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How Would an Appreciation of the Renminbi and Other East Asian Currencies Affect China's Exports?
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Citations
18
References
2009
Year
EconomicsRenminbi AppreciationInternational FinanceEast Asian StudiesBalance Of PaymentTradeGeneralized AppreciationBusinessInternational DemandChinese GdpTrade PatternForeign Exchange MarketGlobal Trade
China's global current account surplus equaled 9% of Chinese GDP in 2006 and 11% of GDP in 2007. Many argue that a renminbi appreciation would help to rebalance China's trade. Using a panel dataset including China's exports to 33 countries we find that a 10% renminbi (RMB) appreciation would reduce ordinary exports by 12% and processed exports by less than 4%. A 10% appreciation of all other East Asian currencies would reduce processed exports by 6%. A 10% appreciation throughout the region would reduce processed exports by 10%. Since ordinary exports tend to be simple, labor-intensive goods while processed exports are sophisticated, capital-intensive goods, a generalized appreciation in East Asia would generate more expenditure-switching towards US and European goods and contribute more to resolving global imbalances than an appreciation of the RMB or of other Asian currencies alone.
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