ASEAN nations meet, discuss dumping US Dollar, Euro for trade
Indonesia has urged its regional partners to also move
away from using Visa and Mastercard to avoid the repercussions of western
sanctions on Russia
By News Desk- March 30 2023
https://thecradle.co/article-view/23096
Finance ministers and central bank governors from the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) this week discussed dropping the
US Dollar, Euro, Yen, and British Pound from financial transactions and instead
moving to settlements in local currencies.
ASEAN includes Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos,
Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam. According
to IMF figures,
the combined nominal GDP of the bloc in 2023 amounts to approximately $3.9
trillion.
The meeting, hosted by Indonesia, focused mainly on
discussing ways to reduce dependence on western currencies through the Local
Currency Transaction (LCT) system, an extension of a previous settlement system
that has started to be implemented among ASEAN member states and which allows
trade to be conducted in local currencies.
An agreement on a similar system was
reached between Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, the Philippines, and Thailand
last November.
Indonesian President Joko Widodo has also urged his
ASEAN partners to drop western payment systems like Visa and Mastercard and
start using locally-developed systems, arguing that the region needs to shield
itself from “possible geopolitical repercussions.”
“Be very careful. We must remember the sanctions
imposed by the US on Russia. Visa and Mastercard could be a problem,” Widodo said
during a local business gathering earlier this month.
Last March, Russian tourists found themselves stranded
in Bali with no way to pay for meals or accommodation or even get a flight home
due to western sanctions that locked out Russian banks from the SWIFT international
payment system.
Out of the 10 ASEAN member states, only Singapore has
enforced western sanctions on Russia.
Over the past year, a growing number of
nations across the world have moved away from conducting trade in US dollars as
a result of Washington’s policy of economic warfare.
Just this week, Brazil,
the largest economy in Latin America, reached an agreement with China to enable
import and export transactions between both nations to take place without using
the US dollar.
Several nations in West Asia and North Africa have
also started to move away from the greenback hegemony in recent months,
like Iraq,
the UAE, Egypt,
and Saudi Arabia.
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