Trump repeats 100% tariffs threat to BRICS nations

The US president warns nations in the group Malaysia applied to join in July against replacing the US dollar as their reserve currency.

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump on Thursday warned off BRICS member countries from replacing the US dollar as a reserve currency by repeating a 100%-tariffs threat he had made weeks after winning the November presidential elections.

We are going to require a commitment from these seemingly hostile countries that they will neither create a new BRICS currency, nor back any other currency to replace the mighty US dollar or, they will face 100% tariffs, Trump said on Truth Social in a statement nearly identical to one he posted on Nov 30.

At the time, Russia said that any US attempt to compel countries to use the dollar would backfire.

The BRICS grouping includes Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, and a few other countries that joined in the past couple of year. The grouping does not have a common currency, but long-running discussions on the subject have gained some momentum after the West imposed sanctions on Russia over the war in Ukraine.

There is no chance that BRICS will replace the US dollar in international trade, or anywhere else, and any country that tries should say hello to tariffs, and goodbye to America! he said.

Trump posted his warning to the BRICS as Canada and Mexico await his decision to follow through on a pledge to impose 25% tariffs on the USs north American trading partners from Feb 1.

Trump wants to use tariffs as a tool to get Mexico and Canada to help stem the flow of illegal migrants and drugs into the US, particularly the deadly opioid fentanyl.

Dollar dominance the outsized role of the US dollar in the world economy has strengthened of late, thanks to the robust US economy, tighter monetary policy and heightened geopolitical risks, even as economic fragmentation has boosted a push by BRICS countries to shift away from the dollar into other currencies.

A study by the Atlantic Councils GeoEconomics Center last year showed that the US dollar remains the worlds primary reserve currency, and neither the euro nor the so-called BRICS countries have been able to reduce global reliance on the dollar.

The acronym BRIC, which did not initially include South Africa, was coined in 2001 by then Goldman Sachs chief economist Jim ONeill in a research paper that underlined the growth potential of Brazil, Russia, India and China.

The bloc was founded as an informal club in 2009 to provide a platform for its members to challenge a world order dominated by the US and its Western allies. South Africa was the first beneficiary of an expansion of the bloc in 2010 when the grouping became known as BRICS.

The group added Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran and the United Arab Emirates in 2023, and Indonesia became member earlier this month.