top | item 44480053

(no title)

spangry | 7 months ago

Won’t the reserve currency simply switch to being “backed” by some other fundamental productive input? And by switch I mean the world’s most militarily powerful country will ensure that countries producing this fundamental input denominate their exports of it in their currency, if they don’t want to risk being “liberated”.

Personally, my money is on semi-conductors. It’s currently sitting at #4 in total international trade value, behind automobiles (which are increasingly reliant on semi-conductor inputs), refined oil, and crude oil.

Certainly casts a new light on contention over Taiwan.

discuss

order

impossiblefork|7 months ago

I don't think that can be done. A whole lot of countries, even some quite small ones, so it won't be possible to directly bully them all.

Secondly, these technologies usually have stages developed by different people. Microchips are a chain: different components from Europe, Japan and the US are put together into actually usable factories in Taiwan, South Korea, the US etc. The whole chain is needed. Obviously the US recently succeded in some bullying against Taiwan, but I think it was mostly about demand, threats of tariffs, that kind of thing, and I think that kind of threat again matters only because exports are necessary because of the oil trade. It'll be harder to bully with tariffs when trade matters less.

I also think bullying countries capable of doing useful semiconductor work is less possible, and I also think countries like China will catch up, so that much will be commoditized.

I see thing as being like the end of the bronze age. With iron there's nothing to control, so there's no path to power, with decentralization and independence as the result.