Why Lebanon Made Their Pound Worth $0.000066
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 23 ต.ค. 2023
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Ok maybe it's not TOTALLY valueless...
Some sources and readings:
Crashed - Adam Tooze
www.investopedia.com/articles....
www.ceicdata.com/en/indicator...
tradingeconomics.com/china/mo...
tradingeconomics.com/united-s...
www.ceicdata.com/en/indicator....
www.cfr.org/in-brief/china-ma...
www.frbsf.org/economic-resear...
www.chicagofed.org/publicatio...
www.aei.org/research-products....
www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/...
databank.worldbank.org/source...
www.imf.org/-/media/Websites/...
www.arabnews.com/node/1682011
www.statista.com/statistics/2...
www.aljazeera.com/economy/202...
www.ft.com/content/75d21ae6-f...
www.salaryexplorer.com/averag...
www.voanews.com/a/lebanon-lea...
Go to 80000hours.org/h0ser to be sent a free copy of their in-depth career guide, which aims to help you:
Learn about what makes for a high-impact career
Get new ideas for impactful paths
Make a new plan based on what you've learned, and put it into action
I beat you to being first on your own video
what
Me when lord h0ser finally releases more real life lore for us to enjoy
Please make a video on Corporatism and Georgism
must be like living in a dystopian nightmare in China
Completely different economy, but Japan spent decades pining for a weak yen. Now the Yen has sunk so low, the government is spending tens of billions to buy the currency to save it. Wild. China and Japan both sinking their currency reminds me of the "gave away all my money so I can grind harder" meme.
More like selling stuff at a loss
"buy currency"... companies in wallstreet bought their own stocks to bump value ... if we pay loan faster it is similar thing but technically reduces amount of money. so is bank of japan just holding that money in their bank account or can they delete it? with FED, most of money is technially debt, so delete is possible; they just dont give as much money back to market. I assume currency is IOUs, similar as bonds and other "paper money" in stock market.
China's RMB has only depreciated against the US dollar (due to the Fed's crazy interest rate hike), but for both the yen and the euro, the RMB has appreciated
@@linshitaolst4936thats what makes the Fed so powerful they can influence other countries economies by just fiscal policies
International debt is the reason and its a scam. If you're wondering why everyone thinks russia attacked ukraine for absolutely no reason it's because russia never subscribed to this world banker agenda
Bruv i legitimately forgot that you existed 😭😭
Same
He was only gone for 2 months 💀
I was lurking on his channel just an hour ago no not me. I never forget🐘
Same
oh hes alive? awesome
I'm Argentinian, it's crazy to think that SO MUCH has passed since the 90s and the 2001 crisis, and I wanted to comment on that, but as you showed, economically it's as simple as that it's just the SAME problems that've been continuing up to this day (because they STILL haven't been fixed), so once again the famous saying here that goes "if you leave Argentina and you come back the day after, ANYTHING AND EVERYTHING could've changed. if you return 10 years later, you find that nothing is different at all."
Gran frase y completamente verdadera, estamos en un loop de crisis económica
if you want to fix it get rid of the peg
@@grimaffiliations3671 That's not the only problem in Argentina, the problem was the government and all the regulations, corruption and unnecesary spending (and making a lot debt and not paying them) with Milei Argentina will get better and its economy will heal, at least that's what I believe in as a Brazillian that lives right next to it.
@@leaper3794 That's HILARIOUS! If you think anarchical capitalism mixed with far-right ideology works you should just read a book and stop joining cout attempts against your government xD
Seriously, it's like you guys just don't learn even after having multiple far-right governments ruining your nation.
yo ma man is the new libertarian guy doin something to fix it ?
I just was thinking, “how cool would it be if we got a new hoser video” and now I have one. Very cool
Me too! Just yesterday I was thinking, "Man if we could have a new hoser video"
Nice, now do "How cool would it be if the guy replying to me gets a new watch"
@@supersardonic1179 Right 😂😂😂 Can't blame you for trying. Hope it works 🤞
Same
The question is when.
Seems like someone has been reading on Michael Pettis' works. This is not just China, it's basically how export-driven growth model works, and have been used across developing countries, including all the Asian tigers, South America... China's leadership recognizes that they need to now restructure the economy toward private consumption to maintain economic growth, which explains all the push for "common prosperity", since the traditional sectors like infrastructure and housing no longer can productively absorb any more investments.
Taiwan dollar and Thai Baht have been somewhat stable for a long time. Then you have countries that aren't trying to boost exports, they are simply going bankrupt--Lao Kip and Burmese Kyat, for example, total disaster with those ones.
You should be aware of 2 facts...
