Isnt that what communism is in part, centralizing the governance, especially economic branches, toward State control/command.. Isnt this also what Fascism has to do since its based not on principle but a kind of pornographic aesthetic of Triumph, which pretty much means perpetual warfare. And the centralizing of the market with communism always collapses when it comes into contact with a free market and hence communism only works if all markets are commanded which means it will also be in a perpetually imperialist state.. I dont know why I started talking about the necessary tyranny of command economies but *S* *W* *a* *G* bro
When Iraq was under Saddam 1 dinar = USD 3.2. Meaning if Irak has foreign debts in the USD worth of USD 1 million, it was only equaled to 300 k dinar. Look at now 1 USD = 1,195. Meaning their USD 1 million debts worth 1 Billion Dinar. That was increament of 1,195 times. How about if 1 USD = 2 Trillion dinar? What if Iraq becomes default and cannot pay? What do you think the USA will have from Iraq if Iraq is default?
I think your all just drinking the anti China US administration propaganda, who by the way with its massive trade deficits and debts to China feels like its gonna get knocked off the top of the hill. Facts are China is a hardworking nation that saves and does in fact have rule of law (unless you listen to Mike Pompeo) and as a result is prospering. It would be great for them to destabilize China, for example with a overnight introduction of democracy, which historically results in massive strife, the list is long and does include the US revolutionary war, French Revolution and never mind that Germany and Japan had to be bombed into oblivion for them to become democratic. We can go right back to what by many is considered the start of modern democracy, signing of the Magna Karta, war war war. I love how the high priests are sharpening their knives for the sacrifice of others they are preparing for democracy. Democracy is all good btw but its introductory process is not and the only reason why USSR didnt have a civil war when it broke up is because Gorbachov didn't want a civil war in a country with nuclear weapons, but never mind the massive internal destabilization and the proxy wars that resulted out of that. I seriously doubt the US would have wrecked the middle east if the USSR was still around, its funny hearing the US talk about internal checks and balances of power, but does anyone ever wonder, what about external checks and balances to power, or does human nature just look inward?
When Iraq was under Saddam 1 dinar = USD 3.2. Meaning if Irak has foreign debts in the USD worth of USD 1 million, it was only equaled to 300 k dinar. Look at now 1 USD = 1,195. Meaning their USD 1 million debts worth 1 Billion Dinar. That was increment of 1,195 times. How about if 1 USD = 2 Trillion dinar? What if Iraq becomes default and cannot pay? What do you think the USA will have from Iraq if Iraq is default?
In China people’s standards of living are slowly increasing, it’s not long ago many more people were living as peasants on farms in rural China, as this improves you could expect people to demand more from their economy. This means more services and goods consumed by their people. People expect to be paid more and the cost of doing business goes up. All of a sudden it’s not so cheap to do business in China as it once was.
Its the middle income trap, as workers demand more money the cheap labour is no longer there, then itll likely go to india then the same will happen to them, then probably some african nation but if no nation is available they would choose a country with the best infrastructure, either the US or a western european nation.
@@sausagejockyGaming Countries get stuck in the middle income trap because they can't innovate and create new high tech goods. China is already a highly innovative economy with lots of high tech companies. No way China gets stuck in middle income.
America: "We shouldn't manipulate currencies because its EBIL" Also America: *Forces japan to artificially double it's currency overnight along with European stooges leading to 30+ years recession* The only lesson here is: Look at what Americans do, not what they say.
@@SangoProductions213 I'm not Chinese, as my name suggests I am Indian - I just call out American hypocrisy when I see it because the worst thing a developing country could do is listen to America yapping about free trade and IP when it was hyper-protectionist and the biggest abuser of IP laws in the early 20th century when it was developing. Not understanding reality is how you end up with trump, no govt healthcare and a murder rate higher than Afghanistan
And with the sheer amount of (usa) dollars china owns, what if they start selling dollars for .75 of the value? China is big enough and if they have the reserve*, they can ruin the usa dollar at a very high price, but cheaper than an all out war. *They are really building up usa dollars and gold.
When Iraq was under Saddam 1 dinar = USD 3.2. Meaning if Irak has foreign debts in the USD worth of USD 1 million, it was only equaled to 300 k dinar. Look at now 1 USD = 1,195. Meaning their USD 1 million debts worth 1 Billion Dinar. That was increament of 1,195 times. How about if 1 USD = 2 Trillion dinar? What if Iraq becomes default and cannot pay? What do you think the USA will have from Iraq if Iraq is default?
@@mastersonogashira1796 lol you have been brainwashed by the USA. So I let you know another side of a coin. So you can see this thing on both sides covered.
Yep, and every country claims what they are doing is for the good of the people while things other countries are doing is evil and needs to be countered. Nationalism is a powerful domestic tool and doesn't need to be internally consistent.
@@neeneko not really. The rate of greediness for each country is different. The US is super Greedy. Trump doesnt want any country to surpass their supremacy as the strongest economy in the world. Meaning every country cannot pass the US GDP. Let see in India side. They have 1.5 billion people. If India cannot surpass the USA GDP meaning India people GDP per capita will always be low. Meaning USD 14T/1.5 billion people = USD 9300. Now let say INdia population has increased to 3 billion people It means their GDP becomes only USD 4600. If no cap on the world GDP certainly India will be the strongest economy in the world by USD 9300x 3billion people = USD 28 K trillion. This is way above the US that only has 300 million people. How about if each India earns the same GDP per capita of each American that is USD 46K?
In alternate universe, Dale Carnegie wrote “Don't be afraid of enemies who attack you. Be afraid of the friends who flatter you.” ― How to Win TRADE and Influence PRICES
When Iraq was under Saddam 1 dinar = USD 3.2. Meaning if Irak has foreign debts in the USD worth of USD 1 million, it was only equaled to 300 k dinar. Look at now 1 USD = 1,195. Meaning their USD 1 million debts worth 1 Billion Dinar. That was increament of 1,195 times. How about if 1 USD = 2 Trillion dinar? What if Iraq becomes default and cannot pay? What do you think the USA will have from Iraq if Iraq is default?
@@Melissa-zy6qi That is a completely different question and an open-ended one at that. You're better off asking it in a political Subreddit or community
you forgot to mention that when China buys foreign currencies, those currencies increase in value. While any single spender normally wouldn't affect the price, the Chinese government can move around so much currency that they can manipulate the currencies of *other* nations on top of their own, but to a more limited extent.
I think there is a difference, though. EE doesn't do personal opinions, his aim is to inform rather than evangelise. It's absolutely fair for him to point out what is his own view and what is consensus, or indeed controversy, among the profession.
I think economist is reserved for the ones actually applying the theories in real world setting..it's fair enough for him who seems to be purely in the academia.
When a nation is competing with rivals that are more developed economically, it makes sense to interfere with free markets in the form of import tariffs or devalued currency to promote its own development. (The US did it back in the 19th century.) When it becomes equally developed, however, such interference becomes disadvantageous.
LOL That's outdated theory. Obama has done it and the economy did not work. Then he did QE or made the USD expensive and then the economy run well. The same as BMW,LV etc, will they sell cheap to promote their products? Nope
19th century? How about Bretton Woods and the fake peg of gold to dollar? It wouldn't have become the world reserve currency but for that trick making dollars "as good as gold". Somehow they only managed to keep the farce going for 25 years but it's effect lasts up to this date
@@dpokor This dollar reserve currency should be ended soon other wise the US will corrupt this system and make other countries victims of their bullies. I guess the first think to do is using gold for everything. When the USD increases in values than purchasing more gold.
