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Reserve currencies in an evolving international monetary system

Part of the Departmental Papers series
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Despite major structural shifts in the international monetary system over the past six decades, the US dollar remains the dominant international reserve currency.

Using a newly compiled database of individual economies' reserve holdings by currency, this departmental paper finds that financial links have been an increasingly important driver of reserve currency configurations since the global financial crisis, particularly for emerging market and developing economies.

The paper also finds a rise in inertial effects, implying that the US dollar dominance is likely to endure.

But historical precedents of sudden changes suggest that new developments, such as the emergence of digital currencies and new payments ecosystems, could accelerate the transition to a new landscape of reserve currencies.

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Product Details
1513560298 / 9781513560298
Paperback / softback
332.042
30/05/2022
United States
English
67 pages