Author

admin

Browsing

Executive Summary

Dedollarization describes the deliberate effort by nations, financial institutions, and regional blocs to lessen their dependence on the United States dollar in trade, reserve management, and cross-border finance. What was once a rhetorical ambition of countries outside the Western alliance has become a strategic priority for a widening coalition that includes major emerging markets and even some US partners. The movement is motivated by geopolitical tension, the increasing use of the dollar as a policy instrument, and structural innovation in payments and settlement technology.

Although the dollar remains the unrivaled core of the international monetary system, its dominance is gradually being eroded. The freezing of Russian foreign-exchange reserves in 2022 and the exclusion of certain banks from the SWIFT payment-processing network convinced many governments that reserve safety is contingent on political alignment with Washington. At the same time, the emergence of central-bank digital currencies, bilateral swap lines, and commodity-linked settlement arrangements has lowered the technical and transactional barriers to non-dollar trade.

This paper traces the historical ascent of the dollar, explains the institutional foundations of its current supremacy, and surveys the growing landscape of dedollarization initiatives. It then evaluates the feasibility of those initiatives and their macro-financial implications. The analysis follows this structure.

1. Introduction

For nearly eight decades the US dollar has served as the backbone of the global monetary order — an anchor for exchange-rate regimes, the dominant invoicing currency in trade, and the benchmark for reserve portfolios. Yet since the global financial crisis of 2008 — and with new urgency after 2022 — an accumulating series of geopolitical and financial shocks has exposed vulnerabilities in that order. Governments have begun to ask whether dependence on a single national currency remains compatible with their own strategic autonomy.

Several factors are driving renewed interest in alternatives. First, the dollar’s centrality gives the United States extraordinary leverage through its control of payment infrastructure and the US financial system. The extension of sanctions, extraterritorial compliance regimes, and the seizure of reserves have transformed that leverage from latent to explicit power. Second, macroeconomic imbalances inside the United States — persistent fiscal deficits, rising public debt, and the Federal Reserve’s heavy interventions — have raised concerns that the supply of dollar assets is expanding faster than the credibility that underpins them. Third, advances in financial technology, including blockchain-based settlement and central-bank digital currencies, are eroding the natural monopoly the dollar once enjoyed in global clearing.

Dedollarization does not imply an organized rebellion against the dollar. It represents an adaptive response to structural change: nations hedging exposure to US policy decisions and to potential disruptions in dollar liquidity. The trend should be interpreted not as a sudden or catastrophic dethronement, but as a slow diversification of the monetary ecosystem. As with past transitions — from sterling to the dollar in the early twentieth century — credibility, market depth, and geopolitical influence will determine the pace of realignment.

The sections that follow place this evolution in historical and analytical context. Section 2 explains how the dollar achieved primacy; Section 3 describes its current role in global finance; Section 4 examines the diverse strategies states are using to reduce dollar dependence; Section 5 evaluates feasibility and consequences; and Section 6 offers concluding reflections on the likely trajectory toward a more plural reserve-currency system.

2. The Rise of the US Dollar as the Global Reserve Currency

Postwar Foundations

The modern dollar system was born in 1944 at the Bretton Woods Conference, formally known as the United Nations Monetary and Financial Conference. Forty-four allied nations agreed to anchor postwar exchange rates to the US currency, itself convertible into gold at $35 per ounce. The arrangement codified America’s postwar economic preeminence: in 1945, the United States generated roughly half the world’s production and held three-quarters of its official gold reserves. The new institutions — the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank — were built around the dollar standard and operated largely from Washington.

Under this regime, the dollar served as the intermediary between various national currencies and gold. Countries accumulated dollar balances as reserves, while US fiscal and monetary policy effectively supplied the liquidity to fuel global growth. For two decades, this system delivered stability and expansion; the fixed-rate framework reduced exchange-rate uncertainty, encouraged trade, and supported reconstruction in Europe and Japan.

The Nixon Shock and Adaptation

By the late 1960s, however, the US government’s fiscal deficits (particularly associated with the Vietnam War and domestic social programs) eroded confidence in gold convertibility. Foreign holders demanded redemption, and in 1971 President Nixon suspended the dollar’s link to gold, ending the Bretton Woods system. Many observers predicted that the dollar’s dominance would collapse with convertibility, but the opposite occurred. Instead of unraveling, the dollar system adapted: exchange rates floated, but the dollar remained the central reference for pricing and reserves.

The Petrodollar and Eurodollar Pillars

Two mechanisms cemented post-1971 dollar dominance. First, the petrodollar system — a tacit bargain between Richard Nixon in Washington and the ruling Royal House of Saud in Riyadh — ensured that crude-oil exports were priced and settled in dollars, forcing global energy importers to hold dollar balances. Second, the Eurodollar market, consisting of dollar-denominated deposits and loans held outside US jurisdiction, expanded rapidly in London and other financial centers. This offshore market multiplied the dollar’s reach while freeing it from domestic regulatory constraints.

Through these channels, the dollar became not merely a national currency but a global funding medium. Its network effects became self-reinforcing: the more participants used dollars, the more efficient and liquid dollar markets became, attracting still more users. By the 1980s, the dollar accounted for the majority of world trade invoicing and reserve holdings, roles it continues to dominate today.

Institutional and Structural Advantages

The endurance of dollar primacy rests on a combination of legal and financial infrastructure, as yet unmatched elsewhere. The US Treasury market offers depth and transparency; American courts provide predictable contract enforcement; and the Federal Reserve supplies a credible lender of last resort. These attributes, together with the network externalities of established usage, create powerful inertia. Even when foreign governments resent US influence, practical considerations — liquidity, safety, and convenience — anchor them to the dollar system.

3. The Current Position of the Dollar in the Global Monetary System

A Dominant, But Eroding, Position

Despite constant forecasts of decline, the US dollar continues to anchor the world’s financial system. Roughly 60 percent of reported global foreign-exchange reserves, nearly 90 percent of foreign-exchange transactions, and more than half of international trade invoicing are dollar-denominated. No other currency comes close. The euro’s share of reserves hovers near 20 per cent, while the Japanese yen, British pound, and Chinese yuan each account for single-digit portions. Dollar funding remains the lifeblood of global capital markets: commodities are priced in dollars, syndicated loans are typically dollar-denominated, and dollar liquidity defines the rhythm of risk-on and risk-off cycles.

Yet beneath this apparent stability, gradual structural shifts continue. The dollar’s share of official reserves has declined from nearly 72 percent in 1999 to roughly 58 percent today. Portions of cross-border trade — especially among emerging economies — are increasingly settled in local or regional currencies. China and Russia now conduct most bilateral trade without reference to the dollar. The Gulf Cooperation Council has discussed parallel invoicing mechanisms for oil. Even in Europe, political pressure to reduce dependence on US clearing channels has grown after successive rounds of American sanctions.

Safe-Asset Shortages and Financial Dependence

The dollar’s dominance also reflects an imbalance: the rest of the world demands safe, liquid assets, and only the United States supplies them at scale. Treasury securities serve as collateral throughout the global financial system, a role no other sovereign bond market can replicate. In times of crisis, demand for Treasurys surges, reinforcing the dollar’s “exorbitant privilege.” But this dependence ties the stability of global finance to the fiscal and monetary policies of one country. US government shutdowns, debt-ceiling brinkmanship, or abrupt policy pivots by the Federal Reserve ripple instantly across continents.

The 2008 financial crisis revealed both the fragility and the resilience of this arrangement. When interbank markets effectively froze, the Federal Reserve extended massive swap lines to foreign central banks, effectively acting as a global lender of last resort. That response cemented confidence in the dollar system — but also underscored that it is, in essence, a public good provided by the United States. The expectation that the Fed will always supply liquidity in global crises further entrenches dollar use, even as it heightens systemic moral hazard.

Network Effects and Path Dependence

The economic literature on currency hierarchy emphasizes network effects: once a medium becomes dominant, switching costs keep users locked in. Dollar-based payment rails, legal conventions, and accounting standards are deeply embedded. Multinationals issue debt in dollars because investors prefer dollar assets; investors prefer them because global corporations issue in dollars. The circularity sustains itself. Breaking it requires not only new instruments but also the credibility of enforcement, regulation, and deep financial markets — attributes that few alternatives possess.

The dollar’s reach is further reinforced by path dependence in institutional behavior. Central banks train staff, build risk systems, and structure reserve portfolios around dollar instruments. Corporate treasurers hedge in dollar markets; commodity exporters quote in dollars; and data providers benchmark in dollars. The inertia of habit magnifies technical efficiency into structural dominance.

Challenges from Monetary Policy and Fiscal Trajectories

Still, the very success of the dollar system generates political tension. US macroeconomic policy now has global spillovers of unprecedented magnitude. When the Federal Reserve tightens to fight domestic inflation, emerging-market currencies weaken, debt-service costs rise, and capital inflows reverse. Conversely, loose US monetary policy can indirectly fuel asset bubbles abroad. Many policymakers outside the United States see this as a vulnerability and a motivation to diversify.

Equally worrisome are long-term fiscal trends. US federal debt exceeds 120 percent of GDP and continues to climb. Large deficits sustain global liquidity but raise doubts about the long-term real value of dollar-denominated assets. Foreign central banks — especially in Asia — hold trillions in Treasurys, effectively financing US consumption. This symbiosis persists because there is no scalable alternative, but it is politically fragile. Any sudden change in confidence could destabilize both the US and global financial systems.

Sanctions and the Weaponization of Finance

Perhaps the most significant change in perception has come from the geopolitical realm. The use of the dollar system as an instrument of coercive policy against nations — through sanctions, asset freezes, and exclusion from payment networks — has redefined the risk calculus of sovereign reserve management. The United States and its allies immobilized roughly $300 billion of Russian central-bank reserves, demonstrating that the “risk-free” dollar asset is risk-free only for friends. The precedent drew concern from countries that might one day find themselves at odds with Washington.

Even US allies have quietly acknowledged the implications. European officials protested the extraterritorial reach of secondary sanctions; Gulf states began exploring non-dollar invoicing with Asian partners; and many developing economies accelerated efforts to build local-currency swap lines. These are incremental steps, but together they amount to a strategic campaign hedging against financial vulnerability to US action.

Technological Shifts in Payments and Settlement

Parallel to these geopolitical dynamics, digital technologies are reshaping the mechanics of cross-border finance. Blockchain-based payment systems, instant-settlement platforms, and central-bank digital currencies (CBDCs) promise to reduce the cost and complexity of non-dollar settlement. China’s e-CNY, the Bank of International Settlement’s mBridge project, and regional initiatives in Southeast Asia have demonstrated that real-time settlement can occur across borders — without routing through New York or London.