@@Blaqjaqshellaq I'll always answer: letting the invisible hand of the free market figure it out. No central planning, even if it's comfortable for those occupying power for 4-8 years, they are always short-sighted
When Iraq was under Saddam 1 dinar = USD 3.2. Meaning if Irak has foreign debts in the USD worth of USD 1 million, it was only equaled to 300 k dinar. Look at now 1 USD = 1,195. Meaning their USD 1 million debts worth 1 Billion Dinar. That was increament of 1,195 times. How about if 1 USD = 2 Trillion dinar? What if Iraq becomes default and cannot pay? What do you think the USA will have from Iraq if Iraq is default?
@D2 E2 the more the better so they world knows the brainwash done by the USA is on now. In fact that brainwash is not true. So this posting just want to let the world know another side of the coin.
@@Melissa-zy6qi So your argument is that two wars and a decade of sanctions between them wouldnt have a impact on its currency value... Your shallow comment looks like a copy past a 50center would post. You even admit that you spam it.
When Iraq was under Saddam 1 dinar = USD 3.2. Meaning if Irak has foreign debts in the USD worth of USD 1 million, it was only equaled to 300 k dinar. Look at now 1 USD = 1,195. Meaning their USD 1 million debts worth 1 Billion Dinar. That was increament of 1,195 times. How about if 1 USD = 2 Trillion dinar? What if Iraq becomes default and cannot pay? What do you think the USA will have from Iraq if Iraq is default?
Love this channel! You just have to do the economics of the British Empire. It can cover the tea trade, cotton industry with india, the opium wars, the east india company being nationalized, the founding of stock trading and there's so much more content than this!
@D2 E2 The foundation of every Empire in existence is slavery and theft. Whether they're seen as good depends on how much social and technological progress they've made with the slavery and stolen wealth.
@@timothygoosby6942 Indeed. History honors those true to their agenda, despite the destruction they cause to others; and dishonors those who are hypocrites, liars and betrayers.
John Clemens P. Rubi this is not true. Every nation in the world have their national reserves based on usd. So when US prints a trillion dollar, the expected currency deflation is actually spread across all other countries. It’s like making an ATM withdrawal out of someone’s else’s account.
SDPRZ every nation’s national reserve are based in USD. When US prints money the expected currency deflation is spread across everyone’s national reserve. It’s like making an ATM withdrawal directly from other people’s account. China printing money more or less gives an unfair advantage by keeping their currency low which in turn maintains their cost of good exports’ attractiveness. Although it might be an unfair advantage, but to overseas end-user consumers like me, it still allows me to buy good for a cheaper price which otherwise would’ve been more expensive. However US printing money is outright robbing my country’s national reserve which is robbing from the taxes I paid. You call it a necessity to outright robbery?
Chinese here, can confirm. The stereotype around parents pushing kids to be doctors, lawyers, engineers, and businessmen since young is more true than ever these days, especially entrepreneurship. Can't do business right if ya ain't good at maths.
Quantitative easing also depresses your currency so any country that prints a lot of money like Japan and the USA are technically "manipulating their currency". Also pegging your currency is a lot more common than you think, even the Euro is pegged. Currency stability is critical to doing any kind of international trade and because the yuan is not commonly accepted it needs to be be pegged to prevent wild fluctuations.
The effect of US printing is much worse though compared to Japanese Yen. The USD is the de-facto world's reserve currency. According to FMI, 60% of world's reserves are held in dollar-denominated assets (plus 40% of the world's debt). This means the FED printing dollars is literally stealing the world!
True but the Euro is pegged for different reasons is it not? The Euro can't be decided entirely by the market due to the wide range of economies from Eurozone countries. However having it pegged is good for countries like Germany and bad for Greece
@@wigglebot2368 I mean because USD is the world reserve currency, there is 80 trillion USD in circulation. I assume even if the US prints 2 trillion USD there won't be much inflation.
No, they just cultivated their domestic brands by walling off foreign brands. Now, they're ready to open up their markets to make sure their homegrown brands stay innovative.
I just checked your channel yesterday to see if you had created a video on this topic. Then today it popped up in my TH-cam feed. Keep up the good work of uploading the exact videos I want to see at exactly the right time.
Hey how about the brazilian real ? i heard it is the most devaluated currency this year for developing countries, and it seems like a big part of the reason is simply because the government wants to. Do you think that this might actually be helpful for our economy in the long term ?
In India, a lot of people say that India will be the next China, or could even surpass China. But as much as I love my country, I have to say we're just plain stupid compared to China and I don't see any way we could catch up to them considering the kind of attention to detail and relentlessness with which they've chased economic prosperity.
India will become China in a way that it will be used as a source of cheap labor. That's the China that think they were referring to. While this is happening, New China will develop even further from India. The only way they can catch up is if they develop unique products (so that they'll be in demand) and not import as much (so that Indian currency isn't devalued as much) While this is all a nice thought, I'd still like to think that Taiwan has the upper ground. Though I didn't do as much research with this particular country to state any definite outcomes.
@@shido8597 not until they've developed. So far, those citizens are bringing home dollars which add value to the currency. Until they can provide jobs for everyone, don't immediately recall the overseas workers. That'll just devastate the economy :(
Chrono-Glitch WaterLily many of these workers are simply moving out of the country though. India needs a more authoritarian government, nobody pages taxes, the streets look terrible, there is insane air pollution. Unless this changes India can’t go anywhere.
Imagine being naive enough to think that every country doesn't do that to some extent ALREADY. Only difference between authoritarian govts and their more democratic counterparts in this matter - is that they don't need public opinion, so they don't have to lie about it.
Just a question on the Cadillac vs Mercedes analogy, but if the value of the dollar decreases, wouldn't the cost to produce the Cadillac increase as well, thereby increasing the cost of the car?
I became a millionaire when i went on vacation in Vietnam. Then when I cashed my millions at the bank they gave me 50.00 and told me to have a nice day
You’re videos have always been amazing and educational, but having just super binged a good number of them, you seem to just get better and better with every one.
When Iraq was under Saddam 1 dinar = USD 3.2. Meaning if Irak has foreign debts in the USD worth of USD 1 million, it was only equaled to 300 k dinar. Look at now 1 USD = 1,195. Meaning their USD 1 million debts worth 1 Billion Dinar. That was increament of 1,195 times. How about if 1 USD = 2 Trillion dinar? What if Iraq becomes default and cannot pay? What do you think the USA will have from Iraq if Iraq is default?
When Iraq was under Saddam 1 dinar = USD 3.2. Meaning if Irak has foreign debts in the USD worth of USD 1 million, it was only equaled to 300 k dinar. Look at now 1 USD = 1,195. Meaning their USD 1 million debts worth 1 Billion Dinar. That was increament of 1,195 times. How about if 1 USD = 2 Trillion dinar? What if Iraq becomes default and cannot pay? What do you think the USA will have from Iraq if Iraq is default?
Drop a dollar on Patreon to access their research material and have your doubts resolved in an exclusive QnA. These guys work hard to produce the videos, they are not Chinese government printing inflated gdp figures.
How is the exchange rate of other countries (like UK, Eurozone, Canada, Japan etc.) determined? How is the value of US dollar determined? What is quantitative easing doing in regard of the exchange rate and international trade?
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Probably everybody. School systems somehow neglect finances in general. I guess the goverments just want to produce more and more brainless consumers/workers
One point that I think is slightly glossed over (if I missed a sentence he said let me know) is that undervalued currencies are not always good for local businesses. They make it more expensive to import and less expensive to export, so if you're making simple goods that only use materials from inside you're country, you'll benefit. But, more complex goods usually require parts that may need to be shipped in from other countries (for example phones and cars) and in this case those imports can eat into local businesses bottom line. I think that EE is more correct to say "undervalues currencies help local businesses" in regards to China because of their capacity to create so many of their intermediary materials (say microchips for phones) locally, but they can't create everything (yet) so the benefit will depend on the business and their production line needs.
