The  United States is bankrupt.  The government refuses to pay its bills. The US currency is no longer the  'be-all and end-all' of international currencies. Notwithstanding Apple,  Microsoft and other entrepreneurial start-up companies, US economic clout is on  the wane. 
Ok,  so the US is not really bankrupt – it can keep printing (and debasing?) more paper  currency notes which the rest of the world happily purchases in ever growing  amounts. Economic stability equals a free trade environment predicated on trust  in the USD. 
The  rest of the world includes Singapore.  
Singapore's  foreign currency reserves, one of the  largest pools of capital in the world are biased towards the US Dollar  (USD). From Temasek  Holdings to the Government of Singapore Investment Corporation (GIC),  Singapore's stake in international  economic stability is great. Singapore  is not alone. China – the  largest single owner of US government debt – has a lot riding on USD  stability. 
The  day China stops buying US debt, the USD  may collapse. 
Result:  China  becomes much less wealthier, on paper at least. Moreover, the US will be  unable to keep importing goods from China because it cannot pay for them in the  'new, debased' USD. In turn, this leads to social problems within China as  Chinese factories reduce production and lay off workers. Consequently, Chinese consumers,  including travellers, decrease consumption and the world suffers more ... and  the vicious cycle continues. 
Of  course, global politics are not so simple. Despite a gradual shift away from US  dependencies, the world needs the US to behave responsibly. International  stability continues to rest on the US, economically and politically. Shutting  down government because of domestic political squabbles is not responsible. It  smacks of 'Banana  Republic' politics and politicians. The US looks more and more like the  Third World countries it chooses to lecture (and bomb when they don't listen)  about governance on a regular basis. 
The  world entered a new socioeconomic era some years ago. The post World War Two Bretton Woods and Cold War orders have wasted away.  However, the replacement paradigm has yet to be defined. At least for the next  several decades the world will continue to watch US domestic politics as if it  were their own. 
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Imran is a business and management consultant.  Through his work at Deodar Advisors and the  Deodar Diagnostic, Imran improves profits of businesses operating in Singapore  and the region. He can be reached at imran@deodaradvisors.com. 

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