Post
Topic
Board Bitcoin Discussion
Re: Will bitcoin end the dollar’s reign?
by
ven7net
on 28/02/2021, 20:21:20 UTC
When the pandemic hit, the US dollar was as mighty as ever. Despite talk of faltering American supremacy, the dollar ruled as the medium of international trade, the anchor against which other nations value their currencies, and the “reserve currency” most central banks hold as savings.
Before the US, only five powers had enjoyed the coveted “reserve currency” status, going back to the mid-1400s: Portugal, then Spain, the Netherlands, France and Britain. Those reigns lasted 94 years on average. At the start of 2020, the dollar’s run had endured 100 years. That would have been reason to question how much longer it could continue, but for one caveat: the lack of a successor.

Read the article @ https://www.ft.com/content/ea33b688-12e0-459c-80c5-2efba58e6f1a

At the time of writing this thread there was no paywall at Financial Times for this article  Wink

Lately there has been a lot of talk about the fall of the dollar's hegemony as an international currency. In discussions, cryptocurrencies are very often touched upon as one of the ways to solve this problem, however, many analysts are wondering if cryptocurrencies are chosen as a replacement for the dollar, will cryptocurrencies be able to solve the same problems that the dollar had? This is a really very good question and probably at the moment no one can say for sure what will replace the dollar, maybe it will be BTC or other cryptocurrencies, or maybe the world will again return to currencies pegged to gold. All this is likely to become clear and we will find out what lies ahead.