Just keep in mind that some toll barriers are because of national security. For example food. Its wise for any nation to retain some level of food production and if that nation has limited access to producing food. It goes without saying that it will usually cost more, so in order to be financially viable you need toll barriers. These toll barriers are also often seasonal based.
I think you're complicating this issue. You did explain everything else very well but this, not so much. You could have done better. Simply put, China builds up a reserve of foreign currency by selling its currency. In this process, the price of its currency is set by China, hence it is able to decide how much it is taking in. By pushing its currency to the world, it decreases the value of its currency. This helps building up the local economy because local goods are cheap, and individuals from other countries tend to buy it cheap and sell it for higher prices. Why other countries can't do it, is because no country is so self sufficient, and they're kind of tied up in an agreement before FIAT came into existence (The Bretton Woods Agreement). The Federal Reserve manipulates the market using banks and interest rates through the USA worldwide, while China played the UNO reverse card by collecting cash and sending out products, hence manipulating the market. China knows what it is doing, and it is doing it well. Federal Reserve is a private entity, meanwhile China is a nation. The world cannot keep up with China in prices because it almost in entirety, the world currencies are tied up with the US Dollar. China will keep buying US dollar, deflating the currency whilst the purchasing power is very less. This will toss the US day-to-day economy into chaos. If US stops selling the dollar to China, inflation would occur. This would set it to course, but the purchasing power would increase. This would cause a chain reaction wherein the industries in the US would raise prices and end up screwing up their own people. A better way to handle it will be to stop printing out notes, ask industries not to increase prices, stop selling US dollar to China, and produce things inside of the country. It'll take time to adjust to the prices, but it'll be worth it.
Do you seriously believe that America can tell three separate parts of their country from different locations and levels to collaborate on a single economic goal for maybe 5-10 years?
China knows what American politicians want, and how selfish they are. If its free money at the cost of Americans, they don't care, suffering Americans arent their problem
This video video is nice,you are doing great! Please try to keep some visual aid such as stats , graphs , figures and tables or numbers.This would engaged the viewers for entire time.
Be careful what you wish for, if China increases the value of its currency it becomes a more powerful and larger consumer market because a strong CNY means more buying influence for every one of its billion citizens. Hypothetically if the CNY is allowed to appreciate to 1:2 USD then its economy will double the size of the US economy. Meaning in total, China can dictate demand with greater influence to multinational companies to reflect Chinese needs and wishes. Weaker supply-side productive competitiveness for stronger demand-side consumer power. People complain about Disney or NBA catering to the Chinese market but a strong CNY means that it will only intensify multinational businesses ' desire to lobby and kotow the CCP line in order to get market access.
China is incredibly easy to do business with. They will literally disappear their own population if they get in the way of profits for you and the government,
Many news articles have gone over the topic of China not just manipulating currency but manipulating and dramatically overvaluing GDP growth figures and inflation. Will you do a video on this? I find this highly interesting from an economics perspective.
The federal reserve isn't ran by the government. The decisions it makes is entirely separate from the US government itself. The currency itself doesn't get manipulated like the Chinese government does things.
@@dennisp8520 That's bullshit. Look up the website of the federal reserve. It's www.federalreserve.gov. What does gov stand for? Also, its board members are nominated by the president and confirmed by the senate. Pray tell what kind of private enterprise free of government control would have such a structure in place.
@@zeus907 oh god, please help this poor ignorant soul. The federal reserve is literally doing its own independent thing. The president, Congress, etc don't have any say over its montary policy. That is different from China who littlerally can have their leader snap there figures to change how the money is being printed and so forth. www.federalreserve.gov/faqs/about_12799.htm
*US: Accomplishes World Domination via false-flag induced 'freedom invasions' to prop up Petrodollar* *The Western Media: China bad, they manipulate their currency AND WE DON'T!* 😂😂😂
Deniz Erdal not sure the biggest baddie on the bloc can justify more 😂 get your shot act together at this election especially with the raise of new silver legion of America aka Qanon
@@denizerdal6465 minimum hourly wage in Shanghai is ~3$/h, with smaller cities being 2$/h. Then that's minimum, most people makes a lot more than that, as minimum wage jobs are usually only taken by students or uneducated people, and long story short, majority of new generation has universe degrees so the second kind if rapidly disappearing leaving students as the only ones working for minimum wage.
I LOVED the Simpsons reference, I know this would probably mean a lot more work, but the Simpsons has a lot of material that may relate to your videos, and would add a lot to the video.
I think that buying stuff from abroad and bringing it back home to resell still counts as an import, and therefor taxed when found, so even those people will find China a bit more unappealing to buy from than usual. The real loophole to the trade war is that China sells parts, so all they need is to sell some unfinished goods into other countries like South Korea, Japan or Vietnam for them to complete, stamp in their brand, and sell it to the US. Iphone has parts made in China, same goes for Samsung and Japanese brands. Pretty much why Trump wants to drag in more countries to the cause.
@@madensmith7014 Guys, the thing is China has the scale and countries/companies have been dependent on China for decades!! They cannot pivot suddenly. It will take time for companies to shift their supply chain which is a costly affair but it has started happening.
Economic problems are, in fact, the reason behind that incident. Back then, in the earlier stage of economic reform, China had two sets of prices, one base on central planing the other market. It was supposed to be a transition between the planned economy to a free market. This inevitably leads to and severe exploitation of the system, often from corrupt officials. To counter this problem, the government decided to allow the previously planned prices of domestic goods to rise (to the same level of market) so that China can transition to a market economy in a short period. The slogan back then was, ”prolong suffering is worse than temporary suffering.” This policy worthen the already high inflation rate and leads to people stockpiling goods in panic. The discontent eventually leads to mass demonstrations. The Chinese government did away with the two sets of prices in the winter of 1989 after the suppression of protest. The 1989 protest is framed in the West as ”pro-democracy.” Although such characterization holds some truth, the protest has more to do with corruption and mishandling of the economy.
So is that what the Swiss National Bank did with the Euro? For around 2011 to 2014, you had to pay at least 1.20 Swiss Francs for 1 Euro. That has been lifted by now but I still wondered how they pulled that off.
**My Chinese friend starts laughing like a maniac while reading her book** Me- *“I’m not sure if she’s laughing about her book or her plans for world domination!?!”*
Oh and here I thought they were mostly doing it by printing a MASSIVE amount of money to keep the price low. I had no idea they kept is absolutely FIXED.
Oh pleaseee.... China does not manipulate its currency. It's only a US accusation going by their own definition. China just does not allow its currency to float freely, but to float only a within trading band to maintain stability and minimise volatility. This is important for trade so there's no big fluctuation in price. Lots of other countries do it too which the US also accuses --- Germany, Switzerland, France, Singapore is a few I can recall.
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Effectively, China subsidizes their buyers/sellers, reducing prices. That's a much simpler way of putting it. At that rate, if someone else is paying, you should just buy all their stuff and sell it at a profit. The money you generate and labour savings can be used to invest into your own society.
