Written by: Bojan Pravica, founder of Elementum

Summary of a quiet yet historic shift in the global monetary framework
Judging by the headlines of financial media, one might get the impression that today’s monetary system is stable: the dollar remains strong, financial markets are functioning, and interest rates fluctuate within familiar boundaries. Yet beneath the surface, a shift is unfolding that is slow, quiet, and therefore often overlooked.
Central banks around the world have been changing how they think about reserves, trust, and risk for several years now. Not through speeches and announcements, but through actual shifts in their balance sheets. Gold, which for decades was considered a relic of the past, is systematically returning to vaults. At the same time, the absolute dominance of the dollar as the sole safe anchor is gradually diminishing.

This article summarizes the key findings of the entire series and explains why this is not a crisis, but a reshaping of the system.

The quiet end of a consensus

For seven decades, a silent agreement prevailed: US government bonds are the safest reserve asset, and the dollar is the politically neutral infrastructure of the global economy. This consensus was not written in treaties, but in the practice of central banks.

Today, this assumption no longer holds unconditionally. Not because the dollar has collapsed, but because the nature of risk has changed. Reserve assets are no longer merely financial – they have also become political.

Why central banks are buying gold again

Central banks do not buy gold out of speculation. They are not interested in short-term price movements. They buy gold because:

In recent years, gold purchases have reached levels not seen since the collapse of the Bretton Woods system. This is not a cyclical phenomenon. It is a structural adjustment in a world where the rules have changed.

Who is leading this process – and why it’s not the West

The biggest buyers of gold today are not the US or Eurozone countries, but nations outside the Western monetary core: China, India, Turkey, Russia, Poland, and many others.

The common denominator is not ideology, but position. These countries are more exposed to external shocks, sanctions, and political pressures. For them, gold is not a protest against the system, but a tool of monetary sovereignty.

China and the importance of non-transparency

China treats gold differently than most countries. It officially reports very little, updates data rarely, and leaves many open questions. This is no coincidence.

In monetary strategy, non-transparency is often an advantage. If markets and competitors do not know exactly what you hold, it is harder for them to apply pressure. China treats gold as a long-term strategic reserve, not as an element of public communication.

The dollar is not collapsing – but it is losing exclusivity

Data from the International Monetary Fund shows that the dollar’s share of global foreign exchange reserves is gradually falling and is currently at its lowest level in about three decades.

This does not mean the end of the dollar. It means the end of its self-evident dominance. The world is not moving away from the dollar, but rather reducing the concentration of risk in a single center.

When money becomes a weapon

The weaponization of financial sanctions was a turning point. When sovereign reserve assets were frozen, it became clear that money is no longer a politically neutral infrastructure.

For central banks, whose duty is to prepare for extreme scenarios, this shifted the baseline logic of decision-making. In this context, gold proved to be the only major reserve asset that is truly “unfreezable.”

Why parallel payment systems are emerging

Countries are not responding to the new reality with rebellion, but with redundancy. Instead of dismantling the existing system, they are building parallel paths:

These systems are not intended for everyday use. They function like a backup generator – invisible most of the time, but crucial during emergencies.

Why even the West disagrees with itself

Top Western institutions interpret the exact same data differently. The Federal Reserve views gold as a marginal asset. The European Central Bank sees it as a signal of caution.

The difference lies not in the data, but in the position. Those who manage the system cannot publicly question it. However, those who are exposed to it cannot ignore its fractures.

What this means for the future

The most likely future is neither a collapse nor a return to the old normal. It is a multipolar, more dispersed monetary system where:

Gold is not returning because the world has lost its mind. It is returning because the world has learned the lessons of past crises.

Central banks are not announcing the end of the system. They are preparing for a world where trust is conditional, infrastructure is politicized, and risks are multifaceted.

Gold is not the solution in this process. It is a signal.

And that signal speaks clearly today:

the world is not abandoning the existing monetary order – it is adapting it to the reality of the 21st century.

Therefore, the current movements are not radical. They are gradual, balanced, and deliberate.