World's Most Expensive Currency | Dhruv Rathee - YouTube

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Hello, friends!
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Now, $1 is about to be equal to ₹75.
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And €1 has crossed the mark of ₹85.
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And £1 is more than ₹100.
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But do you know,
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more expensive than these currencies is the
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World's Most Expensive Currency.
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Can you guess which currency it is?
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Kuwaiti Dinar.
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1 Kuwaiti Dinar is almost equal to ₹250.
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The question then arises
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what is so special in Kuwaiti Dinar?
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That it has become the most expensive currency in the world.
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Whereas the US Dollar, the most popular currency in the world,
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is not as expensive
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as the Kuwaiti Dinar.
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In today's episode, let's try to understand it.
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Friends, you can think of this video as a continuation
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of the 'What if $1 = ₹1' video.
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You guys liked that video.
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That's why today's video is on a similar topic.
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Before talking about the Kuwaiti Dinar,
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we have to look into the history of Kuwait.
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You might be shocked to know friends
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that 70 - 80 years ago,
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the currency used in Kuwait
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was issued by the Indian Government.
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Yup, you heard that right.
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The Reserve Bank of India,
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used to print Kuwait's currency at the time
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and that currency was named
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Gulf Rupee.
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It was quite similar to the Indian Rupee.
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It looked like this.
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And on the note, you can see that 'Government on India' is written.
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The numbering in the Indian Rupee and the Gulf Rupee,
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differed only by a letter.
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The numbers of the Gulf Rupee,
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used to start was a 'Z'
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The speciality of the Gulf Rupee was that
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it could not be used in India.
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It was used in foreign only.
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The next question to arise here is that;
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Why did Kuwait need to use a currency that was being issued by the Indian Government?
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Friends, the answer to this is hidden in history.
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For almost 200 years,
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from 1763 till 1961,
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the British Empire had control over the Persian Gulf area.
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In this area, lied the country Kuwait.
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Kuwait wasn't totally under the control of the British Empire,
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through out the years, there were varying degrees of control over Kuwait.
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Here, the British India Government saw that
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the economy of Kuwait was quite small.
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They didn't see the need to have a new currency for it.
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It was much easier to use the same currency that was being used in India.
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So the initial decision was of the British India Government to use the same currency.
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But in 1947, when India got independence,
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India saw this practice
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and permitted Kuwait to continue using the Indian Rupee.
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Till this point, the exact same Indian Rupee was being used in India and Kuwait.
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Remember, this was the time when Kuwait's economy was small
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because the Oil Boom hadn't happened yet.
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Even though oil was discovered in Kuwait in the late 1930s,
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but because of World War II,
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Kuwait couldn't sell much oil to the rest of the world.
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This started happening in the 1960s.
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But some years after India's Independence,
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India faced a problem.
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Of Gold Trafficking.
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Large scale gold trafficking was happening in the Gulf area,
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The smugglers would sell the gold in India,
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They got Indian Rupee in exchange
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they would then take the Indian Rupees into the Gulf countries
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to get it exchanged into other foreign currencies.
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The Indian economy had to suffer huge losses because of this.
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For this reason, in 1959,
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the Indian Government decided to introduce a different currency for the Gulf area,
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called the Gulf Rupee.
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It could be converted with the Indian Rupee in a 1:1 ratio,
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but the Gulf rupee would not be allowed to be used in India.
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With this, smuggling could be controlled to quite an extent.
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After this, in 1961,
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Kuwait got independence from the British,
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and in 1963,
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Kuwait becomes the first Arab country,
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to conduct its Parliamentary elections.
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And to create a Constitution.
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By the 1970s, it progressed so well that
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Kuwait became the most developed country in the area.
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In fact, in terms of Press Freedom as well,
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Kuwait becomes one of the top countries at that time.
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You may find it unbelievable,
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but this is the truth, friends.
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Once, Kuwait was known for its liberal values.
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The situation isn't really bad now,
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even now, the Press Freedom Index ranking of Kuwait
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is much better than India.
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That is, today in Kuwait,
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journalists have more freedom to speak
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than compared to India.
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Anyway, I diverted quite a bit from the main topic,
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coming back to the original topic of currency.
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In the early 1960s,
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Kuwaiti Dinar is introduced
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by the new Kuwaiti Government.
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And it's priced at ₹13.33 = 1 KD.
