- Someday soon an American company will want to import $500 million in widgets from Asia only to be told that the exporting company will NOT take payment in dollars. We have no idea about the long term impact of this on inflation and the economy.
For the first time ever, India and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) settled an oil trade without first converting their respective local currencies to the United States dollar as has been the custom in the age of dollar dominance.
According to reports, Indian Oil Corp., India's top refinery, purchased one million barrels of oil from the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company using only rupees, delivering yet another incremental death blow to U.S. dollar dominance.
The oil sale is the first to occur ever since India and the UAE entered a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) back in July establishing a Local Currency Settlement (LCS) system that can now be used by the Reserve Bank of India and the Central Bank of the UAE to facilitate trade without the need for U.S. dollars.
Thanks to this MoU, India and the UAE will now be able to engage in bilateral trade for all sorts of things, not just oil, using only the rupee and the dirham. The Reserve Bank of India says the agreement will facilitate "seamless cross-border transactions and payments, and foster greater economic cooperation.
Because India currently ranks as the world's third-largest importer of oil, this is a really big deal because it shows that the U.S. dollar is no longer king – or at least it is moving in the direction of becoming irrelevant in world trade much faster than many anticipated.
WILL GERMANY JOIN BRICS? BYE BYE EURO!
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