower demand on the petro-dollar. In
addition, under their economic alliance,
Russia and China may soon launch a new
currency, a basket of currencies that could
be joined by other nations ready and willing
to abandon the fraudulent western fiat
scheme. Immediate candidates would be the
other BRICS and the countries of the SCO.
The system could function
in the same way as did the Euro at the
beginning – as a basket of currencies each
valued according to some key indicators of
its national economy. – Initially the new
monetary system might be gold based – as
opposed to the current fiat money with no
backing whatsoever. In the long run,
however, gold is not a stable or sustainable
back-up for any currency. The intrinsic
value of gold is only its industrial worth,
currently less than 20% of its use. The
combined economic output of the nations
behind the joint currency – to a lesser
degree the numerical growth oriented GDP,
but rather social indicators such as public
health, standard of education and
environmental concerns, capacity of conflict
resolution, of living in peace and harmony –
might be more indicative of the strength of
a sovereign’s currency than just gold or a
straight GDP.
Such a new monetary system
may soon cover 25% to one third of the world
economy, thereby becoming fully autonomous.
The petro-dollar would further lose its
stature as world reserve. Ten years ago 90%
of world reserves consisted of
dollar-nominated securities. Today that
ratio has shrunk to a mere 60%, as
currencies like the Yuan is rapidly gaining
ground as reserve money, especially in Asia.
Even Australia has recently declared it will
increase its Yuan holding.
The drop of the dollar as
the world’s major reserve currency is
Washington’s biggest nightmare, and has been
for the last 15-20 years, when first Iran
and then Iraq (Iraq’s oil for food program)
and Venezuela threatened to sell their
hydrocarbon in Euros. At that time this
economically strategic move was not so much
meant as an affront to the US, but rather a
measure of security for their own economies,
as worldwide trust in the US dollar was
waning then and now.
This is considered one of
the major reasons for the 2003 US invasion
of Iraq – securing the petro dollar as
trading currency – and the ensuing war, to
take over all of Iraq’s hydrocarbon wells –
and privatize them. It was also the key
reason for Washington’s false flag
accusation of Iran’s plans for manufacturing
nuclear weapons. In the meantime this has
been proven umpteen times as a lie,
including by the 16 major US intelligent
agencies.
Washington’s relentless
aggression on Russia is of course part of
the PNAC (Plan for a New American Century),
to achieve full world hegemony, but at the
same time Washington is desperate not to
lose its dollar supremacy. The US is in a
terminal quagmire. There is no way out.
Washington is acting like a wild beast in
its last throbs of live. The empire may be
capable of destroying the world – including
itself – just so that nobody may survive
outside of the self-appointed Masters of the
Universe.
The emergence of a new
‘eastern’, dollar detached monetary scheme
is therefore becoming increasingly urgent.
One might ask, why hasn’t it happened
before?
The reasons’ might be
manifold. The key players’ – Russia and
China – banking and exchange infrastructure
might not have been ready. But more likely,
to reduce to the extent possible the
collateral economic damage a new monetary
system may entail to the rest of the world.
After all, fair trading among sovereign
nations is a noble objective for global
peace.
Peter Koenig
is an economist and geopolitical analyst. He
is also a former World Bank staff and worked
extensively around the world in the fields
of environment and water resources. He
writes regularly for Global Research, ICH,
RT, Sputnik News, the Voice of Russia / Ria
Novosti, TeleSur, The Vineyard of The Saker
Blog, and other internet sites. He is the
author of Implosion – An Economic Thriller
about War, Environmental Destruction and
Corporate Greed – fiction based on facts and
on 30 years of World Bank experience around
the globe.