china

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The Quiet Default: When Nations Stop Paying in Silence

Sovereign defaults used to make headlines. Argentina in 2001, Greece in 2010—images of protests in the streets and bond spreads flashing red on global terminals. Today, defaults look different. Instead of dramatic declarations, governments quietly stretch out payments, negotiate with state banks behind closed doors, or swap one form of debt for another. The result is a rise in what some analysts call “stealth defaults”—financial breakdowns concealed by creative accounting and diplomatic discretion.

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The Currency Cold War: Competing for the World’s Reserve

In the marble halls of central banks and the quiet meeting rooms of finance ministries, a high-stakes contest is unfolding. It’s not about tariffs or trade agreements. It’s about which currency the world will trust most — and, by extension, which nation will wield the greatest economic influence in the decades to come.

For nearly eight decades, the U.S. dollar has reigned as the world’s primary reserve currency, the backbone of global trade, and the benchmark for commodities from oil to gold. But in recent years, the euro and the Chinese yuan have been maneuvering for greater prominence, each seeking to loosen the dollar’s grip.

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