

Donald Trump’s influence trade uses power as a global currency—which poses challenges for India
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories. Humankind has shown broad acceptance of three different kinds of currencies: widely-acceptable fiat currency (like the dollar or Indian rupee), extinct commodity-based currency (gold and silver coins, or even wheat bushels) and an emerging class of digital currency (such as stablecoins or central bank digital currencies or CBDCs). A fourth class of currency is being minted and popularized by US President Donald Trump: influence.
This has special significance for India. Trump appears to be trading influence—in his personal as well as national capacity—to gain a variety of benefits for himself and the US. Venezuelan politician María Corina Machado recently traded in her Nobel Peace Prize: she gifted it to Trump, apparently in return for his influence over who holds office as Venezuela’s president.
While the Nobel committee has voided this ‘transfer,’ Trump has not recanted his earlier public statement that she lacks leadership nous. Yet, he said he was happy to accept the gift from Machado. World leaders nominating Trump obsequiously for the Nobel Peace Prize have been promised dubious collateral benefits.
Trump extended the US’s considerable security and economic umbrella to Pakistan in exchange for Islamabad’s gushing admiration and, unsurprisingly, a Nobel nomination. It did not matter that it was Pakistan’s top military general and de facto ruler who came bearing gifts. In August, the EU struck a curious trade deal with Washington, agreeing to zero duty on most US goods but a 15% duty on a large number of EU goods exported to America.
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