Currency controls DO NOT depreciate the value of a currency IT INFLATES IT, simple Economics 101... less supply higher price.
SO China WITHOUT currency controls WOULD HAVE A LOWER VALUE ON THEIR CURRENCY.
It is kept artificially high NOT LOW.
Secondly, the dependence of exports for China is really not as high as people seem to believe.
For China exports are around 20% of GDP compare this to European countries... Germany >50% France 40%? UK same ball park.
China is simply not "living and dying with exports"
GERMANY IS
How much of China's GDP is locked tight behind the world's largest housing bubble ?@@qinby1182
@@qinby1182 currency controls do not mean that a price is kept artificially high or low. It is the act of forcefully keeping a currency at a stable price. In this case they do this several ways the most famous of which would be by buying a large amount of united States debt and by setting limits on the amount of money a Chinese citizen can take out of the country. (I believe the limit is $50,000 USD a year which I think the fact that the value is set in USD is pretty indicative). The first act reduces the amount of yuan on hand and the second one prevents currency from leaving. Less supply higher price is "simple economics 101" but it's so simple because it's in a vacuum. Countries can shift the value of their currency in general directions but they can't 100% control it. In addition to that things that can't be controlled or calculated as accurately with a number can impact it such as FEAR. There are a lot of factors that can change value and impact decisions. Calling economics simple shows your lack of understanding on such a complex topic. As for your claims about Germany and China I couldn't find a credible source on GDP with your numbers. The closest one I found is Wikipedia of which some of the numbers have not been updated since 2017. But nonetheless you're still oversimplifying your numbers.
China
Household consumption 37.17%
Government consumption: 16.08%
Gross capital formation: 43.48%
Exports of goods and services: 20.68%
Imports of goods and services: 17.47%
Net exports: 3.21%
Germany
Household consumption: 53.1%
Government consumption: 19.5%
Investment in fixed capital: 20.4%
Investment in inventories: −0.5%
Exports of goods and services: 47.3%
Imports of goods and services: −38.7%
Unfortunately Wikipedia decided to calculate their GDPs differently but whatever. These are the closest numbers I found to your claims. If you have a credible website with your claims please list it with a specific link. Yes, Germany does have a higher export %. But it doesn't mean it's necessarily as reliant as China. The majority of Chinas in house production to be produced within China requires US goods, it's real estate market, the largest percentage of the average Chinese persons net worth has crashed reducing investments. Most of its imports are food and raw materials. So if the exports failed then guess what? Its imports would be massively reduced. As would it's investments, and everything else. Germany have a deficit according to the numbers and a crash would hurt it's jobs but it would still be able to function. Though it's economy would be devasted Germany still has something. China doesn't.
TLDR: currency controls do not always reduce the value or increase the value of a currency, economics is not simple, China is reliant on exports but not as much as people might think a lack of exports would still wreck the economy. Germany is over dependent on exports but not as much as you might think.
Problem is that the demographics and economy show that all the money is in the hands of the older population who've been investing in real estate, hard to convince the young or even middle aged to spend money they don't have
He has Risen 🙏
Amen
Brazil also made the real 1 to 1 in relation to the dolar when it was created, and it kainda worked
Hosus is risen indeed
@@israelisreall oooo cruxifiction oooo soo scary ooooo
Wait for another 10,000 years, nothing will happen.
videos about pegging are always fun to watch
I bet u like to be pegged 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
xD
Pause
hol up. 😂
wait a minute 😯
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You are right.!
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Little updated info for 7:00
The Lebanese Pound traded for around 91.000 Pound per Dollar on the street at the beginning of October, so roughly 2 months ago. And about 7:39 You can scratch the "some markets". It is almost all of them by now, at least in Beirut. You can pay by Pound still but in some cases Pound prices arent written down, meaning you are at the mercy of whatever exchange rate they apply.
most places ive been to have the exchange rate if 89,000-90,000 pounds per dollar, except that one place that charged me 100,000 pounds per dollar ☠️
@@imaginethisisagoodname4368how does salaries work are they given by pound or by usd
One thing to note, the actual ratio of dollars to any other currency is irrelevant as to whether that currency is strong or not. If my current is 100 Yen to 1 Dollar, that doesn’t make it any less strong that the euro at 1.1 Euros to 1 Dollar. The important thing to consider when a currency is stronger or weaker is the relative change in a value of a currency. Theoretically, we could have a currency with an exchange rate of 1 trillion to one dollar, and so long as it’s relative value was increasing against the dollar, we would call that currency as strengthening against the dollar.