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By 1966, Gulf Rupee remains in circulation,
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but after that the Indian Government
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had to devalue the Indian Rupee for several reasons.
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One, India had to go through wars with China and Pakistan,
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I explained all these reasons in the '₹1 = $1' video,
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about why India had to devalue the Indian Rupee.
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But because of this devaluation,
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these Gulf countries are affected.
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And they are forced to create their currencies.
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Oman, Qatar, UAE, all these countries
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create their own currencies after this.
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In 1975, the exchange rate of the Kuwaiti Dinar is fixed to a basket of currencies.
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What it means to 'Fix' the exchange rate,
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I explained it to you in the same video.
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Basically, there are three types of exchange rates,
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Fixed, Floating and Mixed.
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Fixed means that you fix the exchange rate of your currency with some other currency.
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And based on that currency's value, the value of your currency fluctuates.
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Suppose you create a new currency,
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and you fix the value of your new currency to be $5.
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With the fluctuations in the Dollar,
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the value of your currency will also fluctuate.
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The floating exchange rate means that
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with the supply and demand in the market,
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the value of the currency will fluctuate.
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It'll 'Float.'
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And Mixed is the combination of the two.
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The Indian Rupee also had fixed exchange rates till the 1990s.
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Only after the liberalization of the economy happened in India,
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the Indian Rupee was brought under the Floating exchange rate.
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Today, most of the currencies of the world,
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are on floating exchange rate or the mixed exchange rate.
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With the exception of the currencies of the Gulf countries.
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Like the Kuwaiti Dinar, that is still
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working on a fixed exchange rate.
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It is not fixed to a single currency,
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instead, it is fixed with a basket of currencies.
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There is a basket of currencies
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with like 30% Dollars, 20% Pounds
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different currencies in different proportions.
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And their combined ratio,
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is the one fixed to the Kuwaiti Dinar.
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Obviously, the next question to arise is that
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Why has Kuwait kept the exchange rate of its currency even today?
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And why hasn't India kept it fixed?
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Why has India put its currency on the floating exchange rate?
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And are the pros and cons to it?
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Fixing one's currency,
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or pegging it,
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It's also known as Peg.
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The downside is that you have to depend on other currencies
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regarding the economy of your country.
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If you peg your currency to the US Dollar,
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then if the US Dollar crashed tomorrow,
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if the US's economy falls,
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then the economy of your country will also fall.
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Because your currency is based on the US Dollar.
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To avoid this to a large extent,
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Kuwait has pegged its currency with a basket of currencies
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instead of pegging it with the US Dollar only.
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But now the second problem is that,
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when you peg your currency,
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then you have to maintain that peg.
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And to maintain that,
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you need a sufficient supply of foreign exchange reserves in your country.
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What does maintaining mean?
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Look, for any currency,
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to bear the changes in the demand and supply in the market
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is unavoidable.
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Irrespective of whether you're on a floating exchange rate or fixed.
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The only difference is that
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on the fixed exchange rate, the forces of supply and demand,
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need to be counteracted by your government
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by using foreign exchange reserves to maintain the value of your currency.
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When India shifted the Indian Rupee to a Floating exchange rate in the 1990s
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one of the reasons for it was that
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India's foreign exchange reserves
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were so low that they could support only 3 weeks' imports.
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This is the benefit of the floating exchange rate,
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if the unemployment in the country is rising, or the economy is in a bad state,
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then the Central Bank can control the supply of money
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by increasing the supply or reducing the interest rates
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or by devaluing the currency.
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To revive growth.
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These are not possible in the fixed exchange rate.
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I've listed out so many disadvantages of the fixed exchange rate system,
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but why do the gulf countries still use this system even today?
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The simple reason for it, friends, is that
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the economies of these countries are based on Oil.
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And like all of us know, the price of Oil is very volatile.
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It fluctuates rapidly.
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If these countries start using the floating exchange rate,
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then with the demand and supply of oil,
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the currencies of these countries,
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will keep on fluctuating rapidly.
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Their values will change every moment.
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To avoid this, they still use the fixed exchange rate system.
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And Kuwait does not lack foreign exchange reserves.
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Because this country has earned a lot of money by selling oil.
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And they have a lot of US Dollars in reserve.
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So they wouldn't struggle to maintain the peg.
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Kuwait has one of the largest global reserves of oil.
