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The US dollar is collapsing – what started as a trickle of online and financial bodies espousing this, has now started to become more like a river. Why?
Have we heard it all before - or is this way way way different as many pundits espouse?
dailyhodl.com
www.linkedin.com
www.bbc.com
- The USA used to have the largest GDP – not anymore. That title now belongs to China and countries like India are rapidly catching up.
- The US dollar used to be the Linga Franca of world economics. Not any more. The establishment of BRICS with two of the top three world GDP nations opposing the US dollar and, regions like Europe are buying oil from Iran in Euros and not US dollars, which means that the strength of the dollar is fading and the capacity of the USA to impose sanctions fading along with it. Some twenty three other countries are applying to join BRICS. That will seriously undermine the strength of the US dollar.
- The US ceiling debt is rising unabated with a current debt ceiling crisis looming in just days. If the US defaults on their astronomical debt their economy could theoretically crash.
Have we heard it all before - or is this way way way different as many pundits espouse?

American Currency Collapse Has Already Started As BRICS Nations Prepare To Battle US Dollar: Ron Paul - The Daily Hodl
Former Congressman Ron Paul says the dollar's prominence has already started to wane as countries around the world tire of American interventionist policies.


When Will the Dollar Collapse?
The U.S. dollar: The world’s worst reserve currency, except for all the others—for now.
www.thetrumpet.com
Forecast: US Dollar collapse. BRICS countries to increase their global economic influence
In recent years, there have been growing concerns about the stability of the US dollar as the world's reserve currency. The rising power of the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) and their currencies has been a major factor contributing to this concern.

US debt ceiling: Will there be enough time to get a deal through?
The latest debt ceiling talks have been described as "productive" but no deal has yet been reached.