While these technologies are in early stages, their political symbolism is powerful. They show that the infrastructure underpinning the dollar’s dominance is not immutable. If regional payment corridors proliferate — say, yuan-based settlement for commodities in Asia or rupee-denominated trade within South Asia — the cumulative effect could be to erode the network centrality that sustains the dollar.

A System Under Negotiation

In sum, the dollar remains the gravitational center of global finance, but is increasingly encircled by alternative arrangements. The result is not imminent collapse but a slow evolution toward monetary multipolarity: a world in which several currencies share roles that once belonged almost exclusively to the dollar. The next section examines how this process is unfolding in practice — through explicit dedollarization strategies and policy initiatives.

Reframing by Strategy Rather Than Country

Efforts to reduce dependence on the dollar can be grouped into four broad strategies. Each aims to alter a distinct mechanism through which dollar hegemony operates. While many governments pursue several simultaneously, organizing the discussion this way clarifies the economic logic and the institutional challenges behind each. The strategies are:

  1. Trade Invoicing: settlement in local or alternative currencies
  2. Payment Infrastructure: development of alternative channels for payment and messaging
  3. Reserve Composition: diversifying holdings into gold and non-dollar assets
  4. Financial Innovation: experimentation with digital and programmable settlement systems

4.1 Trade Settlement in Local or Alternative Currencies

Replacing the dollar as the invoice and settlement medium in bilateral trade reduces the need for dollar balances and correspondent banking through US channels. Countries facing sanctions or chronic dollar shortages originated this momentum: Russia’s shift to ruble and yuan invoicing, India’s creation of rupee settlement mechanisms, and the BRICS bloc’s proposals for local-currency payment frameworks all fall under this category.

The motivations are straightforward: in bypassing the dollar, trading partners insulate themselves from US monetary cycles and legal jurisdiction. For importers of energy or raw materials, paying in local currency reduces foreign-exchange exposure and transaction costs. For exporters, using local currency broadens the customer base and builds political goodwill.

Local-currency settlement faces significant constraints, however. Thin liquidity in smaller currencies means volatile exchange rates and limited hedging options. Without deep bond markets or reserve assets in those currencies, counterparties typically still hold dollars as a backstop. Even within the BRICS grouping, attempts to balance trade purely in local currencies have encountered mismatch problems. India’s trade deficit with Russia led to the accumulation of illiquid rupees, illustrating that invoicing diversification does not automatically equal financial independence.

Nonetheless, progress is visible. China now conducts the majority of its trade with Russia in yuan. ASEAN members have expanded their Local Currency Settlement framework. The Gulf states have explored partial yuan pricing for oil and gas. These developments are incremental, but collectively they erode the near-universal habit of dollar pricing.

4.2  Alternative Payment and Messaging Infrastructures

A second strategy focuses on replacing or replicating the infrastructure through which cross-border payments flow. The global financial nervous system — SWIFT messaging, CHIPS clearing, and US correspondent banking — grants Washington unparalleled visibility and control. When a nation’s central banks are excluded from SWIFT or when dollar-clearing rights are revoked, that economy is effectively exiled from the global system.

China’s Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS), launched in 2015, aims to provide an independent clearing channel for yuan-denominated transactions. Russia’s SPFS network and its domestic card system MIR serve similar purposes at a national level. The European Union’s INSTEX mechanism, conceived to facilitate humanitarian trade with Iran, demonstrated political intent even if it saw little operational use (and has since shut down).

While none of these alternatives yet rival SWIFT’s reach, their existence signals a slow migration toward a multipolar infrastructure. Interoperability between CIPS and regional systems in Southeast Asia, the Middle East, and Africa is expanding. Each connection marginally reduces reliance on US networks. The key constraint is scale: payment networks derive power from network effects, and displacing an incumbent of SWIFT’s size will require years of cumulative adoption.

For now, the likely outcome is coexistence rather than replacement — a patchwork of interoperable systems connected through gateways. Over time, this patchwork could amount to de facto diversification of financial plumbing, limiting the United States’ ability to monitor or block transactions unilaterally.

4.3 Reserve Diversification: Gold and Non-Dollar Assets

Central banks and sovereign funds have begun reallocating portions of their reserves away from US Treasurys and toward gold, euros, yuan, and other assets. This trend, though modest in percentage terms, represents a major shift in attitude. The logic is defensive: the seizure of reserves from Afghanistan in 2021 and Russia in 2022 proved that even central-bank assets held in Western jurisdictions can be frozen. Holding gold domestically or diversifying into multiple currencies reduces that vulnerability.

The data tell the story. Global central-bank gold purchases in 2022 and 2023 reached their highest levels since records began in the 1950s, led by China, Turkey, India, and several Middle Eastern states. The People’s Bank of China has reported steady monthly additions to its gold holdings since late 2022, even as it trims exposure to US debt. Russia now holds roughly two-thirds of its reserves in gold and non-dollar assets. Meanwhile, several Asian and Gulf sovereign wealth funds have diversified into euro- and yen-denominated bonds, infrastructure projects, and equity stakes abroad.

Diversification is not costless, however. Gold yields nothing and can be illiquid in crisis; non-dollar bonds offer less depth and weaker legal protection. For reserve managers, the challenge is balancing political security with financial performance. The long-run effect, though, is to chip away at the dollar’s near-monopoly in official reserves and to nurture embryonic alternative safe-asset markets.

4.4 Digital and Programmable Settlement Systems

The most innovative strand of dedollarization leverages financial technology. Central-bank digital currencies (CBDCs), tokenized assets, and distributed-ledger settlement platforms enable instant payment and delivery without traditional correspondent banks. The BIS “mBridge” project, linking the central banks of China, Hong Kong, Thailand, and the UAE, has completed live cross-border transactions using digital currencies. Russia and several members of the Eurasian Economic Union are piloting similar systems.

These initiatives are not about cryptocurrency speculation but about rebuilding the architecture of global payments. In theory, CBDCs can clear directly between central banks, eliminating intermediaries and minimizing the jurisdictional exposure that comes with reliance on dollar-based infrastructure. Commodity exchanges in Shanghai and Hong Kong are experimenting with on-chain settlement in yuan for metals and energy products, hinting at a future where key commodities might circulate within closed digital ecosystems.

The obstacles are formidable: interoperability, cybersecurity, legal recognition of digital settlement, and anti–money-laundering compliance remain unresolved. But the direction of travel is unmistakable. The next generation of payment infrastructure is being built with multipolar design in mind.

4.5 Synthesis: The Emerging Pattern

Across these four strategies, a pattern emerges. The aim is not to overthrow the dollar overnight, but to construct redundancy in global finance — to ensure that access to credit, liquidity, and trade can persist even if dollar channels are disrupted. Each innovation, however small in isolation, contributes to a broader diversification of risk. The combined result is a slow diffusion of US monetary power.

Measured by outcomes, dedollarization has already achieved more than many realize. The share of global reserves held in dollars has declined to its lowest level in decades. Non-dollar invoicing is rising in key trade corridors. Gold accumulation by central banks has accelerated. And alternative payment systems, though limited, are functional. What remains uncertain is whether these trends will plateau, or compound into a structural transformation.

The following section evaluates that question in depth, weighing the economic feasibility of large-scale dedollarization and the implications for global stability.

5. Feasibility of Dedollarization

Economic Feasibility

The decisive question is not whether countries want to dedollarize, but whether they can. The dollar’s dominance reflects an ecosystem of liquidity, credibility, and legal infrastructure that no competitor yet replicates. Three economic criteria determine feasibility: the depth of alternative markets, the credibility of monetary governance, and the ability to absorb shocks without policy reversals.

Market depth remains the most formidable barrier. The US Treasury market exceeds $25 trillion in outstanding securities, offering unmatched liquidity and a risk-free benchmark for pricing across maturities. The euro area bond market is fragmented; Japan’s is large but inward-looking; China’s remains partially closed to foreign investors. Until another jurisdiction can issue safe assets on a comparable scale — and maintain investor confidence during crises — the dollar’s funding role will endure.

Credibility and rule of law are equally important. Reserve currencies require not only economic heft but institutional predictability. Investors and central banks must trust that contracts will be honored and that monetary authorities will not impose capital controls or arbitrary revaluations. The Federal Reserve’s transparency, while imperfect, still far exceeds that of most central banks. The European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan enjoy similar credibility, but their currencies lack the global liquidity that amplifies the dollar’s role.

Shock absorption is the third pillar. The United States can run large external deficits because the rest of the world demands its assets. This “exorbitant privilege” allows Washington to issue debt in its own currency and at lower cost. Alternatives must demonstrate a comparable capacity to provide safe assets during global downturns. So far, none has done so: in every major crisis since 1987 — from the Asian financial crash to the pandemic panic — investors have fled to the dollar.

Political and Institutional Barriers

Economic mechanics alone do not explain monetary hegemony. The political and institutional context is equally decisive. Reserve currencies rest on alliances, trade networks, and shared norms. The postwar dollar order was as much a geopolitical arrangement as a financial one: the Marshall Plan, NATO, and the global reach of US corporations bound economic and strategic interests together.

For dedollarization to succeed, alternative systems must replicate some version of this political cohesion. The euro’s early ambitions faltered in part because of governance fragmentation within the European Union. The renminbi’s rise is limited by China’s capital controls and concerns over state intervention. The BRICS group, for all its diversity, lacks a unified legal or institutional foundation for collective monetary governance.

A key lesson from monetary history is that trust and liquidity reinforce each other. Britain’s pound retained global reserve status long after the UK lost economic preeminence, because the Bank of England’s institutions remained credible. The dollar will likely follow a similar pattern: its network effects and institutional inertia will persist long after the US share of world GDP declines. Dedollarization can reduce exposure at the margin, but supplanting the dollar entirely requires a new consensus on global financial governance that does not yet exist.

Geopolitical Dimensions

Dedollarization is not only an economic phenomenon but a diplomatic one. It is both a symptom and a driver of the shifting geopolitical landscape. For nations like China, Russia, and Iran, reducing dollar exposure is part of a broader strategy to insulate their economies from Western sanctions. For others — India, Brazil, Saudi Arabia — it is a hedging mechanism rather than outright opposition. The unifying theme is a desire for optionality: to ensure that financial sovereignty cannot be revoked by decree from Washington.

This geopolitical diversification mirrors changes in trade geography. South-South trade now accounts for a majority of global commerce by volume, and much of it occurs outside the Western alliance system. The growth of regional development banks, new credit-rating agencies, and alternative messaging networks reflect a gradual diffusion of financial authority. In this sense, continued dedollarization is both cause and consequence of multipolarity.

