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by 01100011
1589 days ago
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The USD is the world's reserve currency and loose monetary policy since 2008 is likely spilling over into economies across the globe. If you can get an artificially low rate loan in USD you can convert it to your local currency. It doesn't matter so much what your central bank does. |
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For example, UK has at most $87B of foreign currency reserves, a fraction of which is USD. [1]
UK has 9.2T in privately owned homes [2]. So reserve currency can back at best a tiny, likely sub percent, of all home loan amounts.
And, this is the kicker, the UK does not hold reserve currency to loan to anyone. It's an assert they hold at the national level.
So cost increases there (and other countries listed above) are not the result of US being a reserve currency. Don't make up wild claims.
[1] https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/...
[2] https://www.mansionglobal.com/articles/u-k-home-values-have-...