The thing about this so called dead weight or whatever societal cost u mentioned, think of it like a capitalist type wealth redistribution strategy. The government takes in taxes from the people and businesses, pays for these..."manipulation" thingy, and other nations buy from the businesses, giving them more income, hence producing more tax income. So to get money in, one has to provide goods or services to get that money. So, instead of the government directly giving the money to help alleviate poverty, they made it so that only those hardworking ones gets it, in a self repeating cycle. Think back how this all started, from what economic level they came from. And where they are now. This took some long term planning, and i would argue, if you are worried about china now with its "currency manipulation", you will really be even more worried and afraid when it is fully freely floated. Because that will be the point when the chinese government decide the benefits of free floating yuan will be far more beneficial to china as a whole than a "controlled" one.
Can we just start calling tariffs TAXES and admit that Trump drastically raised TAXES on commodities which hurts the consumer, especially the middle class, which is the primary consumer?
@Stephen Jenkins ...Or we could have just used TPP which SPECIFICALLY barred China from the table and LOWERED taxes. But, that was Obama, so lowering taxes is now socialism now I guess.
Good old china, all of our best friend. At least as long as you do whatever they want. I am truly worried how bad it will get in the coming decades as they become more powerful.
The US dollar floats freely in world currency markets - as do all other WTO member's currencies. Except China of course. It's the only WTO member not required to do so. Talk about a rigged market.
Thanks as always for watching :D This video was requested by the team over on Patreon. If you want to have your say on what video is produced next please consider supporting the channel. www.patreon.com/EconomicsExplained
can you make a video on Pakistan military budget economy and foreign debt relating them because after 6 months of my own research things are still messy also including china's self interest in cpec(china Pakistan economic corridor) and electrical infrastructure development
The devaluation of a currency doesn't always work in the direction you mention at min 6-7 though. When your cadillac sells for double the price in Germany because of the euro's relative value, the company might pump its price in the US, resulting in inflation. This has been a pretty big problem in Argentina, for example.
Economists: “The market shall decide your fate.”
China: “I am the market!”
"It always has been"
IMF:China does not Manipulates its currency
Economics Explained:I'm a Super Follower of the U.S. government
@@theendofdemocracyistyranny405?
Isnt that what communism is in part, centralizing the governance, especially economic branches, toward State control/command.. Isnt this also what Fascism has to do since its based not on principle but a kind of pornographic aesthetic of Triumph, which pretty much means perpetual warfare. And the centralizing of the market with communism always collapses when it comes into contact with a free market and hence communism only works if all markets are commanded which means it will also be in a perpetually imperialist state.. I dont know why I started talking about the necessary tyranny of command economies but *S* *W* *a* *G* bro
D2 E2 Unlimted Currency.
Can Jerome Powell and his money printer defeat the Chinese, find out on the next episode of Dragon Ball Z
That's an episode I'd watch
Not unless he goes Super Powell 3. Market probably need a couple of senzus too.
@@Tenchinu And a yamcha death. Every story in dragon ball needs a yamcha death
When Iraq was under Saddam 1 dinar = USD 3.2. Meaning if Irak has foreign debts in the USD worth of USD 1 million, it was only equaled to 300 k dinar. Look at now 1 USD = 1,195. Meaning their USD 1 million debts worth 1 Billion Dinar. That was increament of 1,195 times. How about if 1 USD = 2 Trillion dinar? What if Iraq becomes default and cannot pay? What do you think the USA will have from Iraq if Iraq is default?
Dango428
1 Yamcha death = 1 prayer
China be like "to beat the market... we must become the market!"
To beat the top comment, this must become the top comment!"
In so many ways XD
in soviet china market is not controlled by you you are controlled by the government
I think your all just drinking the anti China US administration propaganda, who by the way with its massive trade deficits and debts to China feels like its gonna get knocked off the top of the hill. Facts are China is a hardworking nation that saves and does in fact have rule of law (unless you listen to Mike Pompeo) and as a result is prospering. It would be great for them to destabilize China, for example with a overnight introduction of democracy, which historically results in massive strife, the list is long and does include the US revolutionary war, French Revolution and never mind that Germany and Japan had to be bombed into oblivion for them to become democratic. We can go right back to what by many is considered the start of modern democracy, signing of the Magna Karta, war war war. I love how the high priests are sharpening their knives for the sacrifice of others they are preparing for democracy. Democracy is all good btw but its introductory process is not and the only reason why USSR didnt have a civil war when it broke up is because Gorbachov didn't want a civil war in a country with nuclear weapons, but never mind the massive internal destabilization and the proxy wars that resulted out of that. I seriously doubt the US would have wrecked the middle east if the USSR was still around, its funny hearing the US talk about internal checks and balances of power, but does anyone ever wonder, what about external checks and balances to power, or does human nature just look inward?
Funny how that is like actually what a socialist planned economy is.
"I would rather betray the market than let the market betray me! "
-probably not Cao Cao
Man of culture I see
When Iraq was under Saddam 1 dinar = USD 3.2. Meaning if Irak has foreign debts in the USD worth of USD 1 million, it was only equaled to 300 k dinar. Look at now 1 USD = 1,195. Meaning their USD 1 million debts worth 1 Billion Dinar. That was increment of 1,195 times. How about if 1 USD = 2 Trillion dinar? What if Iraq becomes default and cannot pay? What do you think the USA will have from Iraq if Iraq is default?
Nah bro Cao Cao is the type of person that will do that
Liu Bei is coming after you
@@n.m.8802 well in fact it is. Look at Mexico, Venezuela, etc that slip after the USD has been manipulated.
Rumor has it Superintendant Chalmers still can't flex... :(
Ecnomic Explains Pls , make a video about
How to make USA health care system affordable in the capitalist method .........
Time to learn Mandarin Westerners!
I thought this was a video about steamed hams.
5 minutes in - I just got the quote lol.
@@jijov.j1545 by prioritising the budget toward a nationalised healthcare.
There is a Simpsons clip for anything.
20 something seasons does that to a show.
@@kekero540 Now its just a stumbling shamble of an old man past his prime
Kekero is it a coincidence if it happens 100 times?
"The Simpsons did everything." - South Park
That's shows how hip the show really is - no accident there. It takes work to be relevant.
China : set up own foreign exchange to devalue our currency
US : use quantitative easing
India: as usual our currency value going down
😂👍
F india
😂😂😂
In China people’s standards of living are slowly increasing, it’s not long ago many more people were living as peasants on farms in rural China, as this improves you could expect people to demand more from their economy. This means more services and goods consumed by their people. People expect to be paid more and the cost of doing business goes up. All of a sudden it’s not so cheap to do business in China as it once was.
Its the middle income trap, as workers demand more money the cheap labour is no longer there, then itll likely go to india then the same will happen to them, then probably some african nation but if no nation is available they would choose a country with the best infrastructure, either the US or a western european nation.
@@sausagejockyGaming Countries get stuck in the middle income trap because they can't innovate and create new high tech goods. China is already a highly innovative economy with lots of high tech companies. No way China gets stuck in middle income.
Yep. Factories are moving to Vietnam & Indonesia to mitigate this
And their freedoms are decreasing.
@@lolwutasddfdfk By refering innovation I think you mispelled IP theft
*Japanese yen goes down 3% over night*
Japanese government: We did it boys, deflation is no more!
America: "We shouldn't manipulate currencies because its EBIL"
Also America: *Forces japan to artificially double it's currency overnight along with European stooges leading to 30+ years recession*
The only lesson here is: Look at what Americans do, not what they say.
@@AKumar-co7oe here's your 50 cents. Good boy.
@@SangoProductions213 I'm not Chinese, as my name suggests I am Indian - I just call out American hypocrisy when I see it because the worst thing a developing country could do is listen to America yapping about free trade and IP when it was hyper-protectionist and the biggest abuser of IP laws in the early 20th century when it was developing.
