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Planet Money

Is the reign of the dollar over?

09 May 2025

Description

For decades, dollars have been the world's common financial language. Central banks everywhere hold dollars as a way to safely store their wealth. Countries, businesses, and people use it to trade; around 90% of all foreign exchange transactions involve dollars. It's the world's money, the world's "reserve currency."But what if that is changing? What if the world stops seeing the dollar as safe? Today on the show, what is a "reserve currency"? Why is it the dollar? And if the dollar falls from favor, what will replace it?This episode of Planet Money was produced by Emma Peaslee with help from James Sneed. It was edited by Marianne McCune with fact checking help from Sierra Juarez. It was engineered by Kwesi Lee. Alex Goldmark is our executive producer. The Dollar Trap by Eswar PrasadExorbitant Privilege by Barry EichengreenOur Dollar. Your Problem by Ken RogoffFind more Planet Money: Facebook / Instagram / TikTok / Our weekly Newsletter.Listen free at these links: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, the NPR app or anywhere you get podcasts.Help support Planet Money and hear our bonus episodes by subscribing to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org/planetmoney.Music: NPR Source Audio - "Virtual Machine," "Fake Blood" and "Successful Secrets"Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

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Full Episode

0.429 - 21.728 NPR Host

Before we start today's show, a quick note. You may have heard that President Trump has issued an executive order seeking to block all federal funding to NPR. Millions of people, people like you, depend on the NPR network as a vital source of news and entertainment, information and connection. We are proud to be here for you. And now more than ever, we ask you to be here for us.

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22.429 - 31.377 NPR Host

Visit donate.npr.org now to give. And if you already support us via NPR Plus or Planet Money Plus or any other way, thank you.

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32.778 - 34.879 Greg Rosalski

This is Planet Money from NPR.

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37.842 - 44.207 Mike Kudzel

Mike Kudzel, a money manager at PIMCO, got to work on Tuesday, April 8th, ready for a crazy day.

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44.788 - 48.591 Jane Doe

Not wearing a suit that day, dress for your day, wearing Kevlar.

49.025 - 56.492 Mike Kudzel

Kevlar like what firefighters wear because markets were in flames in the aftermath of President Trump's big tariff announcements.

56.953 - 63.859 Mary Childs

So Mike is looking at his screens and they are all red. Basically, every market in the United States, all lines are going down.

64.3 - 72.687 Jane Doe

You had equities go down meaningfully. You had bonds go down in price meaningfully. And you had the U.S. dollar that went lower meaningfully.

73.752 - 91.549 Mike Kudzel

And that is weird. Because normally, when investors get scared, as they were that day, they sell risky things like stocks to buy stuff that they see as safer. And historically, that safer thing has been U.S. government bonds. Treasuries.

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