• TheOctonaut@piefed.zip
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    2 days ago

    That’s… not how currency markets works. At all. Tell me, what do you think happened to the dollars?

    You essentially exported them. More US dollars are now in international use than before.

    As you said, not a significant amount in any way, but just bizarre to celebrate contributing almost nothing to the wrong outcome.

      • TheOctonaut@piefed.zip
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        12 hours ago

        Do you to to explain how supply and demand has anything to do with decreasing the use of US dollars as an international trading standard?

    • VAK@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Do you want them to hold onto it forever, never use it or burn them? (Which will lower inflation for usd based economies anyway)

      • TheOctonaut@piefed.zip
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        12 hours ago

        No? But… Just not think that they’re doing anything particularly notable? Keeping their money in dollars wasn’t an option anyway.

          • TheOctonaut@piefed.zip
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            7 hours ago

            They’re saying (bizarrely, as if moving abroad but keeping their currency in dollars was a realistic option anyway) that it somehow contributes to reducing the influence of the dollar worldwide.

            It doesn’t. It means someone bought US dollars using a different currency (more of an exchange, but the initiating party is essentially buying) and now someone has US dollars that they need to spend. Either by buying products direct from the USA, or by they themselves selling US dollars to someone else, circulating it, until eventually it is repatriated (or destroyed, physically or in value, I guess).

            The way you reduce a currency’s influence is by making it unstable or devaluing it, basically anything that stops people wanting to buy it or accept it as stored value.