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India Beyond the Dollar: Navigating a shifting currency order

As global reliance on the US dollar declines, India cautiously adapts—balancing local currency trade, reserve diversification, and strategic autonomy to strengthen its financial resilience in an emerging multipolar global economy

September 08, 2025 / 19:40 IST
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An appreciating Indian Rupee, while positive for repayment, may also affect export competitiveness. The transition also intersects with how international trade bills are invoiced.

Over the last 15 years, countries across the globe have been gradually attempting to reduce their reliance on the US dollar for international trade, financial transactions, and the holding of foreign exchange reserves. This transformation, long anticipated by economic historians and geopolitical analysts, is no longer a theoretical shift—it is happening in real-time. Evidence from the IMF’s COFER (Composition of Foreign Exchange Reserves) database shows that between Q1 2014 and Q4 2024, the share of the US dollar and the euro in global foreign exchange reserves declined from 63.04% to 57.80% and from 23.27% to 19.83%, respectively.

Over the same period, the share of other non-dominant currencies (excluding the US dollar, euro, Japanese yen, and British pound) increased from 6.34% to 11.82%. Since 2015, the IMF has stopped publishing regional breakdowns of COFER data for emerging and advanced economies, citing disclosure risks—a move that strongly suggests countries may be quietly diversifying their reserves while avoiding overtly publicising such shifts. This subtle yet persistent realignment is steadily reshaping the global financial order. Against this backdrop, India’s position has been pragmatic: while it has pursued local currency trade agreements to mitigate exchange rate risks and uncertainty, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) has reiterated that de-dollarisation is not a stated objective, nor is the creation of a BRICS currency currently under consideration.

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