As the European Union tries to fight its record-high €1 billion deficit per day with China, the bloc's leaders are increasingly pointing to the problem of currency manipulation, which they say Beijing is using to make products even cheaper on the EU market – which is already flooded with Chinese imports.
“An artificially low currency is an advantage for those who want to improve their economic competition positions,” German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said after the European Council summit on 19 June.
The matter of the Chinese currency and its management was also high on the agenda of last week's G7 summit in France.
The signs are that this is a new front in Europe's trade battle against Beijing. To understand why the devaluation of the yuan (or renminbi) matters, here are three things to know.
What’s wrong with the Chinese currency?











