The brewing trade war between China and the United States might be about tariffs and intellectual property today, but Beijing ultimately has its sights set on something else, writes Lan Cao for The New York Times: Establishing the yuan as a global currency to rival the dollar. "[T]here are enormous benefits to being able to print paper money and have the world treat it as if it were gold. Other countries need American dollars, and they are willing to pay a premium to hold them," she writes. "Once they have amassed those all-important dollars, countries use them to buy United States Treasury bonds…This enormous global demand for American debt means that the United States can borrow at relatively low interest rates, financing its budget deficits away. "If the yuan does become a global reserve currency, China, too, could see its influence and economic power expand even further. "This is a strategic priority for China, and it is willing to wait…While the president and his supporters raise doubts about open trade, the dollar's supremacy is closely tied to it. There is nothing guaranteed about that status, or all the benefits that come with it." |