Exactly, I don't understand why even economists fail to understand this. By devaluing your currency, exports aren't increased because your money is cheaper, it's because prices aren't injusted to inflation. All this is, is stealing money from your people
You see the thing
kinda like japan?
@@2bad2bemad20 Japans currency has been weakening recently, but yes. In general it’s been quite stable against USD and has had the position of being a more minor global reserve currency.
Yeah I don't get how he went over that
its the same with south korea's won. they artificially keep it low so exports are competitive. they are also a currency manipulator, which is why other countries especially in asia, aren't especially "good" trade relationships with them. this is one of the reasons why samsung is as large as it is now and accounts for 20% of korea's gdp.
You do NOT keep your currency low BY CURRENCY CONTROLLS
Currency control MEANS RESTRICTION, Restriction of supply MEANS MORE EXPENSIVE any idiot should understand that.
So China is keeping their currency "arificially high" but really WHAT DOES ARTIFICIALLY MEAN???
USA are raising their interest rates MAKING THE USD ARTIFICIALLY HIGH???
Well it makes the USD worth more BUT is it "artificially" or "manipulation"???
EVERYTHING in finance is inherently artificial so... nothing bad about that, it only really means "made by humans" not occurring naturally in nature.
To manipulate only means to affect a change...
Sp really the phrase "artificially manipulating" is MADE TO SOUND SINISTER but it is not, EVERYTHING HUMAN BEINGS DO IS ARTIFICIALLY MANIPULATING STUFF...
Of course this includes THE WHOLE FINANCIAL SYSTEM.
You really can not get rich by keeping your currency low valued ONLY IDIOTS BELIEVE THAT (YOU???) In that case Argentine would be SUPER SUCCESSFUL
In the case of S.Korea... they used TARIFFS that promoted local industry...
Then of course they got HUUGE support from the USA for fighting "Communism" but on the other hand they are still occupied by the USA who still keep forces there 70 years later...
Lies
@@playnite2188proof
Well Korea is in a much better position than Japan currently, Korea pegged it low for a time but it hasn't abused it to the extent Japan and China has to remain competitive.
i live in lebanon and the currency has basically stabilized. since we have no government we have to keep the lebanese pound stable ourselves. in american terms its like either paying everything in singles or using the canadian dollar. thing is anyone with a us dollar payroll can get insanely rich since stores have mostly dropped their prices to stay in business
I am glad it has stabilized, wish everything becomes alright in Lebanon ❤
How df can you survive without a country?
@@ninab.4540 People still live in Somalia and that's way worse.
@@ninab.4540 we still have a country? 😭
It actually did happened.. but going from 250k Dollars a year to 3700$ a year us insane
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The king returns
China's RMB has only depreciated against the US dollar, but for both the Japanese yen and the euro, the RMB has appreciated
That's because the EU and Japan economy are both stagnant
美国改的汇率,导致的兑美元的汇率下降,一切的一切始源于美国
I wouldn't say it has appreciated against the Euro considering it is 0.13€ like it was 10 years ago, more like stagnated
This low valuation of currency would really be beneficial to my country, Nigeria, were it not for the idiots we have as politicians and their mismanagement of our infrastructure and industry and economy.
Exactly i always say this to my friends and family naira doesn't have to rise for the economy to be okay let it fall and focus on reducing imports and increasing exports in Nigeria and the currency will balance for whatever it's worth
@@nicksnelson1231 well said.
@@nicksnelson1231 yeah dependence on imports is the main thing keeping developing countries down
Just a clarification: the actual number is just a mathematical value. The "easy to import/export" being only a result of Purchasing Power/Market Value ratio
On the side, the amount of [Currency] per [other currency] in itself doesn't in itself mean the country is doing it to benefit exports or imports, as that is to do with under- and overvaluation and differences in costs of living and purchasing power and the value of a currency to begin with.
However over time these tactics lead to exchange rates tending towards to follow suit over time.
5:30 I'm confused at this part. Whether than numeric value is higher or lower than 1:1 against the USD doesn't really show if its stronger or weaker than the USD. Rather, it's whether the price will float up or down if depegged (or in other words, if its consistently overvalued or undervalued but held fixed by the government).
The Japanese government can just make the Japanese Yen, which is at 1:150 to the USD right now, do a 1:150 exchange to a "New Japanese Yen", and it would numerically be 1:1 against the USD. But it doesn't change th strength or weakness of the currency.
I could never figure out metric vs imperial exchange rates and that's why I always lost on the commodities markets - in America, a pound is pegged to 16 ounces but in other countries the exchange rate varies depending on market conditions.
Sorry, I just had a stroke reading your comment.