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And on the basis of this oil industry,
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Kuwait can maintain its high-value peg.
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Speaking theoretically,
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Why doesn't Kuwait keep its currency on a much more 'fixed' exchange rate?
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Today, ₹250 = 1 KD.
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Why doesn't Kuwait say that ₹1,000 should be equal to 1 KD?
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That they want to 'fix' the exchange rate of their currency at that high a level.
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Theoretically speaking, Kuwait can do this.
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But then it will be difficult to maintain that peg,
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because that much foreign reserve would be needed to maintain it.
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Today, the forces of supply and demand in the market,
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there are multiple forces,
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I talked about them as well in the other video,
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based on those, the value of a currency that is calculated,
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is the most appropriate point to maintain the peg on.
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For example, a major factor here is the Balance of Payments.
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The money that is coming into Kuwait,
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through foreign investments or exports,
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is much more than the money going out of Kuwait.
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Through imports or investments of the locals in foreign countries.
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It means that foreigners are buying more goods and services from Kuwait
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and are investing there.
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So the demand for the currency is high,
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thus raising its value.
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By the way friends, among all these currencies
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if we include the non-government owned currencies as well,
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then the most valuable, the most expensive currency of the world,
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will actually be the Bitcoin.
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Because the value of 1 bitcoin is almost
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And in comparison with the other currencies,
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why is the value of Bitcoin so high?
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For the same reason.
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Because it has a high demand.
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People actually want to buy it.
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Day by day, the adoption of cryptocurrency,
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is growing exponentially.
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Last year it was estimated
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that $6.6 billion was invested in cryptocurrencies
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by people around the world.
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And with the governments around the world accepting it,
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like, in our country, a Crypto BIll may be presented in the Parliament soon,
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the RBI has already ordered the bank
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to continue the crypto-transactions,
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it is helping to motivate more people into investing in cryptocurrencies.
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In our country, a few crore (ten million) people
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have already invested in crypto.
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The term 'invest' is very critical here.
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Notice that
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they are investing in a currency.
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Before Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies,
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people didn't really think about it
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that they would buy currencies to invest in them.
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Normally, one uses currency in one's day-to-day life.
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But today, the way that cryptocurrency is evolving in the world,
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it seems like people see it as more of an asset,
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than as a currency.
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And it is an investment that is very risky.
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It is very risky because
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it is much more volatile than the price of oil.
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But perhaps this is the reason why people love to invest in it.
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If you are aware of the risks and want to invest in them,
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then you can invest in cryptocurrencies
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by using apps like CoinSwitch Kuber.
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The user interface of this app is really simple.
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It is similar to ordering food online,
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it is that easy to invest in crypto.
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And you can start your journey with as little as ₹100 only.
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And because CoinSwitch Kuber has sponsored this video,
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you will get a sign-up bonus of ₹50
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when you register on it.
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On top of it, you can get an additional bonus of ₹50,
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for each successful referral.
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The link is in the description below.
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You can go try it out.
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Coming back to our topic,
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before concluding, I would like to tell you another thing.
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Always remember that the value of the currency,
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is not an indicator
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of the economic performance of a country.
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Historically, £1 has always been more valuable
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than $1.
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But this doesn't mean that the economy of the UK is stronger
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or that the UK is more powerful than the US.
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It is not so.
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All of us know that the US is a bigger economy than the UK.
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And today, the US is more powerful than the UK.
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And this is the reason, friends, that despite having the world's most expensive currency,
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Kuwait is now going through an economic crisis.
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That started with the Covid-19 pandemic
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when the oil prices crashed.
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The oil prices remained low for a significant amount of time,
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that Kuwait is now at a loss.
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There is no personal income tax in Kuwait.
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Also, Kuwait spends a lot of money on the welfare of its citizens.
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In Kuwait, people get free healthcare,
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free education, cheap electricity, cheap gasoline,
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and several benefits and subsidies in addition to these.
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But now, the government has no other source of income
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since the oil prices are so low.
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The government is trying
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the people are also demanding
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that the revenue sources should be diversified.
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That they come up with other ways to invest in renewable energy.
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And to stop their dependency on oil.
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It is to be seen how Kuwait overcomes this crisis in future.
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The link to download CoinSwitch Kuber will be in the description below.
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I hope you found this video informative.
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Thank you very much!