Seeds of Wisdom RV and Economic Updates Tuesday Afternoon 7-29-25

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BRICS Common Currency Could Launch in 2026
A digital, sovereign alternative to the US dollar is accelerating under BRICS Pay infrastructure.

A Bold Monetary Shift: BRICS Targets 2026 for Common Currency Rollout

Amid rising concerns over global monetary instability and the diminishing dominance of the US dollar, the BRICS alliance is preparing to introduce a common sovereign-backed currency, potentially by 2026. Backed by digital infrastructure and expanded economic power, this initiative is set to challenge the unipolar financial architecture and reinforce a multipolar monetary order.

At the heart of the proposal is BRICS Pay, a sovereign digital settlement system designed to handle cross-border transactions, facilitate dedollarization, and enable trade in local currencies across the bloc’s expanding membership.

Key Developments Leading to 2026 Launch

The BRICS monetary agenda was advanced significantly during the 17th BRICS Summit in Brazil (July 2025), where leaders endorsed concrete progress toward the goal of monetary sovereignty. The alliance is now executing a multi-phase plan, with pilot programs set to begin before 2026.

Notable updates include:

  • Accelerated settlement in local currencies:

    • Russia-China trade now denominated in rubles and yuan

    • India expanding rupee trade with Global South nations

  • BRICS Pay implementation underway:

    • Aimed at enabling digital, borderless transactions

    • Bypasses SWIFT, ensuring financial autonomy

  • CBDC integration:

    • All member states are progressing on central bank digital currency (CBDC) development

    • Pilot programs to test multilateral compatibility will be conducted in phases through 2026

  • Bloc expansion fuels legitimacy:

    • With 10 members (and more pending), BRICS now represents 46% of the global population and 37% of world GDP

Digital Infrastructure: The Cornerstone of BRICS Monetary Sovereignty

The technological engine powering this shift is blockchain-enabled interoperability, with BRICS Pay designed to connect central banks, national payment systems, and users via a single, resilient framework.

This initiative is not merely symbolic. It leverages:

  • Blockchain for cross-border transfers

  • National CBDCs in pilot stages

  • Dedicated payment rails outside of Western financial infrastructure

By enabling smoother, low-cost settlements outside of USD systems, the BRICS currency model aims to foster trust, autonomy, and scalability—particularly for Global South nations seeking alternatives to Western-led monetary institutions.

Implications: Toward a Post-Dollar Financial System

The successful launch of a BRICS currency would mark a monumental reconfiguration of global finance:

  • Trade pricing shifts: Expect increased use of rubles, yuan, and the new BRICS currency in energy and commodity contracts.

  • Global South empowerment: Nations marginalized by dollar-based sanctions and FX volatility gain access to a stable, non-Western monetary alternative.

  • Reduced SWIFT dependency: With BRICS Pay and sovereign CBDCs in place, member states can avoid political and systemic risks tied to Western clearinghouses.

However, execution remains a challenge. The currency’s viability hinges on:

  • Cooperation across diverse economies

  • Political stability and sustained commitment

  • Market trust in a supranational unit still under development

Conclusion: The Countdown Begins

BRICS is no longer theorizing a new monetary future—it is engineering it. If timelines hold, the world could see a functional, digitally-native BRICS currency by 2026, backed by blockchain infrastructure and central bank cooperation.

With dedollarization already underway, this initiative could redefine trade dynamics, commodity pricing, and financial sovereignty in the emerging multipolar world.

@ Newshounds News™
Source:  
CoinTribune   

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10 New Countries on the Verge of Joining the Expanding BRICS Alliance
As 34 nations express interest in membership, BRICS eyes strategic additions from oil-rich, GDP-growing, and infrastructure-hungry regions.

BRICS Expansion Momentum Accelerates: 10 Countries Likely to Join Next

The BRICS bloc is poised for another significant expansion as 34 countries signal interest in joining the coalition. Of these, 23 nations have formally submitted membership applications, while 11 others have shown informal interest.

Originally formed in 2009 by Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa, the alliance expanded in 2024 with the induction of Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, the UAE, and Indonesia—bringing total membership to 10 nations, alongside 13 designated “partner countries.”

Now, attention turns to the next wave of prospective members—a strategically selected group of countries that offer regional influence, economic growth, and commodity resources.

Top 10 Countries Under Consideration for BRICS Membership

BRICS is carefully assessing candidates based on their resource base, GDP potential, geopolitical positioning, and compatibility with the bloc’s long-term agenda, including the use of local currencies through the New Development Bank (NDB).

Here are the 10 most likely additions:

  1. Bahrain

  2. Malaysia

  3. Turkey

  4. Vietnam

  5. Belarus

  6. Sri Lanka

  7. Mexico

  8. Kuwait

  9. Thailand

  10. Uzbekistan

Strategic and Economic Drivers Behind the Candidates

  • Oil EconomiesBahrain and Kuwait offer strong crude production and exports, bolstering BRICS' energy influence alongside existing members like Russia, Iran, and the UAE.

  • Gateway MarketsMexico would give BRICS unprecedented access to Latin American markets, while Belarus could open up new corridors into Eastern Europe—a region of both economic and political interest to the bloc.

  • Emerging Asian EconomiesVietnam, Turkey, Malaysia, Thailand, Uzbekistan, and Sri Lanka bring growing populations, developing infrastructure, and high demand for funding—making them prime candidates for the NDB’s local-currency lending expansion.

This planned expansion aligns with BRICS’ broader mission to create a multipolar global economic structure, reducing dependency on Western-led financial institutions like the IMF and World Bank.

The New Development Bank’s Role in Expansion

The New Development Bank (NDB)—BRICS' financing arm—is actively working to disburse loans in local currencies rather than relying on the US dollar. That strategy makes the inclusion of infrastructure-hungry economies attractive, particularly as BRICS aims to boost intra-bloc trade, energy deals, and development financing without Western intermediaries.

These candidate countries, many of whom are facing infrastructure bottleneckssovereign debt pressures, or development funding gaps, would benefit from BRICS’ multilateral support, while the bloc gains in economic leverage, geopolitical reach, and market integration.

Conclusion: From 10 to 20—BRICS Evolves into a Global Power Bloc

As BRICS continues its deliberate expansion, the alliance is steadily transforming from a symbolic counterweight to the G7 into a functional global alternative. The next wave of members—if approved—could bring the bloc’s core membership to 20 nations, expanding its reach across Latin America, Asia, Eastern Europe, and the Gulf region.

With the world increasingly polarized between Western financial hegemony and multipolar alternatives, BRICS appears to be consolidating power through a combination of resource diplomacyeconomic integration, and currency sovereignty.

@ Newshounds News™
Source:  
Watcher Guru

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