News
Bank of JapanOutput Gap, Potential Growth Rate, and Labor Market Indicators·Al JazeeraCanada’s Carney secures deal for pipeline to expand oil exports beyond US·SCMPAustralia expects to gain extra US$26 billion from exports after Iran war raises prices·Al JazeeraTrump administration renews pressure on International Criminal Court·SCMPChina signals openness to reducing gaping EU trade surplus as Brussels toughens stance·NYTLatest Jobs Report Shows Labor Market Is Not a Source of Inflationary Pressure·Economic TimesFuel price cut? Hardeep Puri explains·Economic TimesUS hiring drops to 57K in June amid inflation·Bank of JapanOutput Gap, Potential Growth Rate, and Labor Market Indicators·Al JazeeraCanada’s Carney secures deal for pipeline to expand oil exports beyond US·SCMPAustralia expects to gain extra US$26 billion from exports after Iran war raises prices·Al JazeeraTrump administration renews pressure on International Criminal Court·SCMPChina signals openness to reducing gaping EU trade surplus as Brussels toughens stance·NYTLatest Jobs Report Shows Labor Market Is Not a Source of Inflationary Pressure·Economic TimesFuel price cut? Hardeep Puri explains·Economic TimesUS hiring drops to 57K in June amid inflation·

About Fiat Risk

Free, transparent data to help ordinary people protect their money.

Our mission

Fiat Risk is a not-for-profit initiativebuilt to educate the world about the structural risks embedded in money systems. These risks don't just show up in economic reports — they shape geopolitics, drive migration, and ultimately hurt the people who can least afford it: ordinary citizens trying to save, plan, and build a better life.

When a currency loses value, it's not an abstract number on a screen. It means a family's savings buy less food. It means a small business can't plan ahead. It means years of hard work can evaporate in months. These are systemic problems created by the world's various financial and political systems — and the people most affected are usually the last to know.

We believe that access to clear, honest information about currency risk should not be a privilege. Hedge funds and institutions have had this data for decades. We're making it available to everyone — for free, with no paywall, no account required, and no hidden agenda.

What we do

We collect publicly available economic data from trusted international sources — the World Bank, central bank exchange rates, governance indicators — and synthesize it into a simple risk score for every fiat currency on earth.

For each country, we answer the question ordinary people actually care about: “How safe is my money?” Not in financial jargon, but in practical terms — how much do your savings need to grow each year just to not lose value? Is the trend getting better or worse? What should you watch for?

Who's behind this

Fiat Risk was created by a risk professional who has spent years working in financial systems and cares deeply about making structural risk data accessible to ordinary people.

The conviction behind this project is simple: the systems that govern money — central banks, fiscal policy, debt markets — create real consequences for real people. Most of those people have no visibility into what's happening until it's too late. This platform exists to change that.

Our principles

Free to use
Everything on this platform today is free — no account required. We believe the baseline data should be accessible to everyone, everywhere.
Transparent methodology
Our scoring approach is documented publicly. We show our data sources, explain our factors, and acknowledge our limitations.
Independent
We are not affiliated with any government, central bank, financial institution, or political organization. The data speaks for itself.
For citizens, not traders
This is not a trading tool. It's an education tool. We help people understand what's happening to their money and what they can do about it.