The political implications for the United States are profound. The dollar’s dominance has long enabled the country to finance deficits cheaply and to project power through sanctions without deploying force. As alternative systems mature, that leverage will diminish. The process will be gradual — decades rather than years — but irreversible once confidence in alternative infrastructure solidifies.

Financial and Macroeconomic Consequences

If dedollarization continues, global finance will undergo several predictable adjustments.

For the United States, a smaller foreign appetite for Treasurys would raise borrowing costs and reduce seigniorage. The Fed would have to consider external balance in its policy calculus more seriously, constraining purely domestic monetary objectives. The dollar’s exchange rate could become more volatile, reflecting a narrower investor base. Over time, a reduced global role might actually strengthen domestic industry by curbing the overvaluation associated with reserve-currency demand — echoing arguments made by economists from Robert Triffin to Barry Eichengreen.

For the rest of the world, diversification could yield both benefits and risks. On the positive side, it would reduce exposure to US policy spillovers and sanctions. On the negative, it could fragment global liquidity, complicating crisis management. The dollar system, for all its inequities, provides a unified mechanism for emergency support via the Federal Reserve’s swap lines. A multipolar system would require new institutions — or coordination among rival blocs — to provide comparable backstops. Without them, financial crises would become more localized but also more frequent.

Implications for Global Governance

A credible dedollarized order would necessitate new multilateral institutions. Existing frameworks — the IMF, World Bank, and Bank for International Settlements — are deeply integrated with dollar finance. If alternative settlement systems proliferate, coordination of exchange rates, capital flows, and liquidity provision will require a parallel architecture. Regional financing arrangements like the Chiang Mai Initiative or the BRICS Contingent Reserve Arrangement offer early prototypes, but their reach remains limited.

Another governance challenge concerns data and transparency. The dollar’s central role allows global regulators to monitor cross-border flows through the US financial system. In a fragmented environment, information asymmetries could increase, making it harder to detect systemic risks or enforce anti-money-laundering standards. Counterintuitively, dedollarization could empower noncompliant jurisdictions and complicate collective oversight.

Technological and Market Innovation

The digitalization of finance may accelerate dedollarization, but it could also re-anchor the dollar if US-based institutions lead the innovation curve.

Stablecoins and tokenized deposits, many of which are dollar-pegged, have already become significant channels for cross-border settlement. If regulated effectively, these instruments could extend the dollar’s reach rather than reduce it. Conversely, if non-dollar stablecoins or multi-CBDC networks gain traction, they could formalize alternative liquidity corridors beyond Washington’s control.

Technological competition therefore intersects with monetary competition. The jurisdictions that establish credible regulatory regimes for digital settlement will shape the next phase of monetary hierarchy. In this sense, dedol-larization is not only a question of geopolitics but of technological governance and standard setting.

Plausible Scenarios for the Coming Decade

To illustrate potential trajectories, three stylized scenarios can be considered:

  1. Gradual Multipolarity (Baseline)

    The dollar remains dominant but loses share incrementally as regional currencies expand their roles. SWIFT remains central, yet interoperable alternatives operate in parallel. US Treasurys stay the main safe asset, though gold and high-grade Asian bonds gain marginal ground. Global trade settlement becomes 70 percent dollar, 20 percent euro, 10 percent other currencies.
  2. Regional Fragmentation (Accelerated Dedollarization)

    Geopolitical blocs consolidate around regional currencies. Energy and commodity trade increasingly shift to yuan and rupee invoicing. Digital payment networks proliferate. The United States retains privileged access to capital but cannot easily enforce sanctions outside its alliance system. Reserve holdings become more diversified, with the dollar share falling near 50 percent.
  3. Crisis-Induced Realignment (Low-Probability Shock)

    A major US fiscal or political crisis — such as a technical default or prolonged government shutdown — triggers a sudden loss of confidence in Treasurys. Central banks diversify aggressively, accelerating the transition to multi-polar reserves. Such an outcome would be highly disruptive, possibly causing a global recession before a new equilibrium emerged.

    Each scenario underscores that dedollarization is path dependent. The pace will be determined by cumulative choices and conditions, rather than any singular event.

6. Implications

Dedollarization is a Process, Not an Event

Dedollarization is not a singular geopolitical rupture, but an incremental process unfolding across several layers of the international system. The world is not heading toward the abrupt collapse of the dollar, but toward a distributed monetary order in which multiple currencies perform specialized functions. In that sense, dedollarization resembles the slow diffusion of technology: adoption proceeds unevenly, shaped by institutional readiness and political will.

Historical precedent supports this view. When the British pound ceded primacy to the US dollar between 1914 and 1945, the transition was slow, contested, and incomplete. Sterling remained a reserve currency well into the 1960s because financial infrastructure and trust networks persisted long after Britain’s economic base eroded. The dollar’s position today is more entrenched than sterling’s was then, benefitting from integrated capital markets, global military alliances, and a deep reservoir of institutional trust. Any change will occur at the margin and over decades, not years.

Structural Persistence and Functional Reallocation

The most likely outcome is functional reallocation rather than outright displacement. Different currencies may assume distinct roles: the dollar as the global liquidity and crisis currency; the euro as a regional funding currency; the yuan as a trade-settlement and commodity currency; and gold or digital tokens as supplementary stores of value. Specialization would reflect comparative advantages — market depth, governance quality, and geopolitical alignment — rather than an ideological rejection of the dollar.

Such a system could prove more resilient in the long run. Diversified reserve holdings reduce concentration risk, and competing payment networks encourage innovation. But they also complicate crisis management. The presence of multiple liquidity providers could produce coordination failures unless clear swap arrangements and policy frameworks are established among major central banks. In this regard, the experience of the pandemic — when the Federal Reserve’s swap lines stabilized global markets — highlights both the indispensability of the dollar and the absence of ready substitutes.

Implications for the United States

For Washington, the challenge will be to manage decline in dominance without triggering a collapse in confidence. The dollar’s role confers three overlapping advantages: seigniorage, policy flexibility, and geopolitical leverage. All are vulnerable to gradual erosion.

First, reduced foreign demand for Treasurys will limit the government’s ability to finance deficits at low cost. Over time, the premium on US debt could rise by 50–100 basis points, increasing already significant debt-service burdens. This adjustment would not be catastrophic but would constrain fiscal policy, especially if interest payments already consume a growing share of federal spending.

Second, the Federal Reserve may have to account for external balance more explicitly. At present, it sets policy almost entirely on domestic conditions, knowing that dollar demand abroad soaks up excess liquidity. A smaller global role would feed back into tighter links between US monetary policy and the domestic yield curve, reducing room for unilateral experimentation.

Third, and most significant, financial sanctions will lose some of their deterrent power. If rivals can settle energy or strategic commodities outside dollar rails, Washington’s capacity to enforce compliance will diminish. Sanctions will still matter within the Western alliance, but their global reach will narrow.

These changes need not spell disaster. A less-dominant dollar could correct distortions that have hurt US manufacturing and exports by keeping the currency persistently overvalued. It could also encourage more prudent fiscal governance once cheap external financing wanes. The United States will remain a central actor in global finance so long as it preserves open markets, strong institutions, and credible monetary policy.

Implications for Emerging and Developing Economies

For emerging markets, dedollarization is both an opportunity and a challenge. On one hand, it offers freedom from imported monetary shocks and from dependence on US liquidity cycles. On the other, it exposes countries to the volatility of less liquid currencies and to governance risks in alternative systems. Successful diversification therefore requires institution-building: credible central banks, sound macro policy, and transparent legal regimes.

Some regional blocs are making progress. The ASEAN Local Currency Settlement initiative has reduced cross-border transaction costs within Southeast Asia. The African Continental Free Trade Area envisions payment integration across the continent. Latin America’s proposed “Sur” unit of account remains embryonic but reflects growing appetite for monetary cooperation. Each step reduces friction in intra-regional trade and cumulatively advances the broader trend toward monetary pluralism.

Technology and the Architecture of the Next System

The digital transformation of money could be the decisive variable in shaping the post-dollar landscape. Central-bank digital currencies, tokenized deposits, and programmable cross-border settlement will determine who controls the plumbing of global finance. If the United States and its allies pioneer open, interoperable systems, the dollar could retain primacy in digital form. If, instead, China and regional coalitions set the standards, the new architecture could bypass US oversight entirely.

Either way, the emergence of distributed-ledger settlement marks a turning point. Monetary power will increasingly reside not in paper notes or reserve balances but in protocol design — the rules and governance embedded in code. The competition over standards for digital identification, privacy, and transaction finality is therefore inseparable from the competition over reserve currencies.

7. Strategic Recommendations

Several policy recommendations follow from this analysis:

  1. For the United States: Focus on macro-stability and fiscal discipline as the ultimate guarantors of dollar credibility. Preserve the rule of law in financial governance; resist politicization of payment systems; and invest in digital infrastructure that extends dollar functionality globally.
  2. For Emerging Markets: Pursue dedollarization pragmatically, balancing autonomy with liquidity access. Strengthen domestic capital markets and regulatory transparency before expanding local-currency settlement.
  3. For International Institutions: Modernize surveillance and crisis-management frameworks to accommodate multipolar liquidity provision. Encourage interoperability among payment systems and ensure that new digital rails meet common compliance standards.
  4. For Investors and Corporations: Recognize that currency diversification is now a structural feature of the landscape. Portfolio strategies should assume a gradual decline in dollar dominance but continued US relevance as a benchmark.

A Transitional Era

The global monetary system is entering a transitional era reminiscent of the 1970s — one of innovation, uncertainty, and competing visions. The difference is that this time the challenge is not inflation or gold convertibility but the diffusion of financial power itself. The institutions created after 1945 were designed for a unipolar world. They will now have to adapt to a polycentric one.

Over the next decade, dedollarization will proceed unevenly. The dollar will remain the currency of last resort during crises, but its monopoly will erode in normal times as alternative systems mature. The endgame is unlikely to be a single successor currency, but a plural equilibrium in which several monetary poles coexist. For policymakers and investors alike, recognizing this evolution early is essential to navigating the turbulence ahead.

8. Closing Reflections: The Shape of the Post-Dollar World

A Slow Erosion, Not a Sudden Collapse

Every major monetary transition in history has followed a long arc rather than a sharp break. The dollar’s trajectory will be no different. Its decline in dominance will occur not through a spectacular crash but through gradual dilution — a slow redistribution of functions across an expanding field of currencies and technologies. The process is already visible in trade, reserves, and payments data: the dollar still dominates, but each year its share edges lower while non-dollar channels gain a little more traction.

