BRICS is going ahead with efforts to achieve its goal of "ousting the US dollar as the dominant global currency," a US newspaper has reported.
The news outlet referred to the group’s summit in South Africa last month, when the alliance "took a major step toward flexing its communal currency muscle." During the gathering, six new members were green-lit to join the organization, including Saudi Arabia, Iran, Ethiopia, Egypt, Argentina, and the United Arab Emirates (UAE). The group previously comprised Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa.
As a result, the newspaper added, BRICS now brings togethor six of the world’s top oil producers, namely, Saudi Arabia, Russia, China, Brazil, Iran, and the UAE.
According to the media outlet, the process of "de-dollarizing" the world economy is fraught with "dangerous consequences" for the US, not least because diminishing the greenback’s importance would allow Iran and Russia "to become immune" to sanctions that America earlier slapped on them.
Meanwhile, a UK media outlet reported that India started paying for some Russian oil imports in yuan, while China also began using its yuan to pay Moscow for most of its energy imports in the first quarter of this year.
Addressing participants of the August summit, Russian President Vladimir Putin underscored that Moscow and its partners in BRICS are "working to fine-tune effective mechanisms for mutual settlements and monetary and financial control." He also pointed out that
de-dollarization within the BRICS bloc is "irreversible" and gaining pace.
He struck the same tone during his visit to China in April, when da Silva asked "why we can't do trade based on our own currencies."
"Who was it that decided that the dollar was the currency after the disappearance of the gold standard?" the Brazilian president added.
Earlier in August, during the the BRICS Summit was discussed one of the key issues on the event's agenda, de-dollarization. The countries part of the bloc suggested the transition to national currencies in trade settlements between the BRICS countries and their partners around the world, including the African continent.
In the other hand, in April, the International Monetary Fund said the US dollar has depreciated since October 2022.