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    14 November

    What Chinese Currency Manipulation Looks Like

    2009-11-12-YuanmanipulationCAFw.JPG
    Source: Federal Reserve: Yuan, Broad dollar index. Graphic idea compliments of AAM.
    The dollar stays flat against the Chinese Yuan, even as it loses value against other major currencies. The dollar is down to $1.50 per Euro, compared to $1.27 at this time last year (sorry to folks daydreaming about summer in Italy). It's down against the Canadian dollar, the Japanese yen and the entire "broad dollar index" tracked by the Federal Reserve. But the dollar is unchanged against the Chinese Yuan (unless one considers 6.836 to 6.827 a drop).
    China's deliberate policy of pegging the Yuan to the dollar makes American imports of Chinese goods artificially cheap and gives American companies opening factories in China an artificial subsidy. That's good for China but bad for America, and helps explain our soaring trade imbalance with China. An extraordinary 83 percent of America's non-oil trade deficit is with China. During the downturn, our trade deficit with other countries has been shrinking -- but not with China.

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