The chain reaction caused by stablecoins in emerging markets is far more complex than people imagine.



Recently, senior industry analysts pointed out a phenomenon worth noting: the inflow of large-scale stablecoins is impacting the monetary policy framework of emerging economies. This is not just a technical issue but also involves deep financial stability concerns.

Specifically, the rapid growth of stablecoins (mainly USD-pegged assets like USDT, USDC, etc.) has provided residents in emerging markets with a new way to bypass their local currencies. When the local currency faces increased depreciation pressure, users are more likely to turn to stablecoins for risk hedging, which in turn exacerbates selling pressure on the local currency—a vicious cycle.

For central banks, this means that some traditional monetary policy tools have become less effective. You cannot control the money supply effectively through interest rate adjustments because the stablecoin system operates independently. It’s like trying to regulate the temperature of a room while someone is secretly opening the window.

The deeper issue lies in the transfer of power structures. Stablecoin issuers (usually US companies) are effectively acting as "shadow central banks" in emerging markets, and this process lacks transparency and regulatory oversight.

In the future, emerging market central banks need to rethink the effectiveness of their financial policies and consider how to coexist with this decentralized financial force. This is a silent battle for the redistribution of monetary power.
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MEVHunterLuckyvip
· 7h ago
The term "shadow central bank" is used perfectly; the US dollar is really racing around the world to claim territory.
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TokenTaxonomistvip
· 9h ago
actually, let me pull up my spreadsheet on this one—the contagion vectors here are way more layered than most people's taxonomic models suggest, ngl
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FarmHoppervip
· 9h ago
Basically, it's the US dollar causing trouble. No matter how powerful the central bank is, it can't stop the RMB from fleeing.
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GateUser-40edb63bvip
· 9h ago
Wait, is the American company acting as a shadow central bank? Isn't this just a form of covert colonization, just with a different disguise?
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PebbleHandervip
· 9h ago
The term "shadow central bank" is used too perfectly; the US dollar has directly squeezed the fiscal lifeline of emerging markets.
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SquidTeachervip
· 9h ago
Basically, it's the US dollar secretly reaping profits, and central banks in emerging countries are becoming more and more stubborn.
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ponzi_poetvip
· 9h ago
The term "shadow central bank" is brilliant; it's basically Financial Colonialism 2.0.
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