5
Ad 728x90
  • Home
  • Politics
    • Foreign Policy
    • Governance & Policy
    • Geopolitical Strategy
    • Security & Defense
    • Human Rights
    • Elections
  • Economy
    • Banking News
    • BRICS Healthcare News
    • BRICS Energy News
    • Transport News
    • Agriculture News
    • Tourism News
  • World News
  • BRICS Cooperation
  • BRICS Explained
    • Members
    • Candidates
    • Summits
  • Home
  • Politics
    • Foreign Policy
    • Governance & Policy
    • Geopolitical Strategy
    • Security & Defense
    • Human Rights
    • Elections
  • Economy
    • Banking News
    • BRICS Healthcare News
    • BRICS Energy News
    • Transport News
    • Agriculture News
    • Tourism News
  • World News
  • BRICS Cooperation
  • BRICS Explained
    • Members
    • Candidates
    • Summits
  • Home
  • Politics
    • Elections
    • Foreign Policy
    • Geopolitical Strategy
    • Governance & Policy
    • Human Rights
    • Security & Defense
  • Economy
    • Agriculture News
    • Banking News
    • BRICS Energy News
    • BRICS Healthcare News
    • Tourism News
    • Transport News
    • World News
  • BRICS Cooperation
  • BRICS Explained
    • Candidates
    • Members
    • Summits
  • Home
  • Politics
    • Elections
    • Foreign Policy
    • Geopolitical Strategy
    • Governance & Policy
    • Human Rights
    • Security & Defense
  • Economy
    • Agriculture News
    • Banking News
    • BRICS Energy News
    • BRICS Healthcare News
    • Tourism News
    • Transport News
    • World News
  • BRICS Cooperation
  • BRICS Explained
    • Candidates
    • Members
    • Summits
Home Politics Geopolitical Strategy

Is the US Losing Its Grip on Global Trade as BRICS Expansion Redraws Economic Maps?

For decades, American consumer demand and the dominance of the US dollar determined how goods and capital flowed around the world

Brics flags
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The rapid expansion of BRICS—from its founding five members to a broader coalition including Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Egypt—is fundamentally reshaping global trade and logistics. Once defined by US-led financial systems and supply chains, the global economy is now tilting toward new power centers in the Global South.

For decades, American consumer demand and the dominance of the US dollar determined how goods and capital flowed around the world. That dominance is increasingly under threat.

“The United States remains a powerful destination, but its relative gravitational pull is waning,” noted one logistics analyst.

As BRICS nations deepen cooperation, oil, gas, and manufactured goods are increasingly moving along South–South trade routes that bypass traditional US and European corridors.

India’s rise as both a manufacturing hub and consumption market has accelerated these shifts. Freight flows from Africa, the Middle East, and Southeast Asia now converge on Indian ports, altering long-established shipping patterns. Meanwhile, currency diversification among BRICS nations—through local-currency settlements and bilateral swap agreements—has begun to challenge the dollar’s supremacy in global trade.

This realignment poses both risks and opportunities for logistics companies. Freight contracts, customs payments, and insurance policies—traditionally denominated in US dollars—must now adapt to a multipolar currency system. That adds volatility but also creates incentives for innovation in trade finance and risk management.

Infrastructure investment is another driver of this shift. China’s Belt and Road Initiative, reinforced by India’s regional ambitions, is constructing new ports, rail lines, and logistics hubs across Africa and Latin America—beyond Washington’s influence.

While the US still commands vast economic power, its global dominance is no longer guaranteed. The task ahead is clear: adapt to the multipolar trade order or risk being sidelined in the next phase of globalization.

Related Posts

Asean china

Why ASEAN’s Security Future Depends on Non-Alignment, Not BRICS

ASEAN’s strategic relevance has never rested on military projection or bloc politics. Its influence comes from a quieter strength: the...

Bric au

BRICS, SCO and AU: Global South Alliances Are Shaping a Multipolar World Order

The architecture of global governance is undergoing a profound transformation as emerging economies deepen cooperation across major multilateral platforms such...

Brics chess

BRICS at a Crossroads: The Need of Its Own Security Council in the Era of Hybrid Geopolitics

Quiet diplomacy—long the defining feature of BRICS—may finally have reached its limits. As global power competition intensifies in 2025, the...

5

BRICS News delivers the latest updates, insights, and trends shaping the alliance and its global impact. Stay informed with reliable, timely, and impactful news on economic and collaborative developments.

Facebook
Twitter
VK
  • Home
  • Politics
    • Foreign Policy
    • Governance & Policy
    • Geopolitical Strategy
    • Security & Defense
    • Human Rights
    • Elections
  • Economy
    • Banking News
    • BRICS Healthcare News
    • BRICS Energy News
    • Transport News
    • Agriculture News
    • Tourism News
  • World News
  • BRICS Cooperation
  • BRICS Explained
    • Members
    • Candidates
    • Summits
  • Home
  • Politics
    • Foreign Policy
    • Governance & Policy
    • Geopolitical Strategy
    • Security & Defense
    • Human Rights
    • Elections
  • Economy
    • Banking News
    • BRICS Healthcare News
    • BRICS Energy News
    • Transport News
    • Agriculture News
    • Tourism News
  • World News
  • BRICS Cooperation
  • BRICS Explained
    • Members
    • Candidates
    • Summits
  • Privacy Policy
  • Copyright Policy
  • Financial Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Copyright Policy
  • Financial Disclaimer

© Crafted with love by Sirius

No Result
View All Result
  • Homepages

© 2018 JNews by Jegtheme.