Posts Tagged ‘Peg’

China: New Currency Regime Is No Yuan-Way Bet

The future movements of the Chinese yuan have been one of the most hotly debated issues in the global economy for many years. The initial 2.1% revaluation of July 21, 2005, after a decade at CNY8.28/US$, was almost as eagerly awaited as the release of the first Star Wars prequel, and like the latter, it… [Read more]

China As A Currency Manipulator: The Elephant In The Room

Let’s rewind two years, to a time before ‘credit crunch’, ‘quantitative easing’, ‘TARP’ or ‘staycation’ had entered the popular vocabulary. I’m talking about a time in which the term ‘currency manipulator’ was part of the zeitgeist of US-China economic relations. Today, G20 summits come and go without this phrase, which once seemed almost ubiquitous, being… [Read more]

Latvia: Another Bad Egg

Three days ago I stressed that the dissolution of Latvia’s four-party coalition government was looking more and more likely. Today, President Valdis Zatlers announced that he has accepted the resignation of the prime minister and his administration. With the economy in turmoil and now lacking a government, Latvia’s ailments are only surpassed by defunct state… [Read more]

CEE Pegged Currencies: Which Next To Devalue?

Of the 32 sovereign states in the emerging Europe region, 19 maintain fixed pegs or heavily managed exchange rate regimes (eight others have floating currencies and five utilise the euro). Thus far, only five of the 19 have made significant devaluations despite a clear regional trend of capital outflows, slowing growth and rapidly declining export… [Read more]


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