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Big Mac index inflames debate over Chinese yuan's value | Big Mac index inflames debate over Chinese yuan's value |
(about 5 hours later) | |
China’s currency is significantly undervalued against the dollar, according to the Economist’s latest Big Mac index, which found that the bestselling burger from McDonald’s cost 43% more to buy in the US than in the world’s second largest economy. | China’s currency is significantly undervalued against the dollar, according to the Economist’s latest Big Mac index, which found that the bestselling burger from McDonald’s cost 43% more to buy in the US than in the world’s second largest economy. |
The yawning gap between the Chinese yuan and the US dollar, documented in the latest index, indicates that another round in the Sino-US currency war could be looming, although experts cautioned against taking the index as a stringent measurement of currency strength. | |
As the Economist, which invented the index in 1986, said: “Burgernomics was never intended as a precise gauge of currency misalignment, merely a tool to make exchange-rate theory more digestible. | |
“The average price of a Big Mac in America in July 2015 was $4.79; in China it was only $2.74 at market exchange rates. So the ‘raw’ Big Mac index says that the yuan was undervalued by 43% at that time.” | |
Currencies linked to China through local trade also enjoy cheap Big Macs, illustrating how much south-east Asian economies have felt the strain over the past year as the Chinese recovery has run out of steam. | Currencies linked to China through local trade also enjoy cheap Big Macs, illustrating how much south-east Asian economies have felt the strain over the past year as the Chinese recovery has run out of steam. |
There are plenty of other factors that can undermine an index based on burger prices, which the Economist freely admits. In some parts of the world it is considered a premium food and priced accordingly. More importantly, it can reflect per capita incomes, which remain much lower in China and the developing world compared with Europe and the US. | There are plenty of other factors that can undermine an index based on burger prices, which the Economist freely admits. In some parts of the world it is considered a premium food and priced accordingly. More importantly, it can reflect per capita incomes, which remain much lower in China and the developing world compared with Europe and the US. |
For example, the cheapest Big Macs can be found in Venezuala, where a mix of subsidies, low taxes and growing poverty have kept the price low. The Economist also publishes a chart showing the burger’s price relative to individual incomes and unsurprisingly, the correlation is consistent; McDonald’s commonly prices its burgers according to what people can afford. | For example, the cheapest Big Macs can be found in Venezuala, where a mix of subsidies, low taxes and growing poverty have kept the price low. The Economist also publishes a chart showing the burger’s price relative to individual incomes and unsurprisingly, the correlation is consistent; McDonald’s commonly prices its burgers according to what people can afford. |
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