It’s a good day when hoser drops a video
you should review the swiss economy and their super strong currency
They are money launderers
all the corrupted government officials around the world support that
@@msergio0293dude i think if they laundered Money the money would have been worthless 💀
would love to see u make a detailed video on lebanon’s economical history
The numerical exchange raye doesn't matter at all. Over/under valuation is a function of ppp i.e. relative buying power.
I like this guy's videos. Unbiased, factual and funny to watch all at the same time
He be just a lil bias against Russia but I love hoser
Very simple: boosting exports. Poland did the same in 2008 and it (thanks to separate from eurozone currency) saved our economy.
Same reason why Italy has been worsening since joining the euro
@@marcoac-sx6lqAnd Slovakia too. Euro isn't stable coz who is even responsibile for its course? They say everyone a bit which basicly means nobody. Plus we gotta add to account the fact that Western Europe's economy is stagnant compared to that of Central Europe. So Slovakia was basicly paying for errors of Western Europe
My friend went to work from Finland to Poland for 6 months, and despite making less than in Finland, he could afford A LOT more. The consumer prices were insanely low.
Komu możemy w takim razie podziękować za uratowanie w większości od kryzysu?
@@karolinakuc4783 Yeah joining the Euro is a huge mistake. A country that cannot determine it's own fiscal policy is at a tremendous disadvantage. You don't control your interest rates either, since you can run out of your own currency that market can jack up your interest rates like they did with greece.
It's always a good day when hoser uploads.
China : Tried to keep its money value down so its export is competitive
Also China: Accidenly devalued too much which accidenly exacerbated its debt crisis.
China // *Surprised Pikachu face*
Most of the Chinese debts are borrowed in RMBs, so devaluation could also decrease the real value of debts.
That doesn't work like that, though. If you borrow 1 billion dollars and the dollar goes down 50%, you still owe 1 billion dollars. Functionally, you now owe the equivalent of 2 billion dollars.
"China : Tried to keep its money value down so its export is competitive"
Well REALITY contradicts this.
IF China had a floating currency the value of the Yuan would go down, meaning the currency control keeps THE VALUE HIGH.
A good practical example is Russia... they had capital controls for 6-8 months?? One USD got 60 Ruble, then they removed capital controls one USD got 100 Ruble NOW a week ago Russia re introduced capital controls, now 1 USd = 92 Rubles. Capital controls DO NOT KEEP THE VALUE DOWN IT KEEP IT UP
Totally CONTRARY to this video.
@@josef_belz519 No, that's not true. It depends on the interest rate. If you borrow a billion USD at 4% interests. and the dollar value goes down 50% over a year, at the end of the year you will owe 1 billion dollars, plus 49 million in interests. The one who borrowed you the money, is the loser.
@@josef_belz519 The problem is when you take out a loan in a foreign currency and your own gets down. If it shrinks by 50 % you need to come up with twice as much money since your income isn't in foreign currency
Hong Kong Dollar also pegs to USD
And in Cambodia people straight up use USD. It might also be pegged 4000:1.
As soon as the video started i knew argentina was gonna be mentioned... God i hope my country can be prosperous one day
One of the fundamental reasons for Argentina's economic sluggishness is that most countries in the world are economic colonies. Unfortunately Argentina is one of them.
The proposal by the Argentine presidential candidate to abolish the local currency and fully adopt the US dollar is the best example of this. How can there be controllable economic prosperity without the ability to control the country's monetary policy?
@@user-dt6iz8hu6h equador is doing well, thanks
@@user-dt6iz8hu6h That doesn't make any sense, they are in an inflationary crisis and Dollarization is just a means to an end. That end is to stabilize prices so the economy can flourish again. Absolutely nobody thinks of it as "colonization"
I think Argentina and China are two extreme examples of the importance of economic sovereignty.
@@GGY-yh6li very true. However political sovereignty is more utmost importance. Without it there's no anything sovereignty. At least Argentina has the 1st one, already more lucky than many nations may I say
It’s good to have you back, friend!
Managing money is different from accumulating wealth, and the lack of investment education in schools may explain why people struggle to maintain their financial gains. The examples you provided are relevant, and I personally benefited from the market crisis, as I embrace challenging times while others tend to avoid them. Well, at least my advisor does too, jokingly
Investors should exercise caution with their exposure and exercise caution when considering new investments, particularly during periods of inflation. It is advisable to seek guidance from a professional or trusted advisor in order to navigate this recession and achieve potential high yields
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Thank you for the awesome content and all the amazing videos!!
Hoser, I am a big fan of your content.
