The Fate of the US Dollar and Us Exceptionalism

For all of those who follow our writings every week you know that we have fought hard to convince our readers, clients as well as advisors, that the preeminence of the US dollar is not in jeopardy (please refer to our previous writings on the topic or let us know if you need us to send you a copy of them). Many of the arguments exposed out there over the last 40 years (the length of our professional economist career) have had to do with conspiracy theories or pseudo-conspiracy theories with nothing behind them but, perhaps, the intention to take advantage of uninformed individuals or as an instrument to sell other products. Many times, these conspiracies also support scams and fraudulent activities.

The US dollar is one of the hundreds of currencies in the world and thus competes with other currencies for the services/benefits it provides to its holders. Thus, as is the case with any good/service, as long as the US dollar continues to provide services/benefits to holders of the currency, the US dollar will live alongside the country. We wrote a white paper where we talked about the functions of money that you can access here.

But the US dollar is, let us say, exceptional in many ways. For Americans, the US dollar is their currency, and, as we said above, as long as the US exists as a country, it will remain the currency of the US. That is, the US imposes the use of the US dollar within its territory. However, the US dollar is exceptional because millions of individuals, as well as firms across the global economy, also get services/benefits from holding US dollars. And we are not talking about US dollars being held at central banks across the global economy as part of central bank reserves. No, that is not what makes the US dollar exceptional. The most important characteristic of the US dollar as the preeminent currency in the world is NOT that it is one of the preferred currencies held by central banks as reserves, it is the fact that millions of non-US citizens and/or non- residents of the US, that is, foreigners, obtain services/benefits from holding US dollars.

Americans are obliged, by law, to use the US dollar; the rest of the citizens of the world are not. It is their choice, and as long as we keep the US dollar the most stable and trustworthy currency in the world, then the US dollar will have no competition in terms of the services/benefits it provides. For those who may be more skeptical about the US dollar exceptionalism, they probably want to use this saying: “in the land of the blind, the one-eyed man is king.”