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The Petrodollar: How America Made the World Buy Oil in Fiat Dollars — And Trapped Everyone In It

3 Views • 07/16/26
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Kwabena Ofori Osei
Kwabena Ofori Osei
45 Subscribers
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In 1971, the United States cut the dollar loose from gold and gambled the entire global economy on a single question: what gives a piece of paper its value once the metal underneath is gone? The answer turned out to be oil — and the deal that made it happen was kept secret for forty-one years.

This is the story of the petrodollar: how a moment of weakness became the most durable instrument of power any nation has ever wielded. From the collapse of Bretton Woods and the Nixon Shock, to the 1973 oil embargo that quadrupled prices overnight, to the chain-smoking Wall Street bond trader who flew secretly into Saudi Arabia in 1974 to strike a deal that would anchor the dollar to the world's most essential commodity.

But this isn't just a story about American advantage. It's a story about a trap. We follow the petrodollars on their journey — from oil importers, into Gulf treasuries, through Western banks, and out as cheap dollar loans to the developing world. Then we watch Paul Volcker raise interest rates to nearly twenty percent and the bill reset overnight, triggering Latin America's "lost decade," sovereign defaults, and more than twenty million people pushed into extreme poverty.

We separate documented history from myth: the real secret Treasury bond arrangement versus the viral "single 1974 oil treaty" that never actually existed. We look honestly at the contested "petrodollar war theory" surrounding Iraq and Libya — what's proven, what's speculation, and why the truth refuses to be neat. And we examine whether the system is finally cracking, with the dollar's reserve share at a three-decade low, the rise of the petroyuan, and central banks quietly stacking gold.

How did America make the world buy oil in dollars? And who really got trapped in it?

If this pulled back the curtain on something you only half understood, hit like and subscribe for more deep dives into the hidden machinery of money and power.

#petrodollar #usdollar #oileconomy #geopolitics #financialhistory #dedollarization #brettonwoods #nixonshock #federalreserve #saudiarabia #opec #petroyuan #brics #reservecurrency #globaleconomy #macroeconomics #economichistory #paulvolcker #debtcrisis #dollarhegemony #wallstreet #powerstructures #moneyexplained #oilanddollars #economicsdocumentary

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3 Comments sort Sort By
Kwabena Ofori Osei
Kwabena Ofori Osei
46 minutes ago

Fiat money-Fiat dollar is a government-issued currency that is not backed by a valuable physical commodity like gold or silver. Instead, its value comes from the public's trust in the issuing government and the stability of its economy.

Key Characteristics of Fiat Money:
No Intrinsic Value: It is made of worthless materials like paper, cheap metal, or digital code.
Government Decree: It becomes a legal tender because a government declares it by law.
Supply Control: Central banks can print or digitally create more money as needed.
Trust-Based: Its value fluctuates based on public faith, inflation, and economic health.

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Kwabena Ofori Osei
Kwabena Ofori Osei
51 minutes ago

Fiat Money-Fiat-Currency-Fiat Dollar:
Money-Currency-Dollar that is backed by nothing except by the credibility of the government that issued it.
From the Latin words, “Let it be done.”
Fiat Money-Fiat Dollar has value because the government printing it says” it has value.”
The government printing the Fiat-Money-Fiat Dollar has declared it is a legal monetary tender, and trust it will have value and be accepted in the future. Fiat money, is money by decree and it is not backed by anything of value, like gold or silver.

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Kwabena Ofori Osei
Kwabena Ofori Osei
58 minutes ago

Fiat money is government-issued currency that is not backed by a physical commodity like gold. It derives its value from the public's trust in the issuing government and its status as legal tender for paying taxes and debts. Most modern global currencies, such as the US Dollar, Euro, and British Pound, are all fiat.

How It Works:
Unlike the gold standard—which was completely abandoned by the United States in 1971—fiat money is not pegged to a tangible, limited valuable resource. Its availability and value are controlled by central banks and monetary authorities.

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