Please upload more. You make really good informative videos and we need more content like this
i swear Hoser was his history/economics tearchers' favorite student
Clicking as soon as it was uploaded 🔥🔥🔥
4:06 Will need more data here, it could be a bit misleading for comparison. Will have to take a look at how much money supply they increased. USD is a global reserve currency, and it has a lot of demand. 4x its money supply is a lot. Where as for RMB, 15 times given it’s growth might not be a lot. However, based on how state banks have to hold those currency’s they probably printed too much.
Just an exaggerated example; if Chinese currency supply has a equivalent of 1 USD, where as USD has 100. China printing 100 times more money is equaled to what USD doubled.
Canadian dollar is worth 2cc’s of Maple Syrup 🍁 when the rest of the world was pegged to the price of gold, Canada pegged their currency to the value of Maple syrup in the Canadian Strategic Maple Syrup reserve
@hoser At 3:02 you used the wrong SAIC logo. You used the US defense contractor SAIC not the Chinese auto manufacturer.
the money supply increase in north america is terrifying, it is one of the main causes of the price inflation everyone is seeing atm
Lol lasagna skill issues
Money supply no doubt is the biggest contributer, but quite likely the decoupling from China too.
When you stop buying from the world's factory, stuff will start getting harder to find and prices will go up. Until all those manufacturing plants and supply line into Southeast Asia stabilise, lower import volumes are gonna push up prices.
Yellow Friend!
having low inflation in a developing country is really hard and completely unnecessary
but USD and EUR and such all have low inflation
meaning a peg will gradually become increasingly hard to uphold
because your currency will slowly outinflate whatever it is pegged to
I even checked yesterday if you posted glad to see a new one with better mic quality
The fact that we get free videos on TH-cam by HOSER is truly a gift. 👏👏👏👏👏
Serbia peg EUR as well.
Great video as always!
The exchange rate doesn’t matter, it’s how it changes that matters, making it less or more than 1 dollar doesn’t make any difference
Welcome back bro. We missed you so much.
most funniest part is 1300 korean won equals to only '1'dollar...
but doller price in korea maintained 1100~1400 won for 20 years
and japan maintained 100~150 yen to 1 dollar for 30 years
It is curious
As a jordanian i can say that our currency does have a higher value than the usd (1 JOD is 1.4 USD) Howeverrrr prices of everyday things is soooo expensive. If you want to buy a Nintendo Switch game, you're expected to pay 60JOD when originally its 60USD. They kept the same number but the value is totally different. 😅
What would 60JOD be in USD? 180USD? 240USD?
@@NothingOfNoteToSeeHere 50 JOD is 84.6USD. I think paying almost 85$ for one game is just outrageous.
If the exchange rate is 1:1.4 its 1.4x times higher@@NothingOfNoteToSeeHere
@@NothingOfNoteToSeeHere what kind of a dumb question is that.. 1 JOD = 1.4 USD. Just multiply x amount by 1.4 or just use google.
literally rediscovered you two days ago glad to see youre still here
the GOAT is back! Welcome back king.
just a minor note but u seem to make it seem like its the value itself that shows whether its beneficial to importing or exporting. maybe u know it and didnt rly get it across much but its not the absolute value, its how the “real” value relates to the traded value. ie if theyve overvalued or undervalued it. so its not like the japanese currency has their currency 100x undervalued or something, it just suggests a likely history of undervaluation, and to see if it is undervalued or not requires a separate investigation.
China's currency being undervalued isn't so bad since they make a lot of retail products inside the country.
China was never known for quality products. Not ever.
Only when youre the producer
@@the_expidition427 Chinese quality might be cheap but their quality sucks tho, u get what u paid for.
@the_expidition427 China is not like the US where free shopping riots occur everywhere
@huiyinghong3073 The quality of Chinese products is the most perfect in the world, unlike those made in the US, where Escherichia coli exceeds the standard everywhere
Glad to see you’re back
I'm Brazilian, not too much of an economy nerd, but from what I know and understand, the Brazilian Real was introduced in the mid 90s, and later its value sore internally, meaning the purchasing power amongst the population grew, good economic decisions shielded against the 2008 recession and business was going good, a saying of the mid-late 2000s is that "Even the maids were going to Disney". Then in 2014 a lot of political scandals made investors leave, then the economy grinded to a halt, MORE political crisis, then total polarization of politics, pandemic, now purchasing power has lowered and the government is shooing out investors
People that say fiat doesn't have 'real' value don't understand that ALL VALUE IS SUBJECTIVE. The problem with fiat is that it doesn't have 'real value,' but that it can be easily manipulated by central banks, and they can print way more money, thus increasing the money supply which necessarily causes inflation if real wealth production does not increase as well. Supply and demand also applies to the supply of money. Gold doesn't have a 'real' value; it is subjective; people even value essentials to survival, like food and water, at different values. VALUE IS SUBJECTIVE.