The reason is structural. The US currency remains deeply woven into the world’s balance sheets, legal contracts, and risk systems. Unwinding that integration requires decades of replacement and adaptation. Even governments most intent on dedollarization continue to hold dollars as working capital because no other instrument offers comparable liquidity. The immediate future, therefore, is one of coexistence: an American core surrounded by a widening periphery of alternatives.

Three Emerging Layers of Global Money

The evolving system can be described in three layers.

  1. The Dollar Core

    This remains the base of global liquidity. Treasurys, US bank deposits, and dollar-denominated repo markets will continue to anchor financial collateral and emergency lending. In crises, investors will still sprint toward the dollar because its depth and legal protections remain unmatched.
  2. The Regional Periphery

    Around the core, regional hubs — Europe, China, the Gulf, and parts of Asia — are building their own ecosystems of trade settlement and liquidity. Each will rely partly on its own currency and partly on digital or commodity-linked instruments. These hubs will interact with the core through swap lines and bridge institutions, producing a network of overlapping monetary zones rather than a single hierarchy.
  3. The Technological Frontier

    Beyond both core and periphery lies the digital realm: CBDCs, tokenized securities, and programmable settlement rails. Here, national currencies blend with code. Whoever controls the standards of interoperability, identity, and settlement finality will exercise a new form of monetary power. The contest for digital standards may determine the hierarchy of the next half-century.

    This layered configuration — core, periphery, frontier — captures how dedollarization will manifest in practice. The system’s center will remain American for the foreseeable future, but its outer rings will increasingly operate on different logics and under different authorities.

Winners and Losers in a Multipolar Order

Winners will include countries that can issue credible local-currency assets and build domestic financial markets deep enough to attract international participation. The euro area, if it resolves its fiscal fragmentation, could reclaim influence; China will gain leverage in commodity trade; and middle-income economies able to intermediate between blocs — India, Indonesia, Brazil — will enjoy new flexibility.

Losers will be those reliant on single-channel access to dollar liquidity. Economies with weak institutions or heavy dollar debt will face higher funding costs and volatility as the global system fragments. The poorest countries, which depend on multilateral support denominated in dollars, may find financing more expensive unless new regional safety nets emerge.

For the United States, the outcome will be mixed. Reduced global demand for Treasurys could raise borrowing costs but also temper chronic overvaluation of the dollar, benefiting exporters. The loss of automatic privilege may even prove salutary if it disciplines fiscal behavior and restores a balance between domestic production and consumption.

The Role of Policy Choices

Nothing about dedollarization is inevitable. Policy can accelerate or retard the process. The United States could preserve much of its monetary leadership by addressing the fiscal trajectory, maintaining open capital markets, and avoiding the overt politicization of its financial system. A reputation for fairness and predictability will remain the dollar’s greatest asset.

Conversely, if Washington continues to weaponize financial infrastructure or neglects macro discipline, it will hasten the very diversification it seeks to prevent. The global reaction to the freezing of Russian reserves was instructive: even allies quietly questioned whether similar measures could someday be turned against them. Restoring the perception of neutrality is therefore a strategic imperative.

Emerging markets face their own choices. They must weigh the allure of autonomy against the benefits of integration. Many will find that selective dedollarization — reducing exposure without abandoning dollar liquidity altogether — offers the best balance between sovereignty and stability.

What Could Accelerate Change

Two catalysts could compress the timeline:

  1. A US Fiscal or Political Shock

    A crisis of governance — prolonged debt-ceiling standoff, technical default, or inflationary spiral — would shake confidence in Treasurys and accelerate diversification. Even a temporary disruption in US payment capacity could prompt reserve managers to seek insurance elsewhere.
  2. Technological Leapfrogging

    If a credible multi-CBDC network demonstrates efficiency, privacy, and legal reliability, adoption could expand rapidly, especially in commodity trade. A successful pilot among BRICS or Asian central banks could convert political intent into operational reality within a few years.

    Neither scenario is inevitable, but both illustrate how fragility in US governance or complacency in innovation could shorten the long glide path of dedollarization into a more abrupt transition. The coming decades will likely resemble the late nineteenth century — a period of overlapping standards, competing empires, and rapid technological change. The countries that built and governed those networks set the rules of globalization. The same principle will apply in the digital age.

Final Synthesis

To summarize the argument developed throughout this white paper:

  1. The dollar’s dominance arose from unique postwar circumstances — US economic scale, institutional credibility, and the network effects of liquidity.
  2. Current challenges stem from fiscal overextension, the politicization of finance, and the emergence of credible technological alternatives.
  3. Dedollarization efforts fall into four main strategies: local-currency settlement, alternative payment networks, reserve diversification, and digital-asset innovation.
  4. Feasibility depends on the depth of markets, the credibility of governance, and geopolitical alignment. None alone can displace the dollar, but together they can dilute its monopoly.
  5. The likely outcome is a multipolar, functionally differentiated system in which several currencies share global roles.

The dollar’s story is therefore not ending — it is evolving. Its supremacy will fade not through defeat but through diffusion, as the world’s financial architecture becomes more distributed, technologically diverse, and regionally balanced.

The age of a single global reserve currency is likely drawing to a close. What replaces it will not be chaos but complexity: a web of interlocking monetary networks reflecting the multipolar reality of twenty-first-century power. The challenge is not to resist dedollarization but to manage it wisely — to ensure that as monetary power decentralizes, financial stability and the open flow of trade survive the transition. In that balance lies the future of global prosperity.

References

Atlantic Council. Dollar Dominance Monitor. 2024. Atlantic Council, https:// www.atlanticcouncil.org/programs/geoeconomics-center/dollar-domi-nance-monitor/.

Atlantic Council and World Gold Council. DollarDominance Monitor. 2024, https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/programs/geoeconomics-center/dollar-dom-inance-monitor/.

“BRICS Summit Ended with No New Currency and All Five Members Issuing Differing and Contradictory Commentary on De-dollarization.” Business Insider Markets, 28 Aug. 2023, https://markets.businessinsider.com/news/ currencies/dedollarization-china-india-russia-leaders-brics-summit-yuan-ru-pee-2023-8.

Earle, Peter C. “De-dollarization Has Begun.” American Institute for Economic Research, 11 Apr. 2024, https://thedailyeconomy.org/article/de-dol-larization-has-begun/.

Earle, Peter C. 2024. “Book Review: ‘Paper Soldiers: How the Weaponization of the Dollar Changed the World Order.’” Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics 27 (3): 109–13.

European Parliament. Expansion of BRICS: A Quest for Greater Global Influence? 15 Mar. 2024, https://www.europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/ BRIE/2024/760368/EPRS_BRI(2024)760368_EN.pdf.

Gleason, Stefan. “BRICS Countries Planning New Gold-Backed Currency.” Money Metals News Service, 10 July 2023, https://www.moneymetals. com/news/2023/07/10/brics-countries-planning-new-gold-backed-curren-cy-002774.

International Monetary Fund. Annual Report on Exchange Arrangements and Exchange Restrictions. 26 July 2023, https://doi. org/10.5089/9798400235269.012.

International Monetary Fund. Currency Composition of Official Foreign Exchange Reserves (COFER). 27 Sept. 2024, https://data.imf.org/?sk=e6a5f467-c14b-4aa8-9f6d-5a09ec4e62a4.

Nikoladze, Maia, and Mrugank Bhusari. “Russia and China Have Been Teaming Up to Reduce Reliance on the Dollar.” Atlantic Council, 22 Feb. 2023, https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/new-atlanticist/russia-and-china-have-been-teaming-up-to-reduce-reliance-on-the-dollar-heres-how-its-going/.

Shastry, Vasuki. “Without a Viable Alternative, Dollar Dominance Upsets Emerging Markets.” Forbes, 11 May 2023, https://www.forbes.com/sites/va-sukishastry/2023/05/11/without-a-viable-alternative-dollar-dominance-up-sets-emerging-markets/.

Sullivan, Joe. “A BRICS Currency Could Shake the Dollar’s Dominance: De-dollarization’s Moment Might Finally Be Here.” Foreign Policy, 24 Apr. 2023, https://foreignpolicy.com/2023/04/24/brics-currency-end-dollar-dom-inance-united-states-russia-china/.

World Gold Council. Gold Reserves by Country. 2024, https://www.gold.org/ goldhub/data/gold-reserves-by-country.


Government is expensive, and America is running up the bill to the tune of $40 trillion. Every April, Americans are reminded of this basic truth. On April 15, the IRS forces citizens to confront what the government takes directly from their income. But taxation is only one way Washington finances itself. It also borrows on a massive scale and operates within an inflationary monetary environment that quietly erodes the purchasing power of the dollar. To understand America’s public finances and the broader health, or malaise, of the republic, one must look at taxes, borrowing, and inflation.

Taxes

The first way America pays for government is the most obvious: taxation. By the time a worker’s paycheck reaches his bank account, the government has already taken several bites. Federal income taxes and payroll taxes reduce what he keeps, while the employer paying those wages has already borne taxes and compliance costs of its own. In many states, state income taxes take another share, and in some localities, city or county taxes do as well. What remains does not escape further taxation for long. Once disposable income is spent, it is taxed again through sales taxes, excise taxes, and fees folded into the price of ordinary goods and services.

The burden is not just layered; it is substantial. According to the Tax Foundation, federal, state, and local taxes claim 39.0 percent of the income of a median two-income family. In addition, the organization reports that the average combined state and local sales tax rate was 7.52 percent as of July 1, 2025, while average state and local tax collections amounted to $7,109 per person. Since Liberation Day, the additional tax on consumption from current US tariff policy is estimated at about $600 per household in 2026.

In other words, taxation does not arrive in a single moment. It follows income from the moment it is earned to the moment it is spent. Yet the conversation over taxes too often stops at what Frédéric Bastiat would have called ‘the seen.’ The visible side of taxation is the public service funded, the road repaired, and the school maintained. But Bastiat’s broken window lesson reminds us that what is visible is not the whole story. Before admiring what taxes build, one should ask what gets broken on the other side of the window.

That skepticism points to Bastiat’s unseen side of taxation: the private consumption forgone, the savings never accumulated, the investment never made, and the business never expanded because resources were first claimed by the state. An AP-NORC poll found that about two-thirds of Americans said their federal income taxes, state sales taxes, and local property taxes were too high, while most also said federal income taxes and local property taxes were unfair. 