Not understanding reality is how you end up with trump, no govt healthcare and a murder rate higher than Afghanistan
@@AKumar-co7oe I am a unicorn, like my name indicates. /sarcasm
@@AKumar-co7oe bro kayon mu lag raha hai in logon ke
“The supreme art of war is to subdue the enemy without fighting.”
― Sun Tzu, The Art of War
i’m reading that book right now
@@yay-cat What's your impression till now?
There's also a documentary available in youtube on the same title.
And with the sheer amount of (usa) dollars china owns, what if they start selling dollars for .75 of the value? China is big enough and if they have the reserve*, they can ruin the usa dollar at a very high price, but cheaper than an all out war.
*They are really building up usa dollars and gold.
I like the fact that you compared one of the timeless classic book with the vile act of absolute evil from CCP.
Indeed
Every country manipulates its own currency. Thats called monetary policy
When Iraq was under Saddam 1 dinar = USD 3.2. Meaning if Irak has foreign debts in the USD worth of USD 1 million, it was only equaled to 300 k dinar. Look at now 1 USD = 1,195. Meaning their USD 1 million debts worth 1 Billion Dinar. That was increament of 1,195 times. How about if 1 USD = 2 Trillion dinar? What if Iraq becomes default and cannot pay? What do you think the USA will have from Iraq if Iraq is default?
anon2k10 I always wonder is “50 cents” a good translation? Or “5 mao” better
@@mastersonogashira1796 lol you have been brainwashed by the USA. So I let you know another side of a coin. So you can see this thing on both sides covered.
Yep, and every country claims what they are doing is for the good of the people while things other countries are doing is evil and needs to be countered. Nationalism is a powerful domestic tool and doesn't need to be internally consistent.
@@neeneko not really. The rate of greediness for each country is different. The US is super Greedy.
Trump doesnt want any country to surpass their supremacy as the strongest economy in the world. Meaning every country cannot pass the US GDP.
Let see in India side. They have 1.5 billion people. If India cannot surpass the USA GDP meaning India people GDP per capita will always be low. Meaning USD 14T/1.5 billion people = USD 9300. Now let say INdia population has increased to 3 billion people It means their GDP becomes only USD 4600. If no cap on the world GDP certainly India will be the strongest economy in the world by USD 9300x 3billion people = USD 28 K trillion. This is way above the US that only has 300 million people. How about if each India earns the same GDP per capita of each American that is USD 46K?
In alternate universe, Dale Carnegie wrote
“Don't be afraid of enemies who attack you. Be afraid of the friends who flatter you.”
― How to Win TRADE and Influence PRICES
Dale Carnegie title, I went to the comments to find who knows it too 👍
When Iraq was under Saddam 1 dinar = USD 3.2. Meaning if Irak has foreign debts in the USD worth of USD 1 million, it was only equaled to 300 k dinar. Look at now 1 USD = 1,195. Meaning their USD 1 million debts worth 1 Billion Dinar. That was increament of 1,195 times. How about if 1 USD = 2 Trillion dinar? What if Iraq becomes default and cannot pay? What do you think the USA will have from Iraq if Iraq is default?
@@Melissa-zy6qi That is a completely different question and an open-ended one at that. You're better off asking it in a political Subreddit or community
you forgot to mention that when China buys foreign currencies, those currencies increase in value. While any single spender normally wouldn't affect the price, the Chinese government can move around so much currency that they can manipulate the currencies of *other* nations on top of their own, but to a more limited extent.
I like how EE talks about economists in third person as if he wasn't one
I think there is a difference, though. EE doesn't do personal opinions, his aim is to inform rather than evangelise. It's absolutely fair for him to point out what is his own view and what is consensus, or indeed controversy, among the profession.
I think economist is reserved for the ones actually applying the theories in real world setting..it's fair enough for him who seems to be purely in the academia.
He's become the very thing he swore to destroy
When a nation is competing with rivals that are more developed economically, it makes sense to interfere with free markets in the form of import tariffs or devalued currency to promote its own development. (The US did it back in the 19th century.) When it becomes equally developed, however, such interference becomes disadvantageous.
LOL That's outdated theory. Obama has done it and the economy did not work. Then he did QE or made the USD expensive and then the economy run well. The same as BMW,LV etc, will they sell cheap to promote their products? Nope
19th century? How about Bretton Woods and the fake peg of gold to dollar? It wouldn't have become the world reserve currency but for that trick making dollars "as good as gold". Somehow they only managed to keep the farce going for 25 years but it's effect lasts up to this date
@@dpokor This dollar reserve currency should be ended soon other wise the US will corrupt this system and make other countries victims of their bullies.
I guess the first think to do is using gold for everything. When the USD increases in values than purchasing more gold.
@@dpokor It seems appropriate for a time when the world was rebuilding after WWII's devastation. Was there a better way?
@@Blaqjaqshellaq I'll always answer: letting the invisible hand of the free market figure it out. No central planning, even if it's comfortable for those occupying power for 4-8 years, they are always short-sighted
Economists: Market rules above everything
China: Becomes the market
Economists: you're not supposed to do that
When Iraq was under Saddam 1 dinar = USD 3.2. Meaning if Irak has foreign debts in the USD worth of USD 1 million, it was only equaled to 300 k dinar. Look at now 1 USD = 1,195. Meaning their USD 1 million debts worth 1 Billion Dinar. That was increament of 1,195 times. How about if 1 USD = 2 Trillion dinar? What if Iraq becomes default and cannot pay? What do you think the USA will have from Iraq if Iraq is default?
@D2 E2 the more the better so they world knows the brainwash done by the USA is on now. In fact that brainwash is not true.
So this posting just want to let the world know another side of the coin.
@@Melissa-zy6qi So your argument is that two wars and a decade of sanctions between them wouldnt have a impact on its currency value... Your shallow comment looks like a copy past a 50center would post. You even admit that you spam it.
I see a meme in a comment, I press like, well played aiden wang, well played
Economists: The market will decide your fate.
China: I am the market!
US: "China manipulates currency. It's unfair!"
Meanwhile FED: "Hehe, money printer goes brrrrrrrrrrrrr!"
This comment is underated.
bruh he spent the whole second half of the video explaining the difference between the two
yeah how is this not a currency manipulation ? dollar index is at 92!!!!!!
@Stephen Jenkins It's the comment section, don't be so serious about everything.
More like Venezuela....
Ah yes, puns for the intellectuals "How to win trades and influence prices."
😂
Finance Optimum Your channel is great.
When Iraq was under Saddam 1 dinar = USD 3.2. Meaning if Irak has foreign debts in the USD worth of USD 1 million, it was only equaled to 300 k dinar. Look at now 1 USD = 1,195. Meaning their USD 1 million debts worth 1 Billion Dinar. That was increament of 1,195 times. How about if 1 USD = 2 Trillion dinar? What if Iraq becomes default and cannot pay? What do you think the USA will have from Iraq if Iraq is default?
Melissa WANG they’ll probably take over our oil fields, set up more bases, have more control over Iraq... etc.
@@Melissa-zy6qi occupy iraq
I was standing at a kiosk at that airport trading some currency listening to this... then he called me a 'schmuck'. Made my day!
China is the real-world demonstration of "I have outsmarted your outsmarting"
Love this channel! You just have to do the economics of the British Empire. It can cover the tea trade, cotton industry with india, the opium wars, the east india company being nationalized, the founding of stock trading and there's so much more content than this!
There's already an episode on the East India Company IIRC.
@D2 E2 Slavery and theft? Roman Empire? Any other Empire?