Value is constant, prices are subjective
@@goateecusbilly1823Nope, value can also change over time e.g. gold for semi-conducter or cobalt for batteries
The only closest thing that can bring the valuation to “scientific” grounds would be the labor theory of value (more specifically Average LTV, cant remember the proper term from beard guy), but was abandoned by economists understandably so since market contradictions are more apparent when viewed through that lens
at the beggining of the year 1 us dollar could buy 300 argentinian pesos. Today it is 1200
Bro someone must tell him that the actual value is "dolar blue", not the value seen on Google
So it can buy less argentinian pesos?
@@iandavidvillaloboswong5180 no, today 1 us dollar can buy 1200 pesos. 2 weeks ago it was 900, a month ago it was 800 and thats how its been going for a while
@@zanettilla You didnt get the joke. It was that the monetary value of 300 pesos was worth more than 1200 pesos today. And the U.S dollar has also dropped in value. So with 1 dollar you buy less pesos even if the number is higher.
@@iandavidvillaloboswong5180 ahhhh alright sorry I didnt get that
Im from Lebanon and its getting better glad to see some documentation of my country feom mt favourite
May I humbly request a video about the current economical situation in Germany and if they're the sick man of Europe again?
You know hoser is dedicated when he spent 2 months infiltrating China's HQ just to make this video
I know that I'm asking a bot, and that this a a fruitless endeavor, but what is the intention of the Heisenberg and now the HeisenbergFam commenting phenomenon? Is it merely to troll or is there a greater reason for this comment game?
waltuh
It appears the official rate for Argentine peso to USD has been pegged to the dollar at 350 since Aug 15. Dólar Blue is 1,050.
Wow this is a good video. The sponsor was even relevant to my situation. You just made my afternoon.
The CHF was never pegged to the EUR. It was caped for some time, but that was also lifted many years ago.
The USD is not going to be replaced by the Yuan or any other currency (sorry). In times (before WWI & WWII) trade always had the option of facilitation in gold. That's also how the WW's economies operated. The USD only managed to step in because it was supposed to be backed by gold, and thus 'as good as gold'. Nowadays, central banks around the world have printed so much currency that NONE of them can be backed by gold. Even Russia and China. End of argument...
The hilarious issue with people claiming whatever coin they claim will replace the USD, is that there's only 1 currency that has grown as reserve currency compared to the US dollar in the last few decades...
And it's the Euro.
In fact between dollar and euro, these 2 coins alone completely dwarf any other currency today with over 3/4s of the world's reserves of foreign currency by other countries.
And lets be clear. The Euro is itself dwarfed by the dollar. And the EU is in no way trying to compete on that issue, its just not a priority. But point is, every time the dollar takes a hit, what countries jump to as a safe haven every time is the euro, not the yuan, or rupple, or watever nonesense BRICS wanna claim works next.
So forget winning vs the dollar. First someone should try to take on its younger brother. Once anyone gets past that barrier we can talk about plausible competition some day.
Nobody expected the Spanish Inquisition to drop so many facts. It's so funny to me that ppl with no knowledge of basic finance get conned by this propaganda like bullshit that the strongest currencys in existence will get clapped by some random nation working overtime on their moneyprinters 😂
@@thespanishinquisition4078 The Euro's only power is based in the number of countries using it for trade, just like th dollar. It isn't technically a single currency, because all EU countries manage their own independent (and wildly) different fiscal policies. The EU is more like the dollar in trade terms, but it is confined within the Eurozone only. A BRICS currency would operate the same way. No. Only traditional gold is the global currency (at the moment), and that is because all countries value it equally.
In multipolar world, no need for a singular currency, but 2-5 is even possible
@@zukritzeln I agree, my point wasn't that € can compete (I specifically mentioned the EU isn't even trying and its not even close.)
But my point is, when it comes to growth relative to the dollar. The € is the only currency that actually surpassed the dollar in terms of new adoptions. And aside from the obvious reason (its relatively new and as the EU soft power grows so does the €), this does cause the effect that countries that fear USA economic pressure, or simply everyone when the dollar is taking a hit for whatever reason, they tend to shift part of their investment into €, not yuan, not rupees, not whatever else.
And this is for 2 main reasons. 1-The ECB can generally be trusted not to go coocoo for cocopuffs (which can't be said of BRICS coins that's for sure) and 2-The € is the 2nd most powerful coin by far, so anyone fearing a $ crash (aside from gold hoarders or the like), will inevitably shift to the 2nd most powerful coin out there by default.
