In the new wave of digital finance, stablecoins are not so much disruptors of the old system, but rather “digital relays of the Bretton Woods System”—carrying the credit of the US dollar, anchoring US Treasury assets, and reshaping the global settlement order.
The new phase after 2020 is the reconstruction process of the digitization, programmability, and fragmentation of the dollar’s credit foundation, with stablecoins being the key connective tissue of this reconstruction.
Stablecoins, especially those pegged to the US dollar like USDC, FDUSD, and PYUSD, have an issuance mechanism of “on-chain dollar certificates + US Treasury bonds or cash reserves,” forming a simplified version of the “Bretton mechanism:”
This indicates that the stablecoin system has essentially rebuilt a “digital version of the Bretton Woods framework,” where the anchor has shifted from gold to US Treasuries, and the national settlement has transformed into on-chain consensus.
Currently, the reserve structure of mainstream stablecoins is dominated by U.S. Treasury securities, especially short-term T-Bills (1-3 month Treasury bills), which have the highest proportion:
From this perspective, stablecoins are “new Bretton tokens backed by T-Bills as gold,” embedding the credit system of the U.S. Treasury.
Although on the surface, stablecoins are issued by private institutions, which seems to weaken the central bank’s control over the US dollar. But in essence:
This allows the United States to “airdrop” dollars into global wallets without the need for SWIFT or military projection, representing a new paradigm of outsourcing monetary sovereignty.
Therefore, we say:
Stablecoins are the “unofficial contractors” of American monetary hegemony.
—— It is not a replacement for the US dollar, but rather pushes the US dollar on-chain, global, and into a “bankless zone.”
In this framework, the global financial system will evolve into the following model:
This means that the future Bretton Woods System will no longer take place at the Bretton Woods conference table, but rather through negotiations and consensus among smart contract code, on-chain asset pools, and API interfaces.
Stablecoins seem to be private innovations, but they are actually becoming a “de facto bridge” for the U.S. government’s digital currency strategy:
Just as the Bretton Woods System established the dollar’s credibility through a gold anchor, today’s stablecoins are attempting to rewrite the currency governance structure with “on-chain T-Bills + dollar clearing consensus.”
Stablecoins are not a revolution, but a reconstruction of U.S. debt, a reshaping of the dollar, and an extension of sovereignty.
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In the new wave of digital finance, stablecoins are not so much disruptors of the old system, but rather “digital relays of the Bretton Woods System”—carrying the credit of the US dollar, anchoring US Treasury assets, and reshaping the global settlement order.
The new phase after 2020 is the reconstruction process of the digitization, programmability, and fragmentation of the dollar’s credit foundation, with stablecoins being the key connective tissue of this reconstruction.
Stablecoins, especially those pegged to the US dollar like USDC, FDUSD, and PYUSD, have an issuance mechanism of “on-chain dollar certificates + US Treasury bonds or cash reserves,” forming a simplified version of the “Bretton mechanism:”
This indicates that the stablecoin system has essentially rebuilt a “digital version of the Bretton Woods framework,” where the anchor has shifted from gold to US Treasuries, and the national settlement has transformed into on-chain consensus.
Currently, the reserve structure of mainstream stablecoins is dominated by U.S. Treasury securities, especially short-term T-Bills (1-3 month Treasury bills), which have the highest proportion:
From this perspective, stablecoins are “new Bretton tokens backed by T-Bills as gold,” embedding the credit system of the U.S. Treasury.
Although on the surface, stablecoins are issued by private institutions, which seems to weaken the central bank’s control over the US dollar. But in essence:
This allows the United States to “airdrop” dollars into global wallets without the need for SWIFT or military projection, representing a new paradigm of outsourcing monetary sovereignty.
Therefore, we say:
Stablecoins are the “unofficial contractors” of American monetary hegemony.
—— It is not a replacement for the US dollar, but rather pushes the US dollar on-chain, global, and into a “bankless zone.”
In this framework, the global financial system will evolve into the following model:
This means that the future Bretton Woods System will no longer take place at the Bretton Woods conference table, but rather through negotiations and consensus among smart contract code, on-chain asset pools, and API interfaces.
Stablecoins seem to be private innovations, but they are actually becoming a “de facto bridge” for the U.S. government’s digital currency strategy:
Just as the Bretton Woods System established the dollar’s credibility through a gold anchor, today’s stablecoins are attempting to rewrite the currency governance structure with “on-chain T-Bills + dollar clearing consensus.”
Stablecoins are not a revolution, but a reconstruction of U.S. debt, a reshaping of the dollar, and an extension of sovereignty.