US Stablecoin Dream Is a Nightmare for China

A decade ago, stablecoins were conceived as a bridge for speculators to travel between risky digital assets like Bitcoin and the less turbulent world of fiat money. That is changing fast. In the hands of a crypto-loving Trump administration, these dollar clones are shaping up as a highway that will carry America’s influence around the world. China’s President Xi Jinping is not taking this new front of geopolitical competition lightly.

It’s a fundamental rewiring of the post-World War II monetary architecture, in which the US is no longer keen to play its historical role of supplying safe assets to the rest of the world.

Large-scale purchases of Treasuries by foreign central banks are adding to international demand for the dollar as a store of value. Its perverse effect is to make the US uncompetitive in trade. Or that’s the position articulated in a provocative paper last November by Stephen Miran, head of President Donald Trump’s Council of Economic Advisers. He’s now on the Federal Reserve board. “From a trade perspective, the dollar is persistently overvalued, in large part because dollar assets function as the world’s reserve currency,” Miran wrote. “This overvaluation has weighed heavily on the American manufacturing sector while benefiting financialized sectors of the economy.”

Enter dollar stablecoins, regulated under the recently passed Genius Act. Since they are prohibited from paying interest, these virtual representations will by themselves not be an attractive store of value. That’s intentional. As long as they convert at par into dollars, they will still go global as means of payment. In countries with high inflation, capital controls, or unstable governments, people may want to use these tokens to send and receive money over the blockchain. With US stablecoins going mainstream, the cost of international remittances, disproportionately high for small firms and individuals, is expected to tumble from its current average of 6.5%, drawing in yet more everyday users.

To Beijing’s alarm, this will launch a new wave of dollarization just when it’s pushing for a greater role for the yuan in international payments.

Take Pakistan, a flagship destination of the Belt-and-Road program and a recipient of billions of dollars of Chinese investment. The Trump administration has signed up Islamabad as an enthusiastic supporter of its global crypto initiative. Since May 2021, the local rupee has lost nearly half of its value against the greenback. Although inflation has cooled from the 2023 high of 38% and the currency has stabilized, that’s largely because of assistance from the International Monetary Fund — the nation’s 24th bailout in 75 years. It’s a no brainer that between a domestic bank deposit and a blockchain wallet stuffed with digital dollars, most Pakistanis may eventually choose the latter.