Brazil rejects Brics currency, aims to rely less on dollar
Country pushing reforms within the group to ease international payments in local currencies
13 February 2025 - 16:05
byMarcela Ayres, Bernardo Caram and Lisandra Paraguassu
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Brasilia — Brazil’s Brics presidency this year will not advance a common currency for the group of major developing economies this year, four government officials said, but its agenda may pave the way for less reliance on the US dollar in global trade.
That agenda could draw the ire of US President Donald Trump, who has twice in recent months warned the Brics group, founded by Brazil, Russia, India, China, not to challenge the dominance of “the mighty US dollar”.
“There is no chance that Brics will replace the US dollar in international trade, or anywhere else, and any country that tries should say hello to tariffs, and goodbye to America!” Trump wrote on social media last month.
The Brazilian officials, who requested anonymity to discuss plans, said the idea of a shared currency to replace the dollar, floated by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and others at recent Brics summits, has never entered technical discussions.
Three of the sources said Brazil is instead pushing reforms within Brics to ease international payments in local currencies, opening the door to less dependence on the dollar for global trade, though they said that is not the main objective.
“It’s not directed against anyone,” said one source, who stressed the focus was on reducing friction for global trade.
The agenda includes studying technologies such as blockchain and linking payment systems to cut transaction costs, following standards set by multilateral bodies such as the Bank for International Settlements, the three sources said.
“No-one wants to create trouble, but Brics countries also don’t want to abandon the idea of exploring this possibility,” said another source, adding that no member countries intend to eliminate their dollar reserves.
Even Lula has backed off the idea of a new currency for the bloc, while still defending last week the Brics nations’ “right to discuss establishing forms of trade that do not make us fully dependent on the dollar.”
Last week, Brazil’s finance ministry and central bank discussed their proposals for the Brics presidency this year, including cross-border payment initiatives, sources said.
Neither institution responded to a request for comment.
SUMMIT IN SIGHT
Brics representatives will meet in SA this month on the sidelines of the Group of Twenty meetings, where Brazil will present its plan for the Brics summit in July, the sources said.
Founded in 2009 and soon expanded to add SA, the group has recently included Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, making it a growing diplomatic counterweight to traditional Western powers.
Brazil has gained prominence in discussions of global payments with the rapid rise of its instant payments system, called Pix, which launched in late 2020 and has already surpassed use of cash, credit and debit cards.
In his first public remarks as Brazil’s new central bank chief last week, Gabriel Galipolo said Pix is programmed in a way that it can be easily integrated with other payment systems, though governance challenges remain an important hurdle.
Brazil already operates a Local Currency Payment System (SML), managed by its central bank through agreements with Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay.
The system allows transactions to be settled directly in Brazilian real, bypassing the dollar as an intermediary and eliminating the need for foreign exchange contracts.
Though the system lowers intermediation costs, settlements take at least three business days, which have limited adoption.
Argentina was the top trade partner with SML transactions last year, totalling 5.1-billion real ($878m) — just a fraction of the overall $27.4bn in bilateral trade.
“With instant payment technology, these connections could become more secure, faster and cheaper,” one of the sources said.
Support our award-winning journalism. The Premium package (digital only) is R30 for the first month and thereafter you pay R129 p/m now ad-free for all subscribers.
Brazil rejects Brics currency, aims to rely less on dollar
Country pushing reforms within the group to ease international payments in local currencies
Brasilia — Brazil’s Brics presidency this year will not advance a common currency for the group of major developing economies this year, four government officials said, but its agenda may pave the way for less reliance on the US dollar in global trade.
That agenda could draw the ire of US President Donald Trump, who has twice in recent months warned the Brics group, founded by Brazil, Russia, India, China, not to challenge the dominance of “the mighty US dollar”.
“There is no chance that Brics will replace the US dollar in international trade, or anywhere else, and any country that tries should say hello to tariffs, and goodbye to America!” Trump wrote on social media last month.
The Brazilian officials, who requested anonymity to discuss plans, said the idea of a shared currency to replace the dollar, floated by President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and others at recent Brics summits, has never entered technical discussions.
Three of the sources said Brazil is instead pushing reforms within Brics to ease international payments in local currencies, opening the door to less dependence on the dollar for global trade, though they said that is not the main objective.
“It’s not directed against anyone,” said one source, who stressed the focus was on reducing friction for global trade.
The agenda includes studying technologies such as blockchain and linking payment systems to cut transaction costs, following standards set by multilateral bodies such as the Bank for International Settlements, the three sources said.
“No-one wants to create trouble, but Brics countries also don’t want to abandon the idea of exploring this possibility,” said another source, adding that no member countries intend to eliminate their dollar reserves.
Even Lula has backed off the idea of a new currency for the bloc, while still defending last week the Brics nations’ “right to discuss establishing forms of trade that do not make us fully dependent on the dollar.”
Last week, Brazil’s finance ministry and central bank discussed their proposals for the Brics presidency this year, including cross-border payment initiatives, sources said.
Neither institution responded to a request for comment.
SUMMIT IN SIGHT
Brics representatives will meet in SA this month on the sidelines of the Group of Twenty meetings, where Brazil will present its plan for the Brics summit in July, the sources said.
Founded in 2009 and soon expanded to add SA, the group has recently included Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, making it a growing diplomatic counterweight to traditional Western powers.
Brazil has gained prominence in discussions of global payments with the rapid rise of its instant payments system, called Pix, which launched in late 2020 and has already surpassed use of cash, credit and debit cards.
In his first public remarks as Brazil’s new central bank chief last week, Gabriel Galipolo said Pix is programmed in a way that it can be easily integrated with other payment systems, though governance challenges remain an important hurdle.
Brazil already operates a Local Currency Payment System (SML), managed by its central bank through agreements with Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay.
The system allows transactions to be settled directly in Brazilian real, bypassing the dollar as an intermediary and eliminating the need for foreign exchange contracts.
Though the system lowers intermediation costs, settlements take at least three business days, which have limited adoption.
Argentina was the top trade partner with SML transactions last year, totalling 5.1-billion real ($878m) — just a fraction of the overall $27.4bn in bilateral trade.
“With instant payment technology, these connections could become more secure, faster and cheaper,” one of the sources said.
Reuters
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