Facing the fragilization of the global monetary system and the contested dominance of the dollar, the BRICS are quietly but surely moving towards a strategic alternative: a common currency backed by sovereign digital infrastructures. Carried by a now enlarged and economically influential bloc, this initiative aims to redraw the global monetary balance. As the instability of fiat currencies worsens, the emergence of such a project calls on markets, institutions, and observers: is this a strong signal towards a new multipolar economic order?
During the 17th BRICS summit , held in early July 2025 in Brazil, leaders took a new step in their drive for monetary emancipation from the dollar. Thus, the bloc members reaffirmed their commitments to monetary cooperation and endorsed substantial advances in the expansion of trade in local currencies as well as in the development of BRICS Pay.
Although no official launch date has been set, analysts estimate that the project follows a structured multi-phase approach and that 2026-2027 is now the realistic horizon for operational implementation.
The dynamics underway within the bloc show concrete empowerment, supported by several strategic levers:
These elements are no longer just diplomatic rhetoric. They reflect real coordination, reinforced by tangible economic and diplomatic facts. The bloc now expresses a clear ambition: to build an independent monetary infrastructure, on a precise timetable, and with interoperable tools already in development.
Beyond the political and commercial dimensions, the BRICS currency project rests on an ambitious technological foundation. Indeed, member states “are actively building sophisticated payment systems” capable of supporting the future common digital currency.
These infrastructures notably rely on blockchain to facilitate cross-border payments and bypass traditional systems such as SWIFT. The development of BRICS Pay is at the core of this technical strategy, aiming to interconnect central banks and end users through a unified, interoperable, and resilient interface.
Research work on central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) is also being integrated into the project architecture. Thus, member countries “are making productive progress in research on integrating CBDCs”, with pilot programs planned to test key stages of the timetable by 2026.
These experiments should allow calibrating the compatibility between existing national digital currencies and a supranational monetary unit still in development. The stakes are twofold: ensure smooth multilateral settlements while guaranteeing the monetary sovereignty of each member state.
The implications of such a shift are major. A functional BRICS currency, particularly the great shift towards local currencies , could redefine global monetary correlations, influence pricing of raw materials (especially energy), and offer Global South countries a credible alternative to the dollar. However, the success of the project will depend on fine coordination between economies with divergent profiles, political stability among members, and the ability to establish trust in a monetary unit still theoretical.