https://www.economist.com/finance-a...give-way-to-a-multipolar-system-of-currencies[The Dollars] share slipped from 71% of global reserves in 1999 to 59% in 2021. The phenomenon is widespread across a variety of central banks, and cannot be explained away by movements in exchange rates.
The findings reveal something compelling about the dollar’s new competitors. The greenback’s lost share has largely translated into a bigger share for what Mr Eichengreen calls “non-traditional” reserve currencies. The yuan makes up only a quarter of this group’s share in global reserves. The Australian and Canadian dollars, by comparison, account for 43% of it. And the currencies of Denmark, Norway, South Korea and Sweden make up another 23%. The things that unite those disparate smaller currencies are clear: all are floating and issued by countries with relatively or completely open capital accounts and governed by reliable political systems. The yuan, by contrast, ticks none of those boxes. “Every reserve currency in history has been a leading democracy with checks and balances,” says Mr Eichengreen.
So basically, central banks are trying to diversify from the Dollar, but into Australian Dollars, Canadian Dollars, Danish Krones, Norwegian Krone, Swedish Krona, and South Korean Won. These are all liberal democracies, with independent central banks. They are very similar to the USA. No one wants to use Chinese Government control Yuan, or worse yet Putin controlled Ruble. Both Yuan and Rubles have been defaulted on, and may well be defaulted on again.