Bretton Woods principles without Bretton Woods politics: reserve design notes for project teams
Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

First reported on MINING.com
30 Second Briefing
Tether’s reported accumulation of roughly 140 tonnes of physical gold in Swiss underground-vaults converted from nuclear shelters, with purchases at times above $1 billion per week, is presented by Erik Groves, corporate strategy lead and in-house counsel at Morgan Companies, as a signal of growing unease with fiat-based reserve systems. He argues that both a re-gold-backed US dollar and a proposed gold-backed BRICS currency would still be constrained by domestic politics, repeating Bretton Woods’ core flaw. The op-ed points instead to a non-sovereign, gold-backed stablecoin combining gold’s reserve credibility with crypto settlement rails as a more durable anchor for global trade.
Technical Brief
- Bretton Woods hinged on a fixed dollar–gold convertibility, with all other currencies pegged to the dollar.
- System design effectively required the US to prioritise external balance over domestic fiscal and political demands.
- Political pressures from rising debt, war spending and social programmes made strict gold convertibility structurally unworkable.
- Termination of convertibility is framed as a political constraint problem, not a technical failure of gold backing.
- Current dollar reserve role is justified by depth of US capital markets, liquidity and legal predictability, despite fiat status.
- Any sovereign-backed reserve, whether US or BRICS, is argued to inherit the same domestic-political override risk.
Our Take
Tether’s reported 140 tonnes of physical gold holdings sit against a backdrop of other non-traditional actors moving into bullion, such as El Salvador’s recent central bank purchase covered in our database, signalling that monetary experiments around gold are no longer confined to G7-style institutions.
The linkage in this op-ed between gold and conflict-linked coltan from Congo echoes a pattern in our Policy coverage where precious metals and critical minerals (gold, silver, tantalum) increasingly appear together, forcing ESG and traceability teams to think about cross-commodity standards rather than siloed compliance regimes.
With more than 200 fatalities cited in the east Congo coltan collapse and Rubaya’s 15% share of global coltan output, any move by US- or Switzerland-based financiers to anchor digital or reserve assets in tantalum supply chains would likely face the same scrutiny now being applied to high-profile gold accumulators in our recent coverage.
Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.
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