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Has China's plan all along have been to devalue the Yuan to knock out debt?
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Re: Has China's plan all along been to devalue the Yuan to knock out debt?
china can't/won't devalue the yuan until or unless it can pay for oil [and preferably other commodities as well, but oil at a minimum] in its own currency.
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Re: Has China's plan all along been to devalue the Yuan to knock out debt?
Originally posted by jk View Postchina can't/won't devalue the yuan until or unless it can pay for oil [and preferably other commodities as well, but oil at a minimum] in its own currency.
https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=34812
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Re: Has China's plan all along been to devalue the Yuan to knock out debt?
Unlike in the 1980s where Chinese wages are very low, the China today depends very much on internal consumption as it does for exports. How will abnormally high inflation impact on the service industry and the employment rate?
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Re: Has China's plan all along been to devalue the Yuan to knock out debt?
Originally posted by touchring View PostUnlike in the 1980s where Chinese wages are very low, the China today depends very much on internal consumption as it does for exports. How will abnormally high inflation impact on the service industry and the employment rate?
Once China has an internal domestic market up and running, then you are spot on about inflation being damaging. But let's not forget China is a communist dictatorship that can resolve public unrest at the barrel of a gun. The employment numbers would go bad and service industries would suffer but politics would stay stable and the Chinese people would bear their suffering quietly.
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