Borrowing

The second way America pays for government is through borrowing. If taxation is the visible bill presented to the public today, debt is the bill postponed until tomorrow. Public choice economics helps explain why this method is so politically attractive. Elected officials seek reelection, and few build careers on openly imposing higher taxes. Borrowing lets them preserve the benefits of spending while muting the immediate pain. The cost is not removed, only transferred. As James Buchanan argued in Public Principles of Public Debt, “The primary real burden of a public debt is shifted to future generations.” That is precisely what makes debt so tempting in democratic politics. Present officeholders get the benefit of spending, while later taxpayers, often not yet born, inherit the obligation.

Treasury reports that, as of February 2026, federal debt service cost $520 billion in fiscal year 2026, equal to 17 percent of federal spending to date. On current projections, interest will be the third-largest item in the federal budget this year, behind only Social Security and Medicare, and even larger than defense spending. Borrowing, in other words, is no longer just a way to postpone costs. It has become one of the government’s largest expenses in its own right.

To whom does the United States owe this money? Primarily to whoever is willing to hold Treasury securities. Treasury data show that, in 2026, the national debt consists of about $31.19 trillion in debt held by the public and about $5.34 trillion in intragovernmental holdings. Debt held by the public is owed to investors outside the federal government, while intragovernmental holdings are Treasury securities held by government trust funds and similar federal accounts.

In practice, this means the United States borrows by issuing Treasury bills, bonds, TIPS, and related securities to a wide range of investors, including pension funds, banks, foreign governments, and foreign private investors. On the foreign side alone, Treasury’s January 2026 data show Japan holding about $1.225 trillion in US Treasury securities, the United Kingdom about $895.3 billion, and mainland China about $694.4 billion. 

These are not marginal economies. IMF figures show that China accounts for about 16.7 percent of world GDP, Japan about 3.6 percent, and the United Kingdom about 3.4 percent. Together, they account for roughly 23.7 percent of world output, underscoring a broader point: global demand for US debt remains strong, and with it the dollar’s central place in the international monetary system.

Inflation

The third way America pays for government is through inflation, and that means through the debasement of money itself. The Federal Reserve explicitly seeks inflation at the rate of 2 percent over the longer run. But even this supposedly managed erosion is currently running above the Fed’s own target. BEA data show headline PCE inflation at 2.8 percent year over year in January 2026. In other words, the dollar is not merely designed to lose purchasing power gradually; at present, it is losing value faster than even the Fed says it should.

Research highlighted by MIT Sloan suggests that the recent inflation surge was not merely bad luck or a supply-side accident. Federal spending was the single largest contributor to the 2022 inflation spike, accounting for 42 percent of inflation that year. Nor was the monetary response neutral. According to FRED, using M2 as a broad measure of money, the money supply rose from about $15.5 trillion in February 2020 to about $22.7 trillion in February 2026, an increase of roughly $7.2 trillion. That increase was equal to about 46 percent of the pre-2020 money stock.

That loss of purchasing power is the practical meaning of currency debasement. BLS historical CPI data show an annual average CPI of roughly 24 in 1950 and about 300 in 2023. Put differently, a dollar from 1950 retained only a small fraction of its former purchasing power by 2023, implying a loss of more than 90 percent. What is often described as modest, well-managed inflation becomes, when compounded over generations, a sweeping destruction of money’s real value.

That would be easier to defend if the institution entrusted with monetary stability had a compelling long-run record. AIER’s own Thomas Hogan argues that US economic performance “has not generally improved under the Federal Reserve.” In other words, a central bank established to stabilize money and credit has instead presided over a long decline in the purchasing power of the dollar.

But the deeper problem is one of hubris. The Federal Open Market Committee sets the target range for the federal funds rate, and the Fed explains that changes in that target affect other interest rates and broader financial conditions. One of the most important prices in the economy is therefore not discovered in a market but administered by a committee.

From a Hayekian perspective, that should be deeply troubling. Interest rates are not just policy levers for experts; they are prices that coordinate time, risk, saving, and investment across millions of people. To place them under the discretion of a board is to assume that a small group can improve upon the information generated by the market process itself. The issue is not merely that the Fed sometimes gets interest rates wrong. It is that the institution rests on the conceit that such prices can be centrally managed at all.

Benjamin Franklin, whose image still rests on the hundred-dollar bill, reportedly answered a question outside the Constitutional Convention in 1787 with a lasting warning: “A republic, if you can keep it.” To keep it requires more than patriotic language and constitutional reverence. It requires fiscal honesty. It requires that the burden of government be made visible rather than deferred, diluted, or disguised. A republic is not kept by obscuring its price, but by confronting it honestly.

To understand the American tax code, you first need to understand a theory developed while watching liquor regulations in the American South. Economist Bruce Yandle noticed that two groups supported Sunday alcohol bans: Baptist ministers, who wanted to protect communities from drinking, and bootleggers, who wanted to eliminate their competition for a day. The two groups had different motives, but pushed for the same policy. Yandle called this dynamic “bootleggers and Baptists,” and it helps explain nearly every major provision in the US tax code.

The pattern is straightforward. A well-connected industry or interest group seeks a tax carveout. On its own, that effort would likely face public resistance. So, it aligns with a broader, more publicly acceptable goal, often championed by genuine reformers. The policy passes under that moral banner, and the administrative state, Treasury officials, IRS regulators, and rulemaking bodies translate it into law that shapes generations of American wealth.

Just to be clear, the bootleggers are not the villains of this story. They’re rational actors pursuing their interests through legal means. Groups can act as bootleggers in some contexts and Baptists in others, each believing their position serves a broader good. The broader question is whether the policies they shape keep resources in private hands where they’re used more efficiently than government spending.

The four largest tax expenditures in the federal code illustrate this dynamic clearly. Together, they “cost” the Treasury over $1 trillion annually and touch virtually every American taxpayer. Their benefits, however, do not flow equally, and that gap almost always comes down to the same thing: complexity.

Retirement Accounts: $397 Billion

The case for tax-advantaged retirement savings is intuitive. Encouraging individuals to save reduces dependence on public programs and strengthens long-term financial security. That was the Baptist argument behind 401(k)s, IRAs, and related plans.

The financial services industry recognized a parallel opportunity. Tax-deferred accounts would channel trillions of dollars into managed investment products, generating steady fees over decades. Firms lobbied heavily to expand and refine these vehicles, while the administrative state built a dense regulatory framework governing contribution limits, eligibility, and withdrawals.

Both sides achieved their goals. Retirement accounts are among the most effective wealth-building tools available, yet their benefits scale with knowledge and income. A middle-income worker may reduce their tax bill modestly while building savings. But a high-income professional, using more complex structures like Simplified Employee Pension-IRAs or defined benefit plans, can shield far larger sums. The policy is broadly beneficial, but its full advantages are unevenly realized.

Capital Gains: $304 Billion

Preferential tax rates on capital gains were justified as a way to encourage long-term investment and economic growth. Lower rates increase the after-tax return on investment, making it more attractive to deploy capital rather than hold it idle. 

High-income households earn a larger share of their income from investments rather than wages, so they capture a disproportionate share of this tax advantage. While small investors benefit from lower capital gains rates, those whose income is primarily structured around capital gains benefit far more. The principle behind the policy is sound, but its design amplifies how unevenly those benefits are distributed.

Employer Health Insurance Exclusion: $296 Billion

The exclusion of employer-provided health insurance from taxable income originated in the 1940s and was formalized in 1954. The policy aimed to expand access to healthcare by encouraging employers to offer coverage.

Labor unions and public health advocates supported the policy as a way to provide broad, stable coverage. Employers and insurers supported it because it strengthened the employer-based system and expanded their market. Its benefits rise with income because higher earners face higher marginal tax rates and often receive more generous plans. A worker with basic coverage receives a modest tax benefit. An executive with a comprehensive plan receives a much larger one.

Millions of Americans receive employer-sponsored coverage with favorable tax treatment. The tradeoff is that the system remains complex and uneven.

Imputed Rental Income: $157 Billion

One of the least visible but most consequential provisions involves homeownership. When you own your home, you effectively consume housing services without paying rent to another party. That implicit benefit is not taxed. The justification rests on the value of homeownership, stable communities, long-term investment, and wealth accumulation.

Real estate developers and lenders supported policies that made ownership more attractive, expanding their market in the process. The result is a substantial subsidy. A homeowner with a modest property receives a small implicit benefit. A homeowner with a high-value property receives a much larger one.

Where Policy Meets Complexity

Each of these provisions was designed to advance widely supported goals, and in many cases, they work. Retirement savings increase, investment flows, healthcare coverage expands, and homeownership grows. But the complexity required to deliver these outcomes creates a second layer of inequality. Americans spend an estimated 7.1 billion hours and $464 billion each year complying with the tax code. 

For the average filer, that amounts to more than a dozen hours and hundreds of dollars spent navigating rules, eligibility, and strategies to minimize liability.

Those who understand the system capture far more of its benefits, while others leave money on the table. The Baptists shaped the purpose, the bootleggers shaped the structure, and the administrative state ensured the details would reward those who know where to look. 

The benefits are real, and the policies are often defensible, but access to them is far from equal.

AIER’s proprietary Everyday Price Index (EPI) vaulted 2.5 percent to 307.4 in March 2026, its second-largest monthly increase back to January 2020 (the first was an increase of 2.9 percent in March 2022). Of the 24 price categories that compose the EPI, fourteen rose, two were unchanged, and eight declined. Unsurprisingly, the largest jumps in price occurred in motor fuel, housing fuels and utilities, and food away from home. Prescription drugs, internet services, and food at home declined the most. (The juxtaposition of price changes in the food away from home versus food at home categories likely reflects the gasoline pass-through of food delivery service costs.)

AIER Everyday Price Index vs. US Consumer Price Index (NSA, 1987 = 100)

(Source: Bloomberg Finance, LP)

The US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) released Consumer Price Index (CPI) data for March 2026 on April 10, 2026. Headline inflation rose 0.9 percent over the past month, meeting survey expectations. Core inflation rose 0.2 percent, also meeting forecasts.

March 2026 US CPI headline and core month-over-month (2016 – present)

(Source: Bloomberg Finance, LP)

Consumer prices in March showed a mixed pattern, with food prices flat overall after February’s 0.4 percent gain, as grocery prices slipped 0.2 percent even while restaurant prices continued to edge higher. Within food at home, most major categories softened, led by a 0.6 percent decline in meats, poultry, fish, and eggs — helped by a 3.4 percent drop in egg prices — while cereals, dairy, and nonalcoholic beverages also moved lower; the main exception was fruits and vegetables, which rose 1.0 percent. The dominant story, however, was energy, which surged 10.9 percent on the month, its sharpest increase since 2005, driven by a record 21.2 percent jump in gasoline prices and a 30.7 percent spike in fuel oil, though natural gas prices bucked the trend with a slight decline. 

