The American Stragetist - logo
 

Chinese Currency Catch 22

May 7, 2008 - 10:23am

For the first part of 2008, the Chinese have increased the pace of yuan revaluation, but in doing so they may have augmented inflation, the very problem they are trying to prevent. Speculators poured funds into China (some believe as much as $200bn) during the first quarter of 2008 on the assumption that the undervalued yuan will appreciate further. The increased pace of appreciation during the first quarter only gave speculators more incentive to sneak cash in China's back door. The resulting growth in the monetary base has contributed to Chinese inflation. As a policy response some have argued China should do a one-off revaluation of the currency anywhere from fifteen to forty percent. Unsurprisingly, the Chinese authorities have not taken this risk.

Snapshot asks, what will be the pace of future yuan revaluation and will it stoke or reduce inflationary pressure?

Morgan Stanley - Dollar Smirks in Asia
AllianceBernstein - Asian Economic Perspectives
Michael Pettis - Have we begun the countdown to the maxi-revaluation?
Peterson Institute - Estimates of the Equilibrium Exchange Rate of the Renminbi