49 pointsby pseudolus3 hours ago9 comments
  • clayhacks2 hours ago
    The article doesn’t mention it, but related is the global share of the US dollar as the reserve currency has been on a steady decline. Between that and the new payment structures discussed in this article we are rapidly approaching an era without American control on global financial systems. Which is a significant lever for soft power and non-military interventions
    • inference-god2 hours ago
      Yeah, Americans will have to feel the same way as everyone else, basically not having access to unlimited credit. Have fun with it.

      At least the libs were owned though :)

      • johneaan hour ago
        Truly.

        "Make the libtards cry"

        Was enough of a hate monger campaign promise, to put the most blatantly corrupt president in US history, in office.

        The descent of the US population into abject idiocy has been striking.

        • archonisan hour ago
          Smartphones in dumb pockets made it all possible.
          • johneaan hour ago
            I think it almost doesn't matter what pockets 8-/

            The routinely noted decline in US "educational achievement" correlates most closely, with the propagation in the school aged population, of "smartphones" and the algorithmic websites at which they're aimed.

            I've been saying lately: Apple caused the collapse of US educational outcomes.

  • tmnvix28 minutes ago
    > But the more serious risk, Mr Lipsky notes, is that countries’ pursuit of payments sovereignty may one day mean various regional systems become incompatible. That would increase financial fraud and sanctions evasion.

    A risk from the US point of view, but for many states, this is quite the opposite - these developments are in large part aimed at removing the risk of US financial abuse in the form of unilateral sanctions.

  • mertbio2 hours ago
    Not sure how visible by the people in the US but a lot of companies and governments in Europe are working on many projects to decouple from the American companies for the critical infrastructure.

    Visa and Mastercard were mentioned in the article but I would also add PayPal into the list.

  • amgreg13 minutes ago
    Does someone know how cross-border payments work, and why it would be complicated for countries to link up their sovereign systems? The article gives the example of Brazil and India, suggests there might be a “liquidity” bottleneck, but omits the details.
  • Havoc2 hours ago
    Was always gonna happen, but recent US unreliability has definitely accelerated it
  • johneaan hour ago
    The claims by VISA and Mastercard, that they are committed to nternational markets, adds up to a big 0.

    If the US government issues sanctions, they will comply.

    Countries outside the US are wise to pursue other infrastructure.

    The big surprise is that this problem has been ignored for so long.

    Of course, here in the US, we will not be alllowed a free instant payment system, because giving 3% of gross sales away to an absentee business, is patriotism 8-/

  • hirvi742 hours ago
    I suppose if one makes this prediction every year, he or she is bound to be right eventually.
  • inference-god2 hours ago
    How weird, strange ?