Peter Koenig: Towards a New Gold Standard? Or a Currency War with China?
2020-10-13 IMI
This alternative currency denominated gold would be strengthened by the power of the respective economies which would back it.
In the end – as is already demonstrated today – international trust in the respective economies and their currencies – gold backed or not – will determine the outcome of a possible currency confrontation. China, already engaged in cross-border trading in local currencies and expanding yuan-trading arrangements internationally, for example, with currency swap measures in place with Russia, Iran and Venezuela, would be well placed to break the US-currency hegemony.
Finally, the goal is not to have one hegemon to replace another domineering power, but to establish a balanced world with several regional hubs or financial centers which would promote a monetary equilibrium that would gradually accompany progress of the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), the bridge that spans the world (see also https://www.globalresearch.ca/china-belt-road-initiative-bridge-spans-world/5695727 ), with increasingly equal access to vital resources for building peacefully a World Community with a Shared Future for Mankind.