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Shifting Global Economic Orders: The Rise of BRICS+ and the Decline of Dollar Hegemony

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  • Shaista Abid

    (CUST Islamabad)

Abstract

This study explores the evolving dynamics of the global economic order by examining the rise of BRICS+—an expanded coalition of emerging economies including Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, and recent entrants—and its challenge to the long-standing dominance of the U.S. dollar in international finance. Through a mixed-methods approach combining quantitative data analysis and qualitative review of institutional developments, this research investigates how BRICS+ nations are pursuing de-dollarization strategies, creating alternative financial institutions, and fostering trade in local currencies. The study reveals a steady decline in the dollar’s share of global reserves and transactions, alongside a growing reliance on the Chinese yuan, gold reserves, and intra-BRICS+ currency swaps. These findings suggest that the global financial system is transitioning from a unipolar dollar-centric model toward a more multipolar framework. While the dollar retains significant advantages in terms of liquidity and institutional trust, the trajectory of BRICS+ economic cooperation indicates a major geopolitical shift with long-term implications for global governance, monetary sovereignty, and economic security.

Suggested Citation

  • Shaista Abid, 2025. "Shifting Global Economic Orders: The Rise of BRICS+ and the Decline of Dollar Hegemony," Magna Carta: Contemporary Social Science, 50sea, vol. 4(3), pages 146-157, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:abq:mccss1:v:4:y:2025:i:3:p:146-157
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