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If the U.S. economy collapses, then the dollar will inevitably be hit hard, and at this level, it will inevitably rise sharply.
**Significant appreciation against the U.S. dollar. and other currencies have also appreciated sharply.
If the U.S. and U.S. economies really collapse, it will cause economic depression and economic collapse at the global level.
The yuan may lose its status as an international currency, or it may cause the United States to significantly overissue dollars.
So I think the U.S. economy collapses, and **** will go up sharply.
Since the formation of the Bretton Woods system, the Bretton Woods system has been based on the gold exchange standard based on the US dollar and **. Its essence is to establish an international monetary system centered on the US dollar, the basic contents of which include the US dollar pegged to **, the currencies of other countries pegged to the U.S. dollar, and the implementation of a fixed exchange rate system. Although the Bretton Woods system collapsed in 1973, the system of pegging the US dollar to ** formed since then did not collapse with it, but evolved into the trend of the opposition between the US dollar and **.
If the U.S. economy collapses, then the dollar will inevitably be hit hard, and at this level, it will inevitably rise sharply. But the impact of the collapse of the U.S. economy is far more than itself, if the U.S. economy really collapses, then it will cause a global level of economic depression and economic collapse, the chain reaction will be extremely huge, from this level of **** and other commodities will also fall sharply, so I personally feel that the U.S. economic collapse can not be analyzed from one aspect alone, it needs to be considered and measured from many aspects!
Hope it helps!
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Because ** is denominated in US dollars, if the U.S. economy improves, it will trigger interest rate hike expectations, so it will be said that the U.S. economy will improve before there is such a statement.
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To understand this question, we must first understand some basic things.
1: The global gold price is linked or basically the same.
2: Why will it rise and fall, there are many influencing factors, the simplest is to hedge value, so his rise and fall and the economy are negatively correlated, for example, if inflation is now, the currency is depreciating rapidly, everyone in order to ensure that their money is not lost in vain, they will choose to buy in kind, then the global hedging product is**, everyone will buy crazy, the demand rises, ****will**.
If the economy improves, people will choose better investment varieties, invest in enterprises, and invest in **, and the demand for ** will decrease at this time, so as to decline.
Moreover, ** is priced in US dollars, 1600 US dollars per ounce, when the US economy improves, his comprehensive national strength will increase, the US dollar will be strong**, that is, the US dollar will increase in value, then relatively speaking, ** will decline.
This is all a general situation, which is convenient for you to understand, and it is relatively simple to say.
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**It's Chinese! What does it have to do with the United States!!
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First of all, when the U.S. economy improves, countries will reserve dollars, the purchasing power of the U.S. dollar will increase, the value will rise, and the value of the reserves will decrease.
Secondly, the U.S. economy accounts for a large proportion of the world, and the U.S. economy is good, which will drive the global economic development.
Third. The U.S. dollar used to be pegged to **, although it is now decoupled, but the trend of the U.S. dollar has a greater impact on **, and the U.S. dollar is bullish ******, and vice versa**.
Finally, prosperous antiques, troubled times**. Also disproves the topic.
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Because the largest reserves are now in European countries such as the United Kingdom, the United States will definitely control the price of the United States in order to control these countries.
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The dollar is pegged to **, and the dollar rules the world economic system!
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The United States is not an economic crisis in the short term, to be precise, it should be a financial crisis, some greedy financial institutions, but the people behind it have to pay, and through the U.S. bond market, the United States will issue additional bonds to increase debt, resulting in fluctuations in exchange rates and interest rates, and eventually its impact will have spread to the world to varying degrees and forms, and China has always been a large investor in U.S. bonds (looking for security and income for huge foreign exchange deposits, and to alleviate the pressure of RMB appreciation), the decline in the price of U.S. bonds, which has increased dramatically, will inevitably hit China's foreign currency investment on the books again, and the reduction in the liquidity of the people's money supply will also make it difficult for enterprises to operate, and slowly affect China's orders and exports; The decline in the growth rate of hot money flowing into China's capital market will also be indirectly affected through the ** housing market and commodity market, but what many experts are worried about is that economic growth is declining, while inflation is still (stagnant inflation).