Brazil’s Has World’s Most Expensive Currency, 149% Overvalued, Says The Economist

A Big Mac sandwichThe Brazilian real is the world’s most expensive currency and is 149% overvalued against the dollar. The Colombian peso, the next most expensive currency is 108% above the U.S. currency, This according to the British magazine The Economist, which has created a new version of the Big Mac index.

The new and improved index takes into consideration not only the price of the hamburger but also the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) per capita of each country analyzed.

The new methodology also shows that China’s currency, the yuan, is not as undervalued as most people believe. The Economist says the yuan seems to be close to its fair value against the dollar and is even slightly overvalued: 3%.

Using the old method, which compares only the price of the Big Mac, the Brazilian currency is 52% above its fair value. In Brazil, the sandwich costs the equivalent of US$ 6.16 while in the US, the price is US$ 4.07.

Using the old Economist’s methodology, the Chinese currency is 44% below its fair value against the dollar. The average price of the Chinese Big Mac is US$ 2.27.

The British magazine’s Mac index, which is 25 this year, is based on the theory of purchasing power parity. This notion points to the relationship between two currencies based on the amount of each currency that is needed to purchase a particular set of products – in this case the Big Mac sandwich at McDonald’s – in each country.

Brazil and Argentina are undergoing a similar situation as US excess liquidity floods world markets with dollars that force the appreciation of local currencies, a phenomenon Brazil officially identifies as the “currencies war.”

The Argentine Peso overvalued in 18.9%. The price of a Big Mac is 4.84 dollars in Argentina, which means the exchange rate should be established at 4.92 Argentine pesos to the dollar, when it really stands at 4.13 pesos.

But if GDP per capita is taken into account, the exchange rate imbalance is even greater. This is because in emerging countries the Big Mac should be cheaper since labour overall is less qualified and should have a per unit cost lower than in industrialized countries.

This means that the difference in exchange rate for Brazil soars to 149% and in Argentina to 101%.

But in some Latin American countries the opposite is also true with some currencies under-valued according to GDP per capita PPP. This would be the cases of countries as Mexico (-32%); Peru (-10.3%) and Chile (-1.7%).

Tags:

You May Also Like

Beyond Ouro Preto

Thanks to the wonderful potions prepared by Loira, Loira and Roque postponed old age ...

Press Freedom to Be Monitored Online in Brazil

The “Press Freedom Network”, an online tool to monitor and denounce press freedom violations ...

10 Brazilians Make the List of Latin America’s 25 Global Star Entrepreneurs

The CEO of AB InBev, the world’s largest brewer, Brazilian Carlos Brito,  is among ...

While Others Might Struggle Brazil Is Ready to Thrive in a Greener Planet

The world leaders have confirmed the prisoner’s dilemma; unfortunately the entire world will face ...

Song(s)

Debate Goes OnBy Brazzil Magazine

Indians Advocate Plurinational States Involving Brazil and Neighbors

Indigenous peoples from Brazil and neighboring countries would like to turn Latin American nations into ...

60% of Wood Cut in Brazilian Amazon Goes to Waste

Studies by Brazil’s Amazonian Institute for Man and the Environment (IMAZON), a non-governmental organization ...

Brazilian Rice Exports Grow, But Imports Are Twice as Big

In the first semester Brazil sold 232,000 tons of rice on the foreign market. ...

Brazilian Chancellor Warns Bush: ‘Democracy Can’t Be Imposed’

Democracy cannot be imposed, the Brazilian Minister of Foreign Relations, Celso Amorim, stressed today ...

Bolivian Indians Say They Will Cut Flow of Gas to Brazil

Guarani Indians threatened yesterday, August 28, to take control of Bolivia’s largest gas and ...