@D2 E2 The foundation of every Empire in existence is slavery and theft. Whether they're seen as good depends on how much social and technological progress they've made with the slavery and stolen wealth.
@@00x0xx The means we use must be as pure as the ends we seek
@@timothygoosby6942 Indeed. History honors those true to their agenda, despite the destruction they cause to others; and dishonors those who are hypocrites, liars and betrayers.
China:
Manipulates the currency
The US:
*Laughs in quantitative easing*
The US does quantitative easing out of necessity not out of strategy
#whatcouldpossibygowrong. The last weminar republic “hold my beer you two 😂 ”
John Clemens P. Rubi this is not true. Every nation in the world have their national reserves based on usd. So when US prints a trillion dollar, the expected currency deflation is actually spread across all other countries. It’s like making an ATM withdrawal out of someone’s else’s account.
SDPRZ every nation’s national reserve are based in USD. When US prints money the expected currency deflation is spread across everyone’s national reserve. It’s like making an ATM withdrawal directly from other people’s account. China printing money more or less gives an unfair advantage by keeping their currency low which in turn maintains their cost of good exports’ attractiveness. Although it might be an unfair advantage, but to overseas end-user consumers like me, it still allows me to buy good for a cheaper price which otherwise would’ve been more expensive.
However US printing money is outright robbing my country’s national reserve which is robbing from the taxes I paid. You call it a necessity to outright robbery?
@@sdprz7893 "The US does quantitative easing out of necessity not out of strategy"
This is why my Chinese classmates are so good at maths.
@God Bless America it's maths in non US countries
Meanwhile everyone here only knows how to do meth.
Math
Chinese here, can confirm. The stereotype around parents pushing kids to be doctors, lawyers, engineers, and businessmen since young is more true than ever these days, especially entrepreneurship. Can't do business right if ya ain't good at maths.
Rubia Ryu I own multiple successful businesses here in Australia and my maths is horrendous. That’s what accountants are for!
Quantitative easing also depresses your currency so any country that prints a lot of money like Japan and the USA are technically "manipulating their currency".
Also pegging your currency is a lot more common than you think, even the Euro is pegged. Currency stability is critical to doing any kind of international trade and because the yuan is not commonly accepted it needs to be be pegged to prevent wild fluctuations.
The effect of US printing is much worse though compared to Japanese Yen. The USD is the de-facto world's reserve currency. According to FMI, 60% of world's reserves are held in dollar-denominated assets (plus 40% of the world's debt). This means the FED printing dollars is literally stealing the world!
US printing also causes inflation so the change in FOREX is meaningless
True but the Euro is pegged for different reasons is it not? The Euro can't be decided entirely by the market due to the wide range of economies from Eurozone countries. However having it pegged is good for countries like Germany and bad for Greece
@@wigglebot2368 I mean because USD is the world reserve currency, there is 80 trillion USD in circulation. I assume even if the US prints 2 trillion USD there won't be much inflation.
@@adaml6703 Yes but there also won't be much FOREX movement
Please do “inflation is just a flat tax” next
In history, it has rarely been a good idea to suppress free market effects for too long.
China will fall
Comunism is a lie
No, they just cultivated their domestic brands by walling off foreign brands. Now, they're ready to open up their markets to make sure their homegrown brands stay innovative.
@@caorusso4926 china is a state capitalist and not communist
Let's drink to that
@@caorusso4926 china is here to stay m8, the sooner you accept it the better
I just checked your channel yesterday to see if you had created a video on this topic. Then today it popped up in my TH-cam feed. Keep up the good work of uploading the exact videos I want to see at exactly the right time.
US: *nooooo you can't just manipulate your currency to give yourself an unfair advantage in the market!*
China: *haha currency go brrrr*
Not really related to the content but I'm liking the improvements in the visual branding, clean, slick and simple.
Hey how about the brazilian real ? i heard it is the most devaluated currency this year for developing countries, and it seems like a big part of the reason is simply because the government wants to. Do you think that this might actually be helpful for our economy in the long term ?
In India, a lot of people say that India will be the next China, or could even surpass China. But as much as I love my country, I have to say we're just plain stupid compared to China and I don't see any way we could catch up to them considering the kind of attention to detail and relentlessness with which they've chased economic prosperity.
I'm a Russian living in Australia and I agree with you fully. The Chinese are very focused, ambitious and disciplined people and they will get far
India will become China in a way that it will be used as a source of cheap labor. That's the China that think they were referring to. While this is happening, New China will develop even further from India. The only way they can catch up is if they develop unique products (so that they'll be in demand) and not import as much (so that Indian currency isn't devalued as much)
While this is all a nice thought, I'd still like to think that Taiwan has the upper ground. Though I didn't do as much research with this particular country to state any definite outcomes.
@@chrono-glitchwaterlily8776 and bring their Indian citizens home
@@shido8597 not until they've developed. So far, those citizens are bringing home dollars which add value to the currency. Until they can provide jobs for everyone, don't immediately recall the overseas workers. That'll just devastate the economy :(
Chrono-Glitch WaterLily many of these workers are simply moving out of the country though. India needs a more authoritarian government, nobody pages taxes, the streets look terrible, there is insane air pollution. Unless this changes India can’t go anywhere.
I'm afraid to make a joke about China. They will probably log the data and then I'm on the bad list 😄
Imagine being naive enough to think that every country doesn't do that to some extent ALREADY.
Only difference between authoritarian govts and their more democratic counterparts in this matter - is that they don't need public opinion, so they don't have to lie about it.
You're a joke yourself 🤣
Imagine taking YT comments seriously
You are now...
Your "how to win friends and influence people“ reference is great!
I really love the quality of your videos, they’re interesting and very well structured and put together
Just a question on the Cadillac vs Mercedes analogy, but if the value of the dollar decreases, wouldn't the cost to produce the Cadillac increase as well, thereby increasing the cost of the car?
western news: China is the biggest currency manipulator!
The USA FED: am I a joke to you?
Finally a very objective view of this whole controversy over currency manipulation.
I became a millionaire when i went on vacation in Vietnam. Then when I cashed my millions at the bank they gave me 50.00 and told me to have a nice day
You’re videos have always been amazing and educational, but having just super binged a good number of them, you seem to just get better and better with every one.
Oh that dude was staring at the wrong direction he’s gonna disappear 0:48
Sure is
When Iraq was under Saddam 1 dinar = USD 3.2. Meaning if Irak has foreign debts in the USD worth of USD 1 million, it was only equaled to 300 k dinar. Look at now 1 USD = 1,195. Meaning their USD 1 million debts worth 1 Billion Dinar. That was increament of 1,195 times. How about if 1 USD = 2 Trillion dinar? What if Iraq becomes default and cannot pay? What do you think the USA will have from Iraq if Iraq is default?
@@Melissa-zy6qi Probably what China is expecting to get from the Belt and Road countries when they can't pay back their predatory loans.
Very well put! You need an outstanding narrative to take such a complex topic and explaining it as clear as you did! Good job!
Thanks for the time and effort
My pleasure!
When Iraq was under Saddam 1 dinar = USD 3.2. Meaning if Irak has foreign debts in the USD worth of USD 1 million, it was only equaled to 300 k dinar. Look at now 1 USD = 1,195. Meaning their USD 1 million debts worth 1 Billion Dinar. That was increament of 1,195 times. How about if 1 USD = 2 Trillion dinar? What if Iraq becomes default and cannot pay? What do you think the USA will have from Iraq if Iraq is default?
I’m loving this new “Chapter ___” format 10/10
Does anyone know where are sources? I can't see them
I don't trust channels who don't list or quote their sources and instead fill their "Info" section with the names of their patreons 👎
Drop a dollar on Patreon to access their research material and have your doubts resolved in an exclusive QnA.
