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August 7, 2003
Currency Conundrums
Both China and India face tough choices on exchange rates
The Chinese currency is under assault-both verbal and speculative. The US Treasury Secretary John Snow, the US Federal Reserve Bank chairman Alan Greenspan and a couple of American Senators have called for a revaluation of the yuan/renminbi. The Governor of the European Central Bank Wim Duisenberg has joined the chorus as have senior ministers from Japan and South Korea. Influential investment banks have put out research reports suggesting that a revaluation is both needed and is imminent.
Unlike most currencies, the yuan is pegged at 8.28 to the US dollar, although it is allowed to vary within an extremely narrow band of 8.276-8.28. It has always been at the centre of debate. The roots of the East Asian financial crisis of 1997/98 have been traced back by some scholars to the hefty devaluation of the yuan by 50% in mid-1994. During the crisis and its aftermath, however, China earned plaudits for holding the peg and for dispelling fears that it would devalue yet again. But why, when it was praised for currency stability then, is it being criticized for currency stability now? Two major factors account for the view that the yuan is grossly undervalued: (i) the phenomenal rise in forex reserves and huge inflows of foreign capital; and (ii) persistently high growth rates of both GDP and of exports, especially to the US and to Europe.
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