Core inflation, excluding food and energy, remained comparatively subdued at 0.2 percent, matching February’s pace and suggesting that the broader inflation impulse outside commodities remained largely contained. Housing-related costs continued their steady upward march, with shelter and owners’ equivalent rent each rising 0.3 percent, while rent itself increased 0.2 percent. Several travel- and consumer-sensitive categories also advanced, including airline fares, up 2.7 percent, apparel, up 1.0 percent, and education, up 0.3 percent, indicating persistent service-sector firmness. Offsetting those gains were declines in medical care, especially prescription drugs, along with lower prices for used vehicles and personal care goods. Taken together, the March report points to an inflation profile dominated by a commodity-driven energy shock layered atop still-firm but relatively moderate core and shelter pressures.

On the year-over-year side, the March 2026 headline CPI jumped to 3.3 percent from 2.4 percent the prior month, slightly less than the 3.4 percent predicted. Core prices, which strip out the more volatile food and energy components, advanced 2.6 percent over the same period versus the 2.7 percent survey expectation.

March 2026 US CPI headline and core year-over-year (2016 – present)

(Source: Bloomberg Finance, LP)

From March 2025 through March 2026, inflation remained broad but uneven across major consumer categories. Grocery prices rose 1.9 percent overall and restaurant prices climbed a stronger 3.8 percent. Within food at home, the largest annual gains came from nonalcoholic beverages, up 4.7 percent, fruits and vegetables, up 4.0 percent, and the “other food at home” category, which increased 2.9 percent, while cereals and bakery products posted a more modest 2.1 percent rise. Offsetting those gains were declines in dairy products, down 1.6 percent, and in meats, poultry, fish, and eggs, which slipped 0.9 percent from a year earlier. Energy remained one of the strongest inflation drivers, advancing 12.5 percent year over year, led by an 18.9 percent jump in gasoline prices, alongside notable increases in electricity and natural gas costs. 

Excluding food and energy, core consumer prices rose 2.6 percent over the year, indicating that underlying inflation pressures remained present but far less dramatic than in the commodity-sensitive categories. Shelter costs continued to provide a steady source of upward pressure, increasing 3.0 percent over the past year and reinforcing the persistence of services-related inflation. Other areas showing meaningful annual gains included medical care, household furnishings, recreation, and especially airline fares, which surged 14.9 percent. Taken together, the annual data suggest an inflation environment shaped by still-elevated energy costs, firm service-sector pricing, and selective food price strength, even as some grocery categories offered consumers modest relief.

The March CPI report was, above all, the first clear inflation print to show the economic effects of the Iran war filtering directly into household prices. The most immediate transmission channel was energy, where the jump in oil prices rapidly fed into gasoline and related fuel costs, pushing the headline reading markedly higher and dominating the public perception of the report. This was less a story of generalized demand pressure than of a geopolitical commodity shock suddenly colliding with the consumer economy. In that sense, March’s inflation picture looked more like an external supply disturbance than the kind of broad-based overheating that typically worries central banks most.

Beneath that headline surge, however, the underlying inflation structure remained comparatively calm. Grocery prices were mixed to softer, several major goods categories showed little evidence of renewed pricing pressure, and some discretionary consumer areas even appeared to weaken as households began adjusting to higher costs at the pump. Services inflation, while still firm in key shelter-related components, generally moderated, suggesting that the oil shock had not yet meaningfully spread into the wider service economy. The only obvious early spillover was in travel-sensitive categories such as airfares, where higher jet-fuel costs likely began feeding through almost immediately.

Taken together, the report reads as the opening stage of an energy-led inflation episode rather than a true reacceleration of the broader price trend. The phenomenology is important: consumers are first encountering the shock in the most visible and psychologically powerful places — gas stations, travel, and transportation-linked expenses — while the rest of the basket remains relativelys stable. That distinction matters where policy is concerned, as it gives the Federal Reserve room to interpret the move as a temporary oil-driven disruption rather than evidence that inflation is becoming entrenched again. The next few reports will determine whether this remains a contained geopolitical price shock or evolves into something more diffuse across an already-strained household cost landscape.

Housing affordability might be the defining economic crisis facing Americans today. Prices have surged  in recent years, and the country is short millions of homes.

There are both obvious and subtle harms created by the housing shortage. When housing prices rise (as compared to incomes) people have less money left over for other goods and services. Others might be unable to afford housing at all, increasing homelessness. Productivity slows because workers find it difficult to afford living in high-productivity cities. And fertility rates often fall as high housing costs cause families to put off or, even avoid, having children.

Naturally, people are looking to hold someone responsible for the high cost of housing. Increasingly, both the left and the right are placing blame on institutional investors — private equity firms and large corporations that buy residential properties. The Senate recently voted to advance the 21st Century Road to Housing Act, which would, among other things, ban institutional investors from buying single-family homes.

At first glance, the argument that institutional investors are to blame for the housing crisis has intuitive appeal. Large corporations can bid up the price of housing, placing it out of reach of ordinary American families. Consequently, families who may otherwise have bought a home will turn to renting or informal arrangements.

At second glance, however, it becomes clear that this diagnosis of the housing shortage is inaccurate. Most notably, institutional investors simply do not account for most home purchases; they account for  between one and two percent of the nation’s single-family housing stock and roughly three percent of single-family rental properties. In most markets, the overwhelming majority of homes are still bought by individuals. Even in dense metropolitan areas where corporate ownership has grown, institutional investors represent no more than three percent of homes in any housing market.

Plus, there are material advantages to renting compared to buying a home. When you rent, you have the flexibility to move for a better job without worrying about selling into a bad market, avoiding the costs of a massive down payment and ongoing repairs. You also don’t have to tie up a lot of wealth in a single asset whose value depends on one neighborhood and one local market.

But the core objection to banning institutional investors is that it does nothing to address the deeper problem: the lack of sufficient homes to meet demand. To understand why we don’t have enough homes, it helps to step back and think about how markets normally work.

Suppose demand for bread suddenly surges. Maybe a city’s population grows quickly, or a new gluten-heavy diet sweeps the nation. Whatever the reason, people are buying more bread than before. As a result, the price of bread rises. In turn, profit-driven bakers realize that there’s a lot of money to be made by baking more. So they produce more bread, pushing its price back down.

Rising prices encourage producers to produce more of a good, eventually making it more affordable. This is well-known. So why aren’t we seeing this play out in the housing market? If lots of people want to live in a particular city — say, because the jobs pay well or the schools are good — housing prices will initially rise. But you’d expect those higher prices to incentivize developers to build more housing, just as higher bread prices incentivize bakers to bake more bread. As more housing is built, the increase in supply should bring prices back down.

The reason why we don’t see developers building more housing in response to higher prices isn’t because they’re not interested in making more money. Rather, it’s because their ability to build is heavily restricted in much of the United States. For instance, large portions of many cities are zoned exclusively for single-family homes. Apartment buildings are prohibited in areas where developers might want to build them. Even when building is permitted, lengthy approval processes can delay projects for years. In San Francisco, it takes an average of 523 days to secure permits for a housing project. In New York, a lawsuit challenging the 2018 Inwood rezoning — intended to allow roughly 1,800 new housing units — held up the first project in the area for approximately three years before it was able to secure final approvals. And height limits, parking requirements, and other regulations can also make construction prohibitively expensive. Recent analysis estimates compliance and fees comprise 24 percent of new home prices.

In short, the root of the problem isn’t primarily increased demand for housing, though demand pressure is present. Rather, the problem is government-imposed restrictions that make it difficult, if not impossible, to adequately increase supply in response. Consequently, prices rise and stay high. Even if every institutional investor disappeared tomorrow, the housing shortage would remain.

So why do institutional investors take the blame for the housing crisis if they’re not the ones responsible? One possibility is that it’s simply easier to fault a visible, identifiable actor than a set of impersonal and poorly designed rules. 

“The reason so many people misunderstand so many issues is not that these issues are so complex,” wrote the maverick economist Thomas Sowell, “but that people do not want a factual or analytical explanation that leaves them emotionally unsatisfied. They want villains to hate and heroes to cheer, and they don’t want explanations that fail to give them that.” 

When people see harm being done, they want to blame someone for doing it. Large institutional investors are concrete agents, easy to name and criticize, whereas zoning restrictions and permitting delays are more diffuse and intangible.

At the same time, there’s a powerful intuition that it’s unfair that institutional investors can buy residential properties. It seems wrong that large corporations can outcompete ordinary buyers for homes. But this intuition is misleading. In a well-functioning market, being outbid by a wealthier buyer is not itself a problem, because supply expands in response. (A billionaire could easily outbid me for a particular loaf of bread, but that’s fine because he’ll induce bakers to bake more). The real issue in housing is not that some buyers have deeper pockets, but that the market is constrained in ways that prevent new supply from being built (bread being baked) when demand rises.

On the bright side, the solution is clear enough: make it easier to build more housing. Government officials should relax zoning restrictions that prohibit high-density housing and simplify approval processes that can delay projects for years. If these reforms were to happen, the same basic mechanism that works to reduce prices in countless other markets will work in housing as well. Until we remove the barriers that prevent builders from building, housing will remain unaffordable. Banning institutional investors might feel satisfying, but it won’t do much good.

There has never been a time when more people had an “excuse” for being rude at an airport.

During the recent TSA government shutdown, some airports, including Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson Airport and Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport, experienced screening lines that on some days reached more than six hours.

During the showdown, my wife and I flew home through Atlanta. Thanks to a real-time Reddit thread, we found the fastest line and didn’t encounter anything close to a six-hour wait.

While no one was happy, travelers accepted their plight stoically and civilly.

Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson is the busiest airport in the world, handling close to 300,000 passengers daily. A miraculous mixture of cooperation and specialization makes that possible. Most of the over 2,000 arrivals and departures are on time. A wide variety of food choices are available while you wait, and the purposeful faces of humanity hustle past each other, with no one being jostled.

Civility was the order of the day. Despite the hardships at the airport, only occasional miscreants tried to cut in line. Few acted like entitled boors.

F.A. Hayek explained how a healthy society functions when individuals submit to the “discipline of abstract rules.” These rules, which we may not even be able to articulate, create an environment where people can form expectations and cooperate with others.

Even when meeting strangers, we rely on shared abstract rules. Hayek explored how, when traveling to another part of our own country, “Though we have never before seen the people… their modes of conduct and their moral and aesthetic values will be familiar to us.”

Civility is a pillar of freedom. Hayek warned, “Coercion can probably only be kept to a minimum in a society where conventions and tradition have made the behavior of man to a large extent predictable.”

