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IMF chief economist Gourinchas says global economy remains firmly ‘dollar-centered’

By Thomson Reuters Jun 26, 2026 | 12:06 PM

By Andrea Shalal

WASHINGTON, June 26 (Reuters) – Global trade flows and relationships are shifting after U.S. President Donald Trump imposed unilateral tariffs on most countries, ​but the U.S. dollar continues to anchor ‌international trade, banking and central bank reserves, the International Monetary Fund’s chief economist said on Friday.

Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas, who will leave the IMF and return to teaching next week, told Reuters in ‌an ​interview that even sharp increases in ⁠the price of gold ⁠over the past few years had been largely driven by the rise of gold exchange-traded funds that allowed investors to buy into gold without holding ​the physical metal.

Stablecoin issuers were also holding gold as an asset, which was driving demand and prices ⁠higher, but even central banks ⁠were not actively buying gold.

“We are seeing ​very, very little in terms of movements that would ​indicate that we’re moving away from a dollar-centered world. ‌We are very firmly in the dollar-centered world,” he said. “That doesn’t mean that it couldn’t change at some point, but really the set of developments we’ve ⁠seen the 10 years, we’re seeing very, very minor things.”

Gold edged higher on Friday as the dollar weakened and expectations ⁠of U.S. interest ‌rate hikes eased slightly after the ⁠previous day’s U.S. inflation data suggested price ​pressures ‌may have peaked. Gold was still on ​track for ⁠a fourth consecutive weekly decline.

Spot gold was up about 1.4% to $4,083 per ounce in early afternoon trading.

The U.S. dollar eased from recent highs after the release of the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge on Thursday.

(Reporting by Andrea Shalal;Editing ​by Dan Burns)