So when all these BRICS apologists try to claim they're somehow gonna replace the dollar. This bears taking into account: Until a coin bests the €, it simply cannot possibly compete with the $. Because even if BRICS' wettest dreams somehow came true, the Fed had a collective aneurism and intentionally wrecked the $, USA went into a civil war somehow (good luck with that...) and everything just went in their favor...
If they haven't beaten the € before that point, then global trade hegemony would just shift from USA to EU. Hell, the EU regulations already have very far reach for some matters, no one's following China's or India's thats for sure. So EU is just the natural successor if somehow USA goes insane.
Now I'm not saying this will happen. It won't. Because it needs for the USA to somehow become collectively insane for a prolonged period of time. But yknow. It serves to point out how their strange hopes and dreams of beating the west are at best futile and at worst utterly delusional. Trying to supplant the USA as global hegemon when you haven't even entered the race for second place is utterly bafflig.
China is not trying to devalue its currency. They actively buy CNY using USD to keep exchange rates stable. But USD keeps going up so CNY has to go down cuz there's no other way. Oil price went up does not affect China much cuz it imports oil from Communist nations. However, the amount of debt servicing fee and other expenses blew up so China is suffering from dollar shortage now. China recycles USD to the US by buying US government debt and other safe securities. However, they still need short term financing for many things. They export finished products but that doesn't mean they don't import anything. Raw materials, high end products like chips and technology are imported. They also pay for advertisement and variety other things. Expenses had only went up, income went down due to economic uncertainty, and debt servicing went up (especially variable loans), China never needs more USD than right now. Therefore, keeping exchange rate constant is less of a priority than other things like (debt servicing and imports). There is no reason to encourage more export now cuz less people will buy their stuff cuz (gas up in western/consumer countries, geopolitical conflict > taxation, uncertainty generally). The more they encourage production and export, the more they will end up with excess inventory that will further ruin their cashflow.
"Oil price went up does not affect China much cuz it imports oil from Communist nations"
Where did you get this bullshit from?
China's 5 largest oil trading partners in 2021 were Saudi Arabia, Russia, Iraq, Oman and Angola. Those aren't Communist nations LMAO
Rare sensible response
I ain’t reading allat 😭
Since when was Saudi Arabia communist
Opine, PRChina selling things cheaper and cheaper, these days are no longer acceptable. Why ?? (1). It represents grave peril to any country to be 100% reliance on PRChina produced goods, see what happened when the CCP unleashes its "Wolf-Warrior" Diplomacy by stop exporting critical minerals / essential goods and also cease importing oneself country's agricultural produces etc. That is why "de-risking" and "diversification" of manufacturing and sourcing of supply chain, and find/seek out other new Markets, away and distance from PRChina are all essential counter-actions to ensure the oneself country's safety and survival. Also, (2). Protect oneself country's manufacturing and production bases, to maintain and provide employment to oneself country's Citizens. The higher taxation from increased employment of own Citizens instead of Chinese Workers, and increased consumption from local production add & boost oneself country's economy. (3). Ordering more and continuing reliance of goods from PRChina and boosting PRChina's economy can be dangerous, as making PRChina richer and richer, is also making PRChina more Powerful and increased Avarice to dominate/control oneself country or worse to conquer and invade oneself country.
Do a vid about Morocco please.....
Please
Rip gold standard, you were so beautiful while you lasted
The Great Depression would like to have a word with you.
He'll be back.
Right brutal
Yeah, having your currency in gold reallt gives a investors stability, which is investment is all about, predictability
@@guydreamrCoincidentally around the time the Federal Reserve had been in full control for an economic cycle...
I feel like I'm in "interstellar" hoser go's into space to make a video for 1 hour but on earth 30 years have passed.
Glad to see you return!
Please make a video on switzerland like the one you did on finland
Who would have known that getting pegged was a bad thing 🤷♂️
we missed you hoser
Another interesting peg story is Turkmenistan
They pegged their currency to the USD at a fixed exchange rate of 3.5 manat to dollar because prices were rising very rapidly... the thing is, it didn't work and prices kept going up which meant things started getting extremely expensive in a poor country.
“They call it PEGGING-“
*”THEY CALL IT WHAT”*
Dam, finally!!! My favorite Canadian is back!!!
YEAH!! he was missing 2 months now he is back!!!🐢
@@fridaballon7809 I was already getting worried. It's so relieving to hear him back :D
You should do a video on Germany, Poland, France, Sweden, Ireland, Austria, and etc
The Danish Krone is pegged to the euro as well (and is coincidentally more or less 1:1 with the Chinese Yuan).
