Wednesday, December 4, 2024

How an upstart global payment system led to Trump’s latest tariff threat

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Donald Trump’s latest tariff threat appears to have stemmed at least in part from a nascent blockchain-based entrant into the influential world of global financial messaging.

The president-elect’s move came in a Saturday afternoon post where he promised 100% tariffs on countries looking to move away from the dollar.

“[A]ny Country that tries should wave goodbye to America,” he wrote.

The target was an organization called BRICS, which currently boasts 10 nations and is led by the Western adversaries of China and Russia.

One new product offering appears to be a key stumbling block.

“The proximate cause of Trump’s threat is the development of BRICS Pay,” wrote Douglas Holtz-Eakin, the president of the American Action Forum, in a Monday morning note.

BRICS Pay is a new attempt by the group to use digital payment and QR code technology to provide an alternative to dollar-dominated networks — specifically the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT).

President-elect Donald Trump during a recent stop in Washington, D.C., as he prepares to assume the presidency next year. (ALLISON ROBBERT/POOL/AFP via Getty Images) · ALLISON ROBBERT via Getty Images

Trump’s post immediately raised fears of a complicated trade war that would potentially span five continents and is set to be another active front for negotiations between Trump’s transition team and overseas leaders in the months ahead.

A Kremlin spokesman quickly responded on Monday that Trump’s move would backfire, adding that the dollar is already in decline.

“Today, we begin building a new, fair, and decentralized financial system for the future,” the BRICS pay website promises as it touts its new effort to be “a new global financial and payments architecture.”

The group aims to offer traditional bank-to-bank connections as well as newer digital means to move money as part of an overall effort to allow more cross-border payments without involving dollars.

The still-unfolding goal is to provide a comprehensive online wallet that would allow citizens and businesses in these countries to make payments around the globe using their national currencies.

It was formally launched this October as a direct counter to SWIFT, a Belgium-based system that currently dominates the connections of banks around the world and is dominated by dollars.

The SWIFT system is largely the reason that 88% of foreign exchange transactions currently involve the dollar — even if there’s not an American on one side of the transaction.

The Logo of The Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication or SWIFT on a billboard December 15, 2022 in Hong Kong, China.
The logo of the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) is seen in Hong Kong in 2022. (Getty Images) · NurPhoto via Getty Images

The recent announcement of a rival came after a BRICS Business Forum in Russia and could have outsized effects on Vladimir Putin and his countrymen, who have been largely banned from the SWIFT system since their invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

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