These guys work hard to produce the videos, they are not Chinese government printing inflated gdp figures.
Q&A second channel, hit them up any time
@@mrmeseeks8790 but he specifically said that he would put sources in the description. Unless perhaps I heard wrong.
Seen plenty of channels put up their info and sources for free.
How is the exchange rate of other countries (like UK, Eurozone, Canada, Japan etc.) determined? How is the value of US dollar determined? What is quantitative easing doing in regard of the exchange rate and international trade?
No shortcuts to trading man. It's got a ton of parallels with affiliate marketing... One of the biggest is put in the work to understand your niche and stay consistent. It's taken me 10yrs to really dial in my approach and become consistent. It wouldn't have taken so long if I had met Kyle Holt Karens earlier..
All I can do now is offer my story for people who actually want to succeed. Like anything your success is going to boil down to strategy, consistent work ethic, and constant learning. Search her on google if interested and visit her website for more information.
@@vincentchamberlain7349 Nice of you to pass this information to others. It's not about finding the keys to success, but also keeping the doors open for the next generation to make it.
I have heard so many incredible things about her and I have been trying to find out how to invest with her easy stock trading software. This information has been useful.
A question please.... Is her software available for any stocks in the world, or it was only used in USA. It's difficult to get a very good analytic software in my home country, Finland after all
.
@@harrychurchill6215 Her's is a global trading platform and it's perfect for any kinds of stocks around the world. She is a regulated broker and her information is available to the public. Look her up online, visit her website and email her.
Thanks for simplifying this complicated topic for us.
Who else learns more from Economics Explained then they learn in school
tbh, most chools dont teach even the basic economics
my teacher a showed a economics explained video in class
You don’t learn stuff like that in school. The majority isn’t supposed to learn stuff like that.
daniel_960_ I’m Dutch but I’m going to school in Australia and we are getting taught economic’s but well its just there not teaching us very well
Probably everybody. School systems somehow neglect finances in general. I guess the goverments just want to produce more and more brainless consumers/workers
One point that I think is slightly glossed over (if I missed a sentence he said let me know) is that undervalued currencies are not always good for local businesses. They make it more expensive to import and less expensive to export, so if you're making simple goods that only use materials from inside you're country, you'll benefit. But, more complex goods usually require parts that may need to be shipped in from other countries (for example phones and cars) and in this case those imports can eat into local businesses bottom line.
I think that EE is more correct to say "undervalues currencies help local businesses" in regards to China because of their capacity to create so many of their intermediary materials (say microchips for phones) locally, but they can't create everything (yet) so the benefit will depend on the business and their production line needs.
where is the link to an article?
this is your best video by far and i have been watching your videos for more then 8 months
I guess EE like RnB so much he started to become an artist in China.
I would gladly accept Mexico peso too. They all exchange to USD pretty easily anyway.
Just keep in mind that some toll barriers are because of national security. For example food. Its wise for any nation to retain some level of food production and if that nation has limited access to producing food. It goes without saying that it will usually cost more, so in order to be financially viable you need toll barriers. These toll barriers are also often seasonal based.
I think you're complicating this issue. You did explain everything else very well but this, not so much. You could have done better.
Simply put, China builds up a reserve of foreign currency by selling its currency. In this process, the price of its currency is set by China, hence it is able to decide how much it is taking in. By pushing its currency to the world, it decreases the value of its currency. This helps building up the local economy because local goods are cheap, and individuals from other countries tend to buy it cheap and sell it for higher prices. Why other countries can't do it, is because no country is so self sufficient, and they're kind of tied up in an agreement before FIAT came into existence (The Bretton Woods Agreement).
The Federal Reserve manipulates the market using banks and interest rates through the USA worldwide, while China played the UNO reverse card by collecting cash and sending out products, hence manipulating the market. China knows what it is doing, and it is doing it well. Federal Reserve is a private entity, meanwhile China is a nation. The world cannot keep up with China in prices because it almost in entirety, the world currencies are tied up with the US Dollar. China will keep buying US dollar, deflating the currency whilst the purchasing power is very less.
This will toss the US day-to-day economy into chaos. If US stops selling the dollar to China, inflation would occur. This would set it to course, but the purchasing power would increase. This would cause a chain reaction wherein the industries in the US would raise prices and end up screwing up their own people.
A better way to handle it will be to stop printing out notes, ask industries not to increase prices, stop selling US dollar to China, and produce things inside of the country. It'll take time to adjust to the prices, but it'll be worth it.
Do you seriously believe that America can tell three separate parts of their country from different locations and levels to collaborate on a single economic goal for maybe 5-10 years?
China knows what American politicians want, and how selfish they are. If its free money at the cost of Americans, they don't care, suffering Americans arent their problem
I apologise but where can one get the sources for the video. Checked the description. Thanks in advance
I hear "Toyota Corola"
Me: "Am I watching Real life lore?"
Me too
You should do a video on capital controls and how wealthy Chinese investors bypass these restrictions
You get a like just off the strength of that title
This video video is nice,you are doing great!
Please try to keep some visual aid such as stats , graphs , figures and tables or numbers.This would engaged the viewers for entire time.
And if you read about history, the rest of the world hasn’t been fair to China too in the past 200 years.
the world hasn't been fair to the world if you go back long enough.
Well maybe not to the brits.
Be careful what you wish for, if China increases the value of its currency it becomes a more powerful and larger consumer market because a strong CNY means more buying influence for every one of its billion citizens. Hypothetically if the CNY is allowed to appreciate to 1:2 USD then its economy will double the size of the US economy. Meaning in total, China can dictate demand with greater influence to multinational companies to reflect Chinese needs and wishes. Weaker supply-side productive competitiveness for stronger demand-side consumer power. People complain about Disney or NBA catering to the Chinese market but a strong CNY means that it will only intensify multinational businesses ' desire to lobby and kotow the CCP line in order to get market access.
Do a video on the economics of patreon supporters
We would like to see a video explaining the economy of Finland!
Ease of doing business report this year is cancelled because of China, Azerbaijan, UAE & Saudi Arabians manipulating the data🔥
China is incredibly easy to do business with. They will literally disappear their own population if they get in the way of profits for you and the government,
@@Rudenbehr if so why isn't China free market?
Many news articles have gone over the topic of China not just manipulating currency but manipulating and dramatically overvaluing GDP growth figures and inflation. Will you do a video on this? I find this highly interesting from an economics perspective.
China has been hiding its GDP They have been showing weakness on purpose
I think the opposite, hiding not overvaluing...
Doesn't the US manipulate it's currency through the Federal Reserve
The federal reserve isn't ran by the government. The decisions it makes is entirely separate from the US government itself. The currency itself doesn't get manipulated like the Chinese government does things.
Yes, it’s called Quantitative Easing
@@dennisp8520 keep dreaming
@@dennisp8520 That's bullshit. Look up the website of the federal reserve.
It's www.federalreserve.gov.
What does gov stand for?
Also, its board members are nominated by the president and confirmed by the senate.
Pray tell what kind of private enterprise free of government control would have such a structure in place.
@@zeus907 oh god, please help this poor ignorant soul. The federal reserve is literally doing its own independent thing. The president, Congress, etc don't have any say over its montary policy. That is different from China who littlerally can have their leader snap there figures to change how the money is being printed and so forth.
www.federalreserve.gov/faqs/about_12799.htm
You should put time stamps of the chapters in the description so we can see them on the timeline.
