Unseating the US$ is a non-starter – Godongwana

SA Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana

THE mooted development of a common currency by the Brics group of emerging nations (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) and an alternative payment system so that they rely less on the mighty United States (US) dollar is increasingly viewed as a non-starter by prominent decision-makers.

South African finance minister Enoch Godongwana is the latest to pour cold water on proposals for Brics nations to dethrone the US dollar, saying it is not a consideration at policy level, or even feasible soon.

“I think most of the hullabaloo about the Brics currency is a debate which is misplaced. This is something we’re not discussing at all. So, for now, it’s too early to even venture into that debate,” Godongwana has told Daily Maverick.

He said the proposals for a common currency and alternative payment system were initially presented for debate to the Brics heads of state, who then referred it to the finance ministers of the emerging nations to probe its merits.

“The ministers of finance are preoccupied with different things than common currency. We are not likely to find each other easier on the common currency question,” said Godongwana, who chairs the Brics workstream of finance ministers, tasked with building mechanisms for cooperation in areas of economic development, sustainable finance, payment areas and others.

Godongwana plans to convene a meeting with the Brics finance ministers in October on the sidelines of the annual meetings of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund in Morocco to discuss other ways in which the nations can deepen the use of their currencies to conduct trade and financial transactions.

NOT FEASIBLE

Decision-makers such as Godongwana and others are against unseating the dollar because of its importance. The dollar is considered the world’s de facto global currency, owing to the US’ mature economy, transparent fiscal and monetary policies and globally open trade environment.

And the dollar is already entrenched in the economies and public finances of Brics countries.

In South Africa’s case, about 11% (or N$543,3 billion) of the government’s gross debt of R5 trillion is denominated in foreign currencies (including the dollar), according to the latest budget documents.

So, walking away from the dollar will not be easy, said Godongwana.

But the Brics heads of state seem to be divided on this matter, with Brazil’s president, Lula da Silva, pitching for a common currency during the three-day Brics Summit in Johannesburg.

Da Silva said the creation of a currency for trade and investment transactions between Brics members “increases our payment options and reduces our vulnerabilities”.

Brics nations such as Brazil, Russia and China have argued that the dollar is volatile, as seen in its wild swings every time the US central bank makes interest rate decisions, or there are any signs the US economy is slowing.

This volatility creates a financial headache for Brics members, which makes their dollar-denominated debt more expensive to service.

In addition to a common currency, Brazil, Russia and China are pushing for the development of an alternative payment system to the globally recognised Swift – an alternative one that bypasses the West, and enables trade and cross-border payments among Brics nations.

Swift is a payment system that is used by more than 11 000 banks and financial institutions worldwide (including those based in Brics nations), and handles 42 million messages a day, facilitating transactions worth trillions of dollars.

But Western nations, including the European Union (EU), US, Canada and the United Kingdom (UK), have targeted Swift as a way to impose sanctions on Russia (for its invasion of Ukraine) by banning the country’s banks from using the payment system.

Godongwana said the introduction of a common currency and alternative payment system will be complex to implement, because such proposals also cut across the mandates of central banks, which are tasked with protecting the value of currencies, and the stability of financial systems.

“It’s an issue for the governors of central banks because they manage payment systems and they know what they are talking about. I don’t want politicians to meddle on that issue,” he said.

The complexity of developing a common currency (or even an alternative payment system) is that Brics nations are vastly different.

They differ in their policy deployment, gross domestic product (GDP) generation, currency management, interest rates and inflation policies, says Adriaan Pask, the chief investment officer at PSG Wealth.

“Achieving the required level of integration would be exceedingly complex. Furthermore, it is necessary to evaluate whether the effort invested in creating a Brics reserve [or common] currency is even worthwhile,” he says.

The complexity would be further exacerbated by the confirmed addition of six more countries (Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Iran, Argentina, Ethiopia and Egypt) to the Brics bloc.

ENTER BRICS BANK

A proposal that Godongwana said is feasible and worth exploring is the increased use of Brics currencies when conducting trade and financial transactions among their nations.

To do this, the New Development Bank (NDB), the Shanghai-based lender better known as Brics Bank, which mainly funds infrastructure and sustainable development projects, will be targeted as the institution will start lending the currencies of emerging nations.

How the NDB’s funding and lending works is that it borrows money on the Chinese market, funding projects from the proceeds of its bond issuances that are traditionally denominated in the renminbi/yuan.

It is exploring ways to fund more projects in rands, as it recently did when it raised R1,5 billion in the domestic currency and Indian rupees.

“We’ve been arguing, particularly with the NDB, that it must intensify servicing us [Brics countries] in our local currencies,” said Godongwana.

The NDB has admitted countries as members of the bank, but is not formally included in the Brics bloc. For example, it admitted the UAE and Egypt long before they were formally incorporated into Brics.

Including countries as members of the NDB paves the way for the bank to extend more funding in local currency, making its reach far and wide.

A spokesperson for the NDB told Daily Maverick it is continually looking to expand the number of countries that are part of its membership, without naming them.

Uruguay is one of the countries waiting to be admitted.

“The NDB’s membership is open to all members of the United Nations. Under the guidance of our board of governors and board of directors, we are actively engaging with countries that share our vision and values, and who can contribute to our mission.”

– Business Maverick

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