Core Viewpoint - The "Mar-a-Lago Agreement" aims to restructure global economic governance through high tariffs, dollar depreciation, debt swaps, multilateral currency negotiations, and security fees, indicating potential challenges for the dollar system [1] Group 1: Dollar System Challenges - The internal dilemma of the dollar's reserve status stems from its provision of global liquidity since the Bretton Woods system, leading to persistent trade and current account deficits [6] - The demand for dollars and U.S. Treasury bonds is driven by strategic, risk-averse, and national security considerations rather than trade balance [6] - The implementation of the "Mar-a-Lago Agreement" could trigger a sell-off of dollar assets, although the current domestic holding of U.S. Treasuries exceeds foreign holdings, which may mitigate drastic market reactions [6] Group 2: Trade Policies and Currency Dynamics - High tariff policies may narrow the U.S. trade deficit in the short term but cannot fundamentally alter trade structures or address the hollowing out of manufacturing [11] - A single trade policy is insufficient to disrupt the currency landscape; a macro-level approach involving coordinated policies across trade, fiscal, monetary, and industrial sectors is necessary [15] - Even if trade balances change, the distribution of international monetary power may not shift correspondingly due to institutional inertia [15] Group 3: Global Monetary Governance - The global monetary governance structure will not rapidly restructure due to short-term maneuvers; it requires a systematic replacement path involving technology, governance capabilities, and legal foundations [16] - The "Mar-a-Lago Agreement" could negatively impact China’s economy and industries, particularly in electronics, metallurgy, and transportation equipment sectors [16] - Under unilateral pressure and currency depreciation, China's manufacturing sectors, especially in high-tech fields like semiconductors, may face significant losses [20] Group 4: Future of Currency Systems - The U.S. is attempting to create a new global currency anchor system involving "dollars + gold + digital dollars," necessitating China to propose systematic institutional options for participation [21] - The current trade disputes are evolving into currency wars, highlighting the need for the renminbi to establish its own safe asset attributes and financial institutional discourse power to challenge the dollar's dominance [21]
美元体系的内在困境:金融权力能否撼动
Sou Hu Cai Jing·2025-07-11 01:19