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Why China’s renminbi push matters even if it never rivals the dollar

If renminbi settlement becomes cheaper and more trade migrates, firms will have less need to generate or hold US currency

The writer is founder and chief economist of Enodo Economics and a senior fellow at Asia Society’s Center for China Analysis

When Xi Jinping’s speech on building a powerful financial country was published as formal Communist Party doctrine in January 2026, a predictable debate followed. Can the renminbi challenge the dollar?

The answer, almost universally, was no. The evidence was largely correct: the renminbi has only 1.9 per cent of global reserves, a share that has barely moved in a decade; China has a closed capital account; and Beijing has a credibility deficit earned through years of arbitrary regulatory intervention. Case closed. But this misses what China is actually doing, why it might matter even if the renminbi never becomes a reserve currency, and what the journey itself does to the cost of staying in the dollar system.

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