China takes action to relax currency
China has today taken action to honour its pledge in making its currency, the yuan, more flexible.
On Saturday, policymakers pledged to make the yuan more flexible but then just 24 hours later the central bank’s website said: “There is at present no basis for major fluctuation or change in the [yuan] exchange rate.”
However, its pledge to “strengthen the flexibility” of the yuan exchange rate was seen by some analysts that Beijing was ready to relax the dollar peg and allow the currency to rise.
US legislators and trade groups have previously said the yuan is kept up to 40% below what its value should be against the US dollar.
The Chinese currency pegged the US dollar until 2005 when it was allowed to rise in value by about one fifth.
The peg was reinstated in July 2008 when the global financial crisis took hold, amid US concerns of the impact on trade.
However, the People’s Bank of China has today raised the centre point of the currency’s official trading band – at 6.7980 to the dollar, 0.43% stronger than yesterday’s rate of 6.8275, thereby allowing the currency to gain.
China has previously said that keeping the yuan stable is “an important contribution” to global recovery and therefore analysts believe the appreciation of the yuan will be “limited” as it does not want to damage its export-led economy.
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