
Pata,
Essa era a missão secreta... eheheheh Nem de propósito, daqui a nada vão levar-me para jantar bico de pato!
Jokas
Essa era a missão secreta... eheheheh Nem de propósito, daqui a nada vão levar-me para jantar bico de pato!

Jokas

Fórum dedicado à discussão sobre os Mercados Financeiros - Bolsas de Valores
http://teste.caldeiraodebolsa.jornaldenegocios.pt/
http://teste.caldeiraodebolsa.jornaldenegocios.pt/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=66357
Se a china vai crescer para 2009 ? Provavelmente SIM.
Mas 9% ????? Duvido
Should the currency of the country with a large and growing trade surplus and large and growing reserves depreciate against the dollar?
The absence of real appreciation in the past undermines China’s case for reacting to the recent renminbi move by allowing the renminbi to depreciate rather than by doubling down on efforts to stimulate domestic demand. China has by far the world’s largest current account surplus. The latest World Bank report argues, I think correctly, that this surplus should persist next year even as exports slow. China will benefit more than most from the recent large fall in commodity prices. If China is unwilling to accept that its exports will slow as the global economy slows, and instead tries to offset dollar strength by weakening the renminbi against the dollar – or it tries to offset renminbi appreciation with export subsidies – everyone else will face additional competitive pressures.
Given China’s size, it is pretty clear that China cannot continue to grow by investing ever more and manufacturing ever more. China ultimately has to produce for Chinese demand not world demand.