Yeah, croatian kuna was basically the same rate as your krone towards euro, but we switched to euro will be a year soon, it was a bit hurtful, but not as much as other countries when they switched, like people learn with time that you need to control some processes, and having tourism participating almost 20% in your economy, and many other businesses like transportation, agriculture etc making their profits connected to tourism and tourist spending it was the right choice, we did have the largest growth after malta in the eu this year, when having a growth at all was a thing, but every nation should decide for themselves.
soo confused how the currency market works. so glad i live in canada where the economy is stable and dont need to worry about currency other than CAD and gold/silver.
Hoser i love you ❤
This began weakening nearly two decades ago, and China has more or less flipped completely to trying to strengthen their currency and improve its buying power since the pandemic (more similar timing than a direct cause). It's strengthened 35% against the dollar over the last decade, and China wishes it was more. This is way, way out of date, and I'm disappointed.
如果中国希望升值,就不会在,美元加息的时候降息
@@user-yj7zn9vb1n My attempt at translation(My knowledge in Chinese should hopefully be good enough to deal with the google translate errors because yes I did use google translate for this):
If China wants its currency to appreciate in value, they would not, cut interest rates when the U.S. dollar raises interest rates.
Pls make a video about Central African Republic 🇨🇫
Literally thought earlier today about how I wanted a new video from you. Love to see it.
>Sees country taking IMF funding
>Immediately panics because *you know* their ecnomy is about to implode ""despite"" the efforts of the IMF
You meant “because” of IMF, right😂
@@thepostapocalyptictrio4762 That's what the scare quotes were for, yeah. Their recommendations of austerity and privatization are rarely in the long term best interest of any country, and I've yet to see any nation in South America or Africa find long term prosperity as a result of these policies.
IMF loans itself is not a bad thing. The problem is that when a country negotiates with IMF, you know that something is _very_ wrong in their economy.
@@MugroofAmeen It is a chicken and egg situation, sure, but I don't know, I feel like world leaders on how to fix the economic woes of a country would have a better track record fixing economic woes than a loan shark.
China has increased money supply for 15times and the USA just for 4 times, (and the exchange rate has remained basically unchanged 6-7) so this means Chinese Yuan actually appreciated 3.75 times?🤯
No, the bigger economy scales need large number of currencies, and China's growth rate significantly outperformed USA, so the central bank could print more currency to increase supply
If it was a true free market I think so. We need need a PhD economist to explain this for me.
@@nsebastyoure a loser and so are economists
Chinese quality might be cheap but their quality sucks tho, u get what u paid for.
Don't forget that they also buy so many us treasuries, which make their currency more underappreciate than what it actually is (yes they think just printing money is not enough yet)
Holy shiet. I visited Lebanon in July 2022 and the exchange rate was 28k pounds for 1 dollar.
This country was fu...d by so many factors in such a short time.
What you explain is currently happening in Nigeria 🇳🇬 It will be great if you can make an analysis on nigerias economy
This concept of pegging is very cool. More governments should become pegging enthusiasts‼️‼️👍😎 China is #1 pegging enthusiast country in the world‼️‼️
US : moves manufacturing to China
Also US: China took our jobs 😅
A major reason why they’ve kept the shadow peg is that they quite literally do not have the currency reserves to float it. At this rate, you cannot access your personal cash reserves without taking the massive conversion rate hit. If people actually took their money out of their accounts, the country would not have enough foreign cash reserves (via depositors) to function
Hoser is finally uploading again! Holy cow
The low value of their fiat doesn’t make manufacturing and supplies cheaper. It essentially comes down low wages. Labor’s so cheap that they can source and manufacturer at a fraction of the cost. If their currency was low value, but they got paid higher wages, it wouldn’t be cheaper to produce in China. So ultimately, it’s not the value of the currency, it’s the wages.
Hammering their currency down briefly (up to 40 years or so) lowers their wages on a global scale, so the currency trick is to buy time and/or ride off the momentum.
fiat
Also you can raise more soldier with the same overall wage costs, so also military spending is not comparable because of wages
China wages nowadays are expensive for foreign companies so what china is doing is subsidizing their high value added industries to compete
Great video, love your pegging content!
Just a small addition of info that wasnt mentioned in the video. Namibia is also pegged to the South African Rand along with Lesotho and Eswatini.
Glad to see you back ya hoser!
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11:11 "The government tried what it could do to stop this" *proceeds to list measures that only worsen recessions*
Modern Argentina in a nutshell
We have been waiting for this and you delivered🔥
Yaaaas! New Hoser content! I've been waiting.