Overview
The petrodollar system is the arrangement whereby oil is priced and traded in U.S. dollars worldwide. Established through secret agreements between the United States and Saudi Arabia in 1974, this system replaced gold as the backing for the dollar after Nixon ended gold convertibility in 1971.
Because every country needs oil, and oil must be purchased in dollars, every country must hold dollar reserves. This creates artificial demand for dollars, allowing the U.S. to print money and run massive deficits that would be impossible for any other country. In exchange, the U.S. provides military protection for Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states.
The petrodollar system has been enforced through military intervention. Countries that have attempted to sell oil in currencies other than the dollar - Iraq, Libya, and potentially Iran - have faced regime change or severe sanctions.
"Whoever controls the oil controls entire nations; whoever controls money controls the world."
- Henry Kissinger (attributed)
Creation of the Petrodollar
After Nixon ended dollar-gold convertibility in 1971, the dollar faced a crisis. Without gold backing, why would countries continue to hold dollars? The solution: replace gold with oil.
The 1974 Saudi Deal
In 1974, Secretary of State Henry Kissinger negotiated a secret agreement with Saudi Arabia:
- Oil in Dollars Only: Saudi Arabia agreed to price all oil sales exclusively in U.S. dollars
- OPEC Follows: Other OPEC nations followed Saudi Arabia's lead
- Petrodollar Recycling: Saudi Arabia would invest oil revenues in U.S. Treasury bonds
- U.S. Military Protection: America would protect the Saudi regime
- Arms Sales: U.S. would sell advanced weapons to Saudi Arabia
Declassified Documents
The full details of the petrodollar agreement were classified for decades. Bloomberg obtained declassified documents in 2016 revealing the extent of Saudi holdings in U.S. Treasuries and the secret nature of the arrangement.
Why It Matters
- Global Dollar Demand: Every country needs dollars to buy oil
- Infinite Spending: U.S. can print money without typical consequences
- Deficit Financing: Other countries finance U.S. debt by holding dollars
- Imperial Power: U.S. can sanction any country by cutting dollar access
- Military Justification: Need to "protect" oil supplies justifies global military presence
Enforcing the Petrodollar
The petrodollar system has been maintained through military force. Countries that have threatened to abandon dollar pricing for oil have faced severe consequences.
Iraq (2003)
The Threat
November 2000
Saddam Hussein announced Iraq would sell oil in euros instead of dollars through the UN Oil-for-Food program.
The Response
March 2003
U.S. invaded Iraq. WMDs were never found. One of the first actions: Iraqi oil sales returned to dollars.
Libya (2011)
The Threat
2009-2011
Gaddafi proposed a gold-backed African currency (gold dinar) for oil sales. He held 144 tons of gold.
The Response
October 2011
NATO intervention. Gaddafi killed. Libya's gold reserves disappeared. Country remains in chaos.
Hillary Clinton's Emails
Declassified State Department emails revealed that preventing a gold-backed African currency was a primary motivation for the Libya intervention. The emails explicitly mentioned Gaddafi's gold reserves and plans for a pan-African currency that would threaten French and American interests in Africa.
Iran
- 2008: Iran opens oil bourse trading in non-dollar currencies
- Response: Severe sanctions, designation as part of "Axis of Evil"
- Ongoing: Continued pressure, assassination of scientists, threat of military action
- Current: Iran sells oil to China in yuan, faces maximum pressure campaign
Venezuela
- 2017: Venezuela announces oil sales in yuan and other currencies
- Response: Severe sanctions, recognition of opposition leader as president
- Ongoing: Economic collapse attributed to socialism; sanctions rarely mentioned
Who Benefits?
The petrodollar system provides enormous advantages to the United States at the expense of the rest of the world.
U.S. Benefits
- Exorbitant Privilege: U.S. can print the world's reserve currency
- Free Imports: Essentially exchange paper for real goods
- Deficit Spending: Can run massive deficits funded by foreign dollar holders
- Low Interest Rates: Foreign demand for Treasuries keeps rates down
- Sanction Power: Can cut any country off from global finance
- Military Dominance: Defense spending funded by petrodollar privilege
What Other Countries Lose
- Dollar Dependency: Must earn or borrow dollars to buy oil
- Inflation Export: U.S. exports inflation to dollar holders
- Sovereignty: Subject to U.S. sanctions and financial control
- Trade Disadvantage: Currency fluctuations affect oil costs
- Forced Holdings: Must hold dollar reserves that lose value
"The United States can issue debt in its own currency and because the dollar is the global reserve currency, can do so at extremely low interest rates... This is what former French President Valery Giscard d'Estaing called America's 'exorbitant privilege.'"
- Barry Eichengreen, Economist
The BRICS Challenge
The BRICS nations (Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa - now expanded) represent the most significant challenge to petrodollar dominance since its creation.
De-Dollarization Efforts
- China-Russia: Oil and gas traded in yuan and rubles
- China-Saudi Arabia: Discussions for yuan-priced oil sales
- BRICS Currency: Proposed alternative reserve currency
- New Development Bank: Alternative to IMF/World Bank
- Gold Accumulation: BRICS nations accumulating gold reserves
- Payment Systems: China's CIPS as alternative to SWIFT
Key Developments
Russia-China Pipeline
2019
Power of Siberia pipeline delivers Russian gas to China. Payments in rubles and yuan, not dollars.
Saudi-China Meeting
2022
Xi Jinping's visit to Saudi Arabia. Discussions of yuan-priced oil contracts.
BRICS Expansion
2024
BRICS expands to include Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iran, Egypt, Ethiopia. Major oil producers joining.
Central Bank Gold Buying
2022-2024
Record gold purchases by central banks, led by China, Russia, and other BRICS nations.
Saudi Arabia's Shift
The original petrodollar partner is now hedging its bets. Saudi Arabia has joined BRICS, discussed yuan oil contracts with China, and is no longer exclusively aligned with the U.S. The 50-year petrodollar agreement reportedly expired in 2024.
Timeline
Nixon Shock
U.S. ends gold convertibility. Dollar needs new backing.
Oil Embargo
Arab oil embargo demonstrates oil's strategic power.
Petrodollar Agreement
Kissinger negotiates secret deal with Saudi Arabia. Oil priced exclusively in dollars.
Iraq Switches to Euro
Saddam announces oil sales in euros.
Iraq Invasion
U.S. invades Iraq. Oil sales return to dollars.
Gaddafi's Gold Dinar
Libya proposes gold-backed African currency for oil.
Libya Intervention
NATO intervention. Gaddafi killed. Gold dinar dies.
Russia Sanctions
Russian assets frozen. Russia demands rubles for gas. De-dollarization accelerates.
BRICS Expansion
Saudi Arabia and major oil producers join BRICS. Petrodollar agreement reportedly expires.