In totalitarian societies, order is accepted as the product of a “deliberate arrangement” and, in Hayek’s words, “must rest on a relation of command and obedience.”

In a tribal society, norms of honesty and human regard don’t apply to those outside the tribe. Without coercion, people would not remain civil for long while standing in line with strangers for six hours at an airport.

As political tribalism grows, norms of mutual regard that make shared life possible shrink. Seeing others as objects that serve our ends overtakes the mindset of seeing people as real as we are.

What will happen in America as us-versus-them tribalism grows? One poll showed that 80 percent of college students would not room with someone who voted differently from them. 

A crisis of civility is also a crisis of freedom. Is a crisis of civility coming our way? 

What Adam Smith Understood

Adam Smith opened The Theory of Moral Sentiments with a challenge to beliefs some hold about human nature. However selfish we suppose people to be, he wrote, there are “some principles in his nature, which interest him in the fortune of others, and render their happiness necessary to him, though he derives nothing from it except the pleasure of seeing it.”

Activating empathy requires a disciplined willingness to see the world from somewhere other than the center of our own concerns.

Smith’s mechanism for this was the “impartial spectator” — that internalized judge we can learn to consult, who evaluates our conduct not from the vantage of our own interests but from the position of a disinterested observer. “We can never survey our own sentiments and motives,” Smith explained. He continued, “We can never form any judgment concerning them, unless we remove ourselves, as it were, from our own natural station, and endeavour to view them as at a certain distance from us.”

To maintain freedom, the inner work of civility is required.

Smith understood what was at stake if we failed to do this work. “Society,” he noted, “cannot subsist among those who are at all times ready to hurt and injure one another.”

Justice [not injuring others], he argued, is “the main pillar that upholds the whole edifice.” Remove it, and “the great, the immense fabric of human society… must in a moment crumble into atoms.” But justice does not generate itself. It depends on habits of mutual regard, whose automatic responses toward strangers carry at least the minimum of respect that social life requires.

Civilization progresses or regresses, Smith believed, depending on our adherence to those habits and our willingness to tame what he called “the great division of our affections” — the selfish side that, left unchecked, will always treat other people as props in one’s own story of me.

At the airport, the number of people thinking, “Don’t you know how important I am?” is still largely limited to members of Congress.

Civility Is Not Politeness

Most of us use “manners” and “civility” as though they mean the same thing. Alexandra Hudson wants us to understand what that confusion is costing us.

In The Soul of Civility, Hudson draws a clear line between the two. 

Civility is something deeper than manners. Drawing on the work of philosopher Martin Buber, Hudson sees it as a disposition to see other human beings inherently worthy of respect. Manners, she writes, are “the form, the technique, of an act, but civility is more.” Without the inner disposition, politeness is a performance. With it, even blunt speech and action can remain genuinely civil. 

A poll shows that 80 percent of college students self-censor out of fear of offending. Freedom is not maintained by people fitting in.

Civility—not agreement—is what we owe one another as participants in a shared society. With civility, we recognize that the person across from us — in the TSA line, in the comment section, in the meeting room — is a genuine human being and not an obstacle, irrelevant, or merely a means to our end.

When we fail to make that recognition habitual, we reveal what Adam Smith understood: Social fabric is far more fragile than we imagine and would tear without our everyday moral exertions.

Hudson puts it plainly. Civility “promotes social and political freedom by empowering us to keep the expressions of our baser, self-interested instincts in check instead of relying on external forces, such as government mandates, to do so.”

Habits of self-governance are demonstrated by the small daily acts of deference, patience, and mutual recognition. Authoritarianism and totalitarianism arise when self-governance weakens and is replaced by compliance.

With precision, Hudson identifies the root of the problem: The “outsized self-love of human beings continues to be the preeminent threat to social concord today.” The antidote to that self-love is not a regulation. It is civility “tempering our self-love out of respect for others, but also so that our social natures can flourish.”

We can stand in a TSA line, seething at the traveler in front of us who is struggling to find their boarding pass. Yet, despite an external polite performance, our every sigh makes it obvious that we regard this fellow traveler as an obstacle.

The alternative is to recognize that he is probably as stressed as we are and as likely to see everyone else as the problem. We can, in Smith’s language, view the scene from a distance. From that distance, our irritation becomes harder to justify, and the humanity of the fellow traveler harder to ignore.

It is in those smallest of daily encounters that civility is strengthened, and freedom is renewed.

Inflation surged in March, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) reported today. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 0.9 percent last month — triple February’s 0.3 percent pace and the largest monthly increase since early in the pandemic. On a year-over-year basis, headline inflation jumped to 3.3 percent from 2.4 percent, reversing months of steady disinflation in a single report.

But strip out food and energy, and the picture looks entirely different. Core inflation rose just 0.2 percent in March, unchanged from February. Year-over-year, it edged up only slightly to 2.6 percent. In other words, the broad price pressures that keep Fed officials up at night barely moved.

The culprit is no mystery: energy. The energy index surged 10.9 percent in March — the largest monthly increase since September 2005 — and gasoline prices jumped 21.2 percent, a record monthly increase, as the conflict with Iran and the disruption to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz sent oil prices sharply higher. Shelter, which accounts for about a third of the index, rose a modest 0.3 percent. Food prices were flat, with a small decline in groceries offset by a small increase in restaurant prices.

Within core categories, the gains were concentrated in a handful of volatile items: airline fares jumped 2.7 percent, apparel rose 1.0 percent, and transportation services increased 0.6 percent. Working in the other direction, medical care fell 0.2 percent after a 0.5 percent increase in February, personal care declined 0.5 percent, and used cars and trucks dropped 0.4 percent for the second straight month. On balance, the decliners roughly offset the gainers, which is why core inflation held steady.

The three-month trend makes the headline–core divergence even starker. Over January through March, headline CPI averaged 0.47 percent per month — equivalent to a 5.6 percent annualized rate, well above the 3.3 percent year-over-year figure. But virtually all of that acceleration comes from March’s energy spike. Core CPI over the same three months averaged just 0.23 percent per month, or about 2.8 percent annualized — barely above its 2.6 percent year-over-year pace. The underlying trend, in short, has not changed much.

Although the Federal Reserve officially targets the personal consumption expenditures price index (PCEPI) rather than the CPI, the distinction between headline and core is especially important this month. An energy-driven price spike, however dramatic, is not the kind of broad-based inflation that would warrant a policy response. Markets seem to agree: the CME Group’s FedWatch tool now indicates that the Fed will almost certainly hold rates steady at its meeting later this month.

The latest labor market data reinforce the case for patience. March payrolls rebounded by 178,000 after February’s revised 133,000 decline, and the unemployment rate ticked down to 4.3 percent. But perhaps more telling is what happened to wages: year-over-year earnings growth slowed to 3.5 percent, the weakest reading since May 2021. That suggests the nominal spending pressures that drive sustained inflation are easing, even as a geopolitical shock temporarily distorts the headline numbers.

The Fed can afford to look through the March energy spike. Core inflation is well-behaved, wage growth is moderating, and the 0.9 percent headline reading is a reflection of what is happening in the Strait of Hormuz, not in the domestic economy. The real question is whether elevated energy costs linger long enough to raise inflation expectations. If they do, the calculus changes. But for now, the data suggest the Fed should hold steady.

The anniversary of “Liberation Day” came and went on April 2 without much fanfare. The Trump administration’s silence was striking, especially considering all the pomp and circumstance they invested in last year’s lavish unveiling at the White House Rose Garden.

But was it any wonder that the “dog didn’t bark,” given how the last twelve months played out?

Let’s take a quick trip down memory lane.

On April 2, 2025, President Trump vowed that the day would “forever be remembered as the day American industry was reborn.” On January 30, 2026, just two months ago, he declared “Mission Accomplished” on his trade war in a triumphant op-ed in The Wall Street Journal, claiming that his tariffs had “brought America back” and ushered in an “American economic miracle.”

Americans disagree, and so does the data. Trump’s tariffs have proven to be one of his most unpopular policies to date. Studies suggest they’ve slowed growth, raised costs, and failed to deliver the manufacturing renaissance the administration promised. Trump never admits defeat, and he never shies away from touting a victory, so his silence over the anniversary of “Liberation Day” was deafening.

Luckily for the president, it’s not too late to flip the script and reverse much of the damage from his ill-fated trade war.

First, however, he’ll need to remember a lesson he seems to have forgotten from his greatest trade deal to date. In his defense, it was 40 years ago.

Sometime in 1986, Donald Trump and Tony Schwartz struck a big, beautiful deal. Over eighteen months, Schwartz shadowed the real estate magnate, getting a feel for the man he would catapult to stardom by ghostwriting The Art of the Deal. In return, Trump got what he’s always craved: his name in gold, top-billed on the cover (plus half of the advance and all subsequent royalties).

Critics may assert that Schwartz was “ripped off” by this deal (even before Trump’s lawyers issued a cease-and-desist order and demanded that Schwartz return his royalties and the book advance, which the authors had split 50/50). Surely Schwartz deserves more credit for writing essentially every word of the bestseller that made Trump an international superstar and paved his path to the Oval Office. Our 44th president might even scold Trump: “You didn’t [write] that! Somebody else made that happen!”

To economists, however, the Trump-Schwartz deal was truly a work of art. Only Trump went on to achieve international fame, but both men reaped enormous gains from this stroke of genius. Rewind back to 1986. Schwartz was a fantastic writer; Trump, an ambitious entrepreneur who could hardly afford to take time away from making deals to write about them. It would have been silly for Schwartz to seek his fortune by trying his hand at high-end real estate. And it would’ve been even sillier for Trump to pen an entire book, as readers of his Truth Social can attest.

Together, they accomplished what neither could do on their own. After its publication, Trump candidly, and quite humorously, admitted he’d now written more books (one) than he’d read. In so doing, they enriched not only themselves but the lives of millions of devoted readers around the world.

That, in essence, is why economists support free trade. Trade and the ideas and institutions that underpin it are among the biggest factors driving the economic miracle we’ve experienced over the past few centuries. Trade not only helped lift the United States and dozens of other nations out of poverty. It also helped make America great in the first place. It’s no coincidence that America’s strongest periods of economic growth correspond to its periods of freest trade. 

Those benefits continue to this day. Trade makes widespread prosperity possible, a fact protectionists like Trump now take for granted.

Trump can deride free trade all he wants, but his trade with Schwartz forty years ago was easily the best business deal he’s ever struck. It quite literally kick-started his personal-branding empire and launched him to global stardom. Trump never would’ve become a household name if he hadn’t had the good sense to strike that deal with Schwartz and the good fortune to live in a nation that protected his right to make that trade freely.

