For those with negative personality. It's you against you, full stop.
http://www.amazon.com/How-Get-Your-Step-Step/dp/188655417X
http://www.amazon.com/How-Get-Your-Step-Step/dp/188655417X
Quote from pepper_john:
Again, please ask a Chinese from mainland China about the actual exchange rate prior to 1994 if you know one, instead of blindly believing some fed reserchers in SF whose experience with RMB, if any, was probably only with the official exchange rate. Anecdotal evidence is still better than imaged ones.
Quote from Trader666:
Let me get this straight... you (an ET assclown who can't admit he's wrong) are saying to believe you over the Federal Reserve? And Paul Tudor Jones who's traded foreign exchange for 30 years and is worth $3 billion is somehow foolish enough to put this "obviously wrong" information in his investment letter... but you know better? LMAO!!!!
Quote from pepper_john:
The fed research paper already showed that there was no such thing as "50% devaluation on Jan 1, 1994".
I asked my Chinese friend...
Quote from Trader666:
So now you're lying?
On January 1, 1994, the Chinese government unified its exchange rate system by abolishing the official rate. Overnight the market value of China's currency fell by 50%.
http://www.frbsf.org/econrsrch/wklyltr/wklyltr98/el98-01.html
And who gives a crap about what your Chinese friend says? If you even have one. Grow up.
China does not intend to promote exports by the depreciation of (its) currency [6]. It would have been more correct to say that it no longer does so, since that is what it had done since January 1, 1994, when the Chinese currency was devalued in real terms by about 55%.
http://www.asianews.it/news-en/Chinese-yuan-set-to-replace-dollar-14131.html
Quote from trefoil:
You guys reminded me I needed to get off my lazy ass and actually ask someone about this. Which I did, and he remembers more or less the same thing, a drop from about 8.5 to 8.3, close enough to 8.2 given that he wouldn't have remembered the exact rate so many years later, and then steady for many years after that.
So, once again more evidence that this devaluation wasn't all that great. But I also found a paper online that talked about three different rates prior to 1994. I'll post that with some comments later.
When China assumed its seat on the Executive Board of the International Monetary
Fund (IMF) in 1980, the official rate of was about 1.50 yuan per USD. Since then,
although the authorities have classified the currency regime as a âmanaged floatâ, in
reality exchange rate had not been uniform until 1994 (Roberts and Tyers, 2001). At
the beginning of 1981, an internal settlement rate was introduced, at which all
purchases of foreign exchange had to take place. From 1986 to 1994 three different
rates were effective at the same time: the âofficialâ rate (an-oft-adjusted peg to the
USD); âswapâ market rates (unofficial floating rates which the central bank
occasionally adjusted through market intervention); and the âeffectiveâ exchange rates
actually faced by exporters (weighted averages of official and unofficial rates, see
Roberts and Tyers, 2001). The apparent overvaluation of the official exchange rate
during the 1980s, at least relative to the market-based exchange rates, was a source of
concern to policymakers who recognized it as a tax on exports.
