Gambling with the dollar’s dominance
Mint Bangalore
|January 01, 2026
Notwithstanding some ups and downs, the US dollar has been the uncontested global reserve currency since the end of World War II.
That status has allowed the US government to borrow at lower interest rates than would have been possible if central banks and private investors did not view US Treasury securities as the “safe asset” par excellence.In the 1960s, Valéry Giscard d’Estaing, then France’s finance minister, famously described this consequence of America’s monopoly on the world’s reserve currency as an “exorbitant privilege.” Yet over time, this privilege propped up by sustained demand for Treasury securities has bred generations of US politicians and policymakers who show no regard for the risks posed by growing US current-account and fiscal deficits.
Worse, the US Federal Reserve fueled this cycle by keeping its policy rate “low for long” after the 2008 global financial crisis. For too many, “long” was interpreted as “forever.” They simply took it for granted that US growth would be consistently higher than the real interest rate on government debt, which itself would remain exceptionally low by historical standards. After all, despite the ballooning debt stock, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) determined that the government's net interest outlays as a share of GDP were lower in 2021 than two decades earlier.
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