Asia's Developing Future

Economic models show China yuan shift, Malaysia–Singapore reactions, were best options

Informações:

Sinopsis

The People’s Republic of China’s gradual shift from a currency policy pegged to the US dollar to one that tracks the movements of a range of currencies was the correct choice given the challenges, and neighbors Malaysia and Singapore were best served by reacting in a similar way. That’s the conclusion of research presented in Global Shocks and the New Global and Regional Financial Architecture, Asian Perspectives, a new book by the Asian Development Bank Institute. The vulnerability of the currency regimes used in Asia came into focus after the Asian financial crisis of 1997–1998, when the many Asian countries that had pegged their currencies to the US dollar found they had opened themselves to significant economic and financial risks. Since the crisis, countries have either chosen to let their currencies trade more freely against the dollar—Indonesia, Thailand, and the Republic of Korea, for example—or shifted to other methods that still retain significant control over the value of their currencies. One