Yuan
Yuan
BY
BHANUTEJA V.R
YUAN
EVOLUTION
During the Qing Dynasty, the yuan was a round coin made of silver
Also called yuan dollar. a copper coin of the Republic of China, equal to
100 cents; dollar.
A new yuan was introduced in 1955 , known as the renminbi yuan. It is
the currency of the People's Republic of China to this day.
1 Chinese Yuan equals = 10.22 Indian Rupee
CURRENT SCENARIO
1) Rupee volatility
2) Pressure on exports
YUAN IMPACT ON
WORLD ECONOMY
Whattheyuandevaluationmeansaroundtheworld
Africa
China is now the number one trading partner for most African
countries.
In an effort to make the buying and selling of goods much easier,
some states introduced the yuan into their foreign exchange
system.
In 2011, the Nigerian Central Bank pledged to store between 5%10% of its foreign reserves in yuan, alongside dollars and euros.
Nigeria believed that looking east would help protect the local
currency, the naira, against the volatility of oil prices set in
dollars.
Later on Kenya, whose port is a major gateway for Chinese
goods, announced plans to set up a clearing house for the Chinese
currency.
Brazil
Under normal circumstances, the devaluation of the yuan would have a
huge, negative impact on the Brazilian economy.
China is Brazil's main commercial partner, and a weaker yuan would
mean a Brazilian loss in its terms of trade with the Asian giant.
But these are not normal circumstances in Brazil, as the country is facing
its worst economic downturn in two decades.
One of the few positive side-effects of this is that the Brazilian real has
dropped to its lowest level in 12 years, favouring Brazilian exports
abroad.
While the Chinese currency has dropped about 3% since January, the
Brazilian real has lost 23% of its value.
If this were a purposeful currency war, Brazil would surely be "winning"
in the race to the bottom.
Brazil's economy is in crisis largely due to China, but this has more to do
with the overall slowdown of the Asian economy and the end of the
commodities boom cycle in recent years than just currency fluctuations.