ASEAN Unveils 5-Year Plan to Reduce US Dollar Dependency Starting 2026
The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) has formalized a strategic roadmap to diminish reliance on the US dollar for cross-border transactions between 2026 and 2030. The bloc’s 46th summit in Kuala Lumpur culminated in a multipolar financial framework designed to prioritize local currencies over the greenback.
While not an immediate abandonment of dollar-based trade, the plan signals a deliberate shift. The ’Economic Community Strategic Plan 2026–2030’ explicitly targets reduced dollar investments and expanded use of regional currencies. This transition could reshape forex dynamics, potentially boosting valuation of ASEAN currencies as billions in trade flows migrate to native tender.
The MOVE carries geopolitical implications. As ten emerging economies—including Brunei and Cambodia—coordinate this financial pivot, Western markets may face new volatility. The dollar’s dominance faces its most structured challenge yet from a collective representing one of the world’s fastest-growing regions.