Posts Tagged ‘ yuan peg ’

Korea Economic Slice: The Fiat System, Asian Money Today and Tomorrow

Sep 7th, 2010 | By Rob
Korea Economic Slice: The Fiat System, Asian Money Today and Tomorrow

In 1933 the Gold Standard was pushed aside and the United States Dollar (USD) officially became tied to nothing. Later in 1944, during a gathering of global leaders in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire, international exchange rate policies were put in place to assure the system of “floating” global currencies. Yet it would be the Mr. John Maynard Keynes who went on to define this exchange of paper money as “fiat currency”, or money where the “material substance… is divorced from its monetary value”.



Korea Economic Slice: Chinese Renminbi Floats Again

Jun 29th, 2010 | By Rob
Korea Economic Slice: Chinese Renminbi Floats Again

The moment that Europe and the U.S. have been lobbying for over the past nine months finally arrived, as China ended the rule based exchange rate “peg” of the Renminbi, or Chinese Yuan, to the U.S. Dollar. While the immediate implications of a floating Yuan are positive for Asia as a whole, the mid-term reprocussions of a stronger Renminbi may tell a starkly different tale.