*US: Accomplishes World Domination via false-flag induced 'freedom invasions' to prop up Petrodollar*
*The Western Media: China bad, they manipulate their currency AND WE DON'T!* 😂😂😂
At least we don't have gulags and concentration camps. Also we pay our workers more than a couple cents an hour.
And don't forget what the media says when an American President who opposes all these invasions and wars comes into power (Trump).
@stockart whiteman I never said we're not bad, I'm just saying we're not as bad.
Deniz Erdal not sure the biggest baddie on the bloc can justify more 😂 get your shot act together at this election especially with the raise of new silver legion of America aka Qanon
@@denizerdal6465 minimum hourly wage in Shanghai is ~3$/h, with smaller cities being 2$/h. Then that's minimum, most people makes a lot more than that, as minimum wage jobs are usually only taken by students or uneducated people, and long story short, majority of new generation has universe degrees so the second kind if rapidly disappearing leaving students as the only ones working for minimum wage.
I LOVED the Simpsons reference, I know this would probably mean a lot more work, but the Simpsons has a lot of material that may relate to your videos, and would add a lot to the video.
I remember my Professor saying that Japan actually manipulates way more times than China.
"Look! It's Godzilla!" "No, it's China manipulating it's currency!"
Sure....america never manipulates its own currency, sureeeeeeeee
bruh he spent the whole second half of the video explaining the difference between money printing and what china does.
Uh, yeah, i commented this after the first sentence he uttered....shot my gun too early.
Wow this production quality level up caught me off guard. Good stuff
That's how China is able to offset the cost of trade tarriff's imposed by West by decreasing the value of their currency.
I think that buying stuff from abroad and bringing it back home to resell still counts as an import, and therefor taxed when found, so even those people will find China a bit more unappealing to buy from than usual.
The real loophole to the trade war is that China sells parts, so all they need is to sell some unfinished goods into other countries like South Korea, Japan or Vietnam for them to complete, stamp in their brand, and sell it to the US. Iphone has parts made in China, same goes for Samsung and Japanese brands. Pretty much why Trump wants to drag in more countries to the cause.
@fane babanu Yeah tbh, point is that it's not only Americans using Chinese factories. Samsung isn't even American
@Flare Bruh, credit where credit is due. Germans killed tons of people but that doesn't mean the cars they make aren't good.
@@madensmith7014 Guys, the thing is China has the scale and countries/companies have been dependent on China for decades!! They cannot pivot suddenly. It will take time for companies to shift their supply chain which is a costly affair but it has started happening.
That import tax is what Harley did in the 80s and why import bike brands had fewer bikes over 700ccs during that time.
Wait... This is just importing stuff from China 🇨🇳 😮😲😯 and now you are playing the game China created
Please make a video on what can be the reasons that can make USD loose it’s grip in on as The worlds reserve currency.
Economics of June 4th 1989
Economic problems are, in fact, the reason behind that incident. Back then, in the earlier stage of economic reform, China had two sets of prices, one base on central planing the other market. It was supposed to be a transition between the planned economy to a free market. This inevitably leads to and severe exploitation of the system, often from corrupt officials. To counter this problem, the government decided to allow the previously planned prices of domestic goods to rise (to the same level of market) so that China can transition to a market economy in a short period. The slogan back then was, ”prolong suffering is worse than temporary suffering.” This policy worthen the already high inflation rate and leads to people stockpiling goods in panic. The discontent eventually leads to mass demonstrations. The Chinese government did away with the two sets of prices in the winter of 1989 after the suppression of protest.
The 1989 protest is framed in the West as ”pro-democracy.” Although such characterization holds some truth, the protest has more to do with corruption and mishandling of the economy.
So is that what the Swiss National Bank did with the Euro? For around 2011 to 2014, you had to pay at least 1.20 Swiss Francs for 1 Euro. That has been lifted by now but I still wondered how they pulled that off.
**My Chinese friend starts laughing like a maniac while reading her book**
Me- *“I’m not sure if she’s laughing about her book or her plans for world domination!?!”*
Oh and here I thought they were mostly doing it by printing a MASSIVE amount of money to keep the price low. I had no idea they kept is absolutely FIXED.
The West: Its over China. I have the high trade tariffs.
China: You underestimate your greedy corporations.
Woww crystal clear explanation! Thank you EE
Love your channel, great rebranding!
most of the developing ecnomies do this though. one way or another
Oh pleaseee.... China does not manipulate its currency. It's only a US accusation going by their own definition. China just does not allow its currency to float freely, but to float only a within trading band to maintain stability and minimise volatility. This is important for trade so there's no big fluctuation in price. Lots of other countries do it too which the US also accuses --- Germany, Switzerland, France, Singapore is a few I can recall.
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Effectively, China subsidizes their buyers/sellers, reducing prices. That's a much simpler way of putting it. At that rate, if someone else is paying, you should just buy all their stuff and sell it at a profit. The money you generate and labour savings can be used to invest into your own society.
The thing about this so called dead weight or whatever societal cost u mentioned, think of it like a capitalist type wealth redistribution strategy.
The government takes in taxes from the people and businesses, pays for these..."manipulation" thingy, and other nations buy from the businesses, giving them more income, hence producing more tax income. So to get money in, one has to provide goods or services to get that money. So, instead of the government directly giving the money to help alleviate poverty, they made it so that only those hardworking ones gets it, in a self repeating cycle.
Think back how this all started, from what economic level they came from. And where they are now. This took some long term planning, and i would argue, if you are worried about china now with its "currency manipulation", you will really be even more worried and afraid when it is fully freely floated.
Because that will be the point when the chinese government decide the benefits of free floating yuan will be far more beneficial to china as a whole than a "controlled" one.
I like the mirror of the title with a particular book :)
Can we just start calling tariffs TAXES and admit that Trump drastically raised TAXES on commodities which hurts the consumer, especially the middle class, which is the primary consumer?
Don't let the trump fanboys hear you say that. All his policies are genius and apparently he's doing a great job
“iT’s BaSiC eCoNoMiCs” said the guy who never took an econ class and thinks socialism is when the government does stuff.
@Stephen Jenkins ...Or we could have just used TPP which SPECIFICALLY barred China from the table and LOWERED taxes. But, that was Obama, so lowering taxes is now socialism now I guess.
Excellent video!. Can you please link the Journal article mentioned in the video in the description?
Is there anything that the chinese arent actively manipulating tbh?(!) :^]
Good old china, all of our best friend. At least as long as you do whatever they want. I am truly worried how bad it will get in the coming decades as they become more powerful.
Is this channel dedicated to the famous school of Australian Economics I constantly hear about?
lol I am pretty sure the US does the same thing when it suits them.
The US dollar floats freely in world currency markets - as do all other WTO member's currencies. Except China of course. It's the only WTO member not required to do so. Talk about a rigged market.
This is a hard topic for me, gotta rewatch a couple of time more to fully understand this topic
Thanks as always for watching :D This video was requested by the team over on Patreon. If you want to have your say on what video is produced next please consider supporting the channel.
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Great video! Just one problem: the Chinese currency is the yuan and not RnB. RnB is a music style.
can you make a video on Pakistan military budget economy and foreign debt relating them because after 6 months of my own research things are still messy also including china's self interest in cpec(china Pakistan economic corridor) and electrical infrastructure development
Can you make a video explaining how the US and European countries manipulate world trade by their dumping practices? Thank you.
The devaluation of a currency doesn't always work in the direction you mention at min 6-7 though. When your cadillac sells for double the price in Germany because of the euro's relative value, the company might pump its price in the US, resulting in inflation. This has been a pretty big problem in Argentina, for example.