The implications for international trade should be obvious. Trump would’ve been a fool not to strike that deal if Schwartz had happened to hail from New Guinea instead of New York. He’d also be far less rich and powerful.

As economists have noted since the days of Adam Smith, the benefits of trade don’t magically stop at a nation’s borders. Economic laws are universal: they apply to everyone, everywhere, across time and space. If engaging in a mutually beneficial trade with a fellow New Yorker was good for Trump forty years ago, then giving Americans that same freedom to trade with foreigners is good today.

Are there edge cases where trade should be regulated or proscribed? Certainly, few economists opposed restricting trade with Nazi Germany in 1940, and even fewer advocate for unrestricted trade in fissile materials or chemical weaponry today. Yet these exceptions prove the general rule: trade enriches, and restricting it impoverishes.By all early indications, Trump has no intention of heeding our advice and calling off his quixotic trade war. But our plea to him remains simple: Let ordinary Americans reap the gains from trade you so clearly understood when you struck that fateful deal with Schwartz. If specialization and trade are good for you, why not for millions of Americans eager to strike their own “art of the deal”?

For a nation that dominates the seas, the United States now faces a critical crossroads. Its commercial shipyards — once the envy of the world — have fallen into near collapse. 

The Trump administration’s 2026 Maritime Action Plan aims to reverse this decline with sweeping fees on foreign-built ships and subsidies to revive domestic production and rebuild the maritime industrial base.

Yet rather than confronting the structural causes of decline, Washington has turned to familiar tools: protectionism, subsidies, and penalties on foreign competition. America’s shipbuilding troubles did not begin with foreign rivals — and they will not be solved by taxing them. Without addressing the industry’s underlying weaknesses, the plan risks raising costs, distorting trade, and ultimately burdening American consumers and businesses.

The Hidden Costs of the Maritime Action Plan

At the center of the Maritime Action Plan is a sweeping fee regime targeting foreign-built ships, aimed at redirecting demand to US shipyards and countering foreign competition — particularly from China. Under this plan, cargo arriving at US ports on foreign-built vessels would be subject to fees ranging from 1 to 25 cents per kilogram. 

Though seemingly modest, these fees quickly become substantial given the scale of modern shipping. A one-cent fee would add about $375,000 to a typical 5,000-TEU containership call; at 25 cents, the cost would jump to approximately $9.4 million — costs that would severely disrupt shipping economics.

Tanker shipping would face similar pressures. An Aframax crude tanker could incur around $700,000 per port call at one cent per kilogram and up to $17.5 million at the high end. These costs would not be borne by shipowners. They would flow through charter contracts to importers and ultimately to consumers, particularly through higher fuel prices. Car carriers would face similar pass-through effects, with higher shipping costs ultimately reflected in vehicle prices.

Scaled nationwide, the impact becomes substantial. The fees could add roughly $2.1 billion annually to containerized imports at the low end and more than $52 billion at the high end — effectively a tax on global trade that raises landed costs across the economy. Because the charges are weight-based, they ignore value and strategic importance, creating uneven effects across industries. Ultimately, the costs would be passed on to consumers, without addressing the underlying causes of America’s maritime decline.

The deeper problem is that global shipping is deeply interconnected. China, for instance, now sits at the center of the industry. Its shipyards produce more than half of the world’s ships, account for more than 70 percent of new container orders, and make up nearly 30 percent of the active fleet. Major global carriers — responsible for over 80 percent of US imports — also rely heavily on Chinese-built vessels. The policy would therefore disrupt not just foreign competitors, but the backbone of US trade itself.

The damage wouldn’t stop at rising prices, either. Major shipping lines have already warned that widespread port penalties could lead them to reduce stops at smaller American ports, focusing service on larger gateways or rerouting cargo through Canada and Mexico before it reaches the US by rail or truck. The main targets would be small and mid-sized port communities, dockworkers, truckers, and warehouse workers — the very groups these policies aim to protect.

Why a US Shipbuilding Comeback Won’t Happen

The Maritime Action Plan also seeks to increase the share of international trade carried on US-built, US-flagged, and US-crewed vessels — effectively extending Jones Act logic to global trade. Yet this ambition collides with industrial reality. US shipyards accounted for less than 0.3 percent of global output over the past decade, falling to just 0.04 percent in 2024. Production of large cargo ships has averaged fewer than three per year, and the United States has not built an LNG tanker in more than four decades. The Government Accountability Office has described the sector as experiencing near total collapse.

The gap with international competitors is stark. A large commercial vessel built in the United States can cost up to $250 million — roughly five times a comparable foreign-built vessel. Oil tankers priced at about $47 million internationally can exceed $220 million in US yards, while operating a US-flagged ship costs more than $11 million annually, compared with roughly $2.6 million for foreign-flagged vessels. Construction timelines are equally uncompetitive: recent US-built containerships have taken up to 40 months to complete, versus less than six months in South Korea.

Scale presents another obstacle. The plan envisions about 25 ships per year over a decade. By comparison, China delivered an average of 832 commercial ships annually from 2022 to 2024, compared with 259 in Japan and 214 in South Korea. Even at full implementation, US output would remain too small to achieve economies of scale or meaningful competitiveness.

The industry’s decline is structural, not temporary — and far too deep to be reversed by mandates or subsidies alone. Labor shortages remain a central obstacle. Shipbuilding requires a stable, highly skilled workforce, yet US yards struggle to hire and retain workers. The Philadelphia shipyard — often seen as central to any revival — has reportedly faced turnover approaching 100 percent, while other yards report similar shortages. Although countries such as South Korea and Japan have relied on foreign labor to ease workforce constraints, such an approach sits uneasily with current US immigration policy.

Infrastructure poses another challenge. Much of the US shipbuilding infrastructure dates back to World War II, leaving American yards far behind global competitors in automation and productivity. High input costs — driven by steel tariffs and a weakened supplier base — further erode competitiveness. These constraints underscore a broader reality: America’s shipbuilding decline is structural, not due to foreign competition, and protectionism cannot reverse it. Reviving American shipbuilding will require confronting these realities — not repeating a century of failed protectionist policies.

Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell recently emphasized that the US economy remains resilient, in large part due to a labor market holding steady, despite growing uncertainty. The direct words Powell used to describe the current situation were a kind of “zero employment growth equilibrium.” There is limited hiring, yes, but also limited layoffs. When combined with persistently low jobless claims, policymakers seem to be of the opinion that conditions remain stable, even strong, in toto. On paper, we rest very near full employment. Unfortunately, this is only part of the story. Upon digging, the labor market shows signs of strain. 

Hiring has markedly slowed, and recent data and surveys point to noticeably weaker hiring conditions compared with the last decade. Some reports show outright job losses along with rising unemployment, challenging the notion of continued strength. Yet layoffs remain subdued, and even jobless claims are staying low, signaling that firms are holding onto their workers. This “low-hire, low-fire” labor market appears stable, but it lacks forward momentum. What we appear to have is an economy that is neither collapsing nor improving — drifting, not growing. 

And so we reach this strange purported equilibrium. Labor markets are not collapsing, but they are not advancing with any force, either. This stability is stagnant. Powell did add that this stagnation “does have a feel of downside risk, and it’s not kind of a really comfortable balance,” but alarm bells are not ringing in DC yet. When looking at employment data, this strange picture emerges. Here, then, we see the limits of employment data, like the concept of full employment. 

Investopedia explains full employment like this: “Full employment exists when all willing and available skilled and unskilled labor is being used.” This is not to say that the unemployment rate is truly zero percent, but it is meant as a theoretical goal. Some people will be willfully unemployed for various reasons. A laid-off mechanical engineer will take some time to look for new jobs in his field before considering other lines of work. The nurse who quits due to understaffing will not necessarily jump into the same situation at a different hospital, but might hold out for a better work environment. Excluding these individuals, the rate should reach zero percent. Often, full employment is defined as an unemployment rate sitting between four and six percent. The US unemployment rate for February was 4.4 percent, falling within the full employment range. Here we see one source of “optimism” for Washington. 

As is often the case, this indicator cannot capture the uneven, localized, and shifting nature of real work. In practice, the labor market is a process that cannot be captured in a single snapshot. Workers search, firms adjust, industries expand and contract, and skill levels increase and decrease. At any given moment, some sectors are growing while others decline. The same applies to regions. These details are often smoothed over by aggregates. This means that telling us where the average stands does not indicate how the system itself functions on the ground. A stable national picture can hide underlying volatility. Balance in the aggregate may in reality be nothing but a series of offsetting imbalances. 

For example, consider underemployment. A man desiring full-time work settling for part-time hours is still employed. A college graduate working retail despite a degree suited for investment analysis is still technically employed, despite underutilization of his skillset. These distinctions matter for economic well-being, despite hardly registering in headline statistics. 

Even the data themselves can be misleading. Employment figures are often revised, sometimes drastically. Many times these revisions show weaker job creation than originally reported, changing the narrative from strength to concern. Recent revisions from the Bureau of Labor Statistics have erased hundreds of thousands of previously reported jobs — in some cases, completely flipping growth months into contraction months. None of this is helpful nor is it a good reason for optimism. 

Likewise, structural forces reshape labor demand. Technological changes and the ability to switch jobs affect the market in ways not so quickly detectable. The goal is not mere employment but good matches between employers and employees to maximize value creation. People remaining in a job because it is increasingly difficult to switch does not signal health. When necessary reallocation is not happening, we lose out on potential growth and rising efficiency, even if unemployment figures remain stable. 

When just looking at unemployment figures, it is easy for a policymaker to confuse full capacity with true economic vitality. This misreading has its consequences. Policymakers, equipped with the specious belief that they can beneficently direct the economy, might focus on restricting demand so as to avoid inflation. Or they might defer to current policies that are actually weakening the economy, but only in a less obvious way (or in such a way as to only become manifest months later in a “revision”).

With all this in mind, we must be careful how we choose to measure economic health. All national statistics provide somewhat useful summaries, but cannot replace dispersed, local knowledge embedded in actual market activities. The economy does not employ “labor” in the abstract, but rather it employs specific people, with specific skills, in specific places, at specific times, for specific reasons. When this complexity gets reduced to a single number like the unemployment rate, we lose clarity for the sake of a simplistic metric. 

An economy can appear to be fully employed on paper while being less dynamic, less accessible, and less resilient in practice. Headlines might read “strong” or “stable”, but the economy is more than aggregate figures. It is a web of individual choices and adjustments, and those adjustments are real and important, but not fully captured in a headline number.