As international monetary tensions intensify, China is accelerating its offensive against the dominance of the dollar. Beijing officially launches a strategic plan to impose its own international payment system. This initiative marks a major turning point in redefining global financial flows, reinforcing China’s ambition for a multipolar economic order. By directly targeting the traditional networks dominated by the West, this maneuver now captures the attention of markets, governments, and major financial institutions.
The Shanghai municipal government, with the support of the People’s Bank of China (PBoC), officially launched an ambitious plan to increase the use of the yuan in cross-border transactions .
This plan “aims to develop an independent international payment system” based on the Cross-Border Interbank Payment System (CIPS), a network that already includes over 1,300 financial institutions across 110 countries.
Chinese authorities clarify their objective:
Increase the internationalization of the yuan and support the expansion of Chinese companies abroad.
CIPS is presented as a credible alternative to SWIFT, which has so far dominated the international payments sector.
The major pillars of the plan include:
The strategic choice of Shanghai to lead this offensive is no coincidence. The city plays a pivotal role in the Chinese economy and serves as a laboratory for international financial reforms. This deployment is part of a broader dynamic linked to the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), which aims to weave a yuan-dominated exchange network.
Beyond simply strengthening CIPS, China now expresses its intention to reshape the global financial architecture by offering the BRICS members a true alternative to the dollar.
The project supported by the PBoC indeed plans to “promote cross-border settlements in yuan” among member countries, marking a major strategic shift. The aim is to facilitate exchanges within the economic bloc but also to reduce exposure to the American banking system, seen as a geopolitical leverage.
The development of an autonomous payment ecosystem could profoundly transform the dynamics of international trade. By supporting bilateral financial flows with strategic partners through CIPS, China thus hopes to cement its economic influence while encouraging the adoption of the yuan in global exchanges.
Such a strategy fits into a trend observed in several recent BRICS initiatives, which aim to promote the use of local currencies and establish independent financial institutions.
This evolution raises multiple questions about the future of the international monetary system. If the transition toward a multipolar world in the field of payments accelerates, it could weaken the dollar’s preeminence and trigger profound restructurings in financial markets. Ultimately, the rise of an autonomous BRICS payment system could offer emerging countries greater economic maneuvering capacity, which would also lead to tensions with defenders of the current monetary order.