The exchange rate of Japanese yen has never been very high, and Japanese yen and Korean won are also the least valuable currencies in our eyes. After all, we often hear that people in these two countries spend tens of thousands or even hundreds of thousands of yen and Korean won every time they eat a meal and buy clothes. It still sounds scary. But when we convert the money into RMB, we will feel that it is nothing, and the consumption level is not as high as ours.
At this time, there will be a very interesting phenomenon. People often wonder, if we compare the Japanese 100 yen with the actual domestic situation, how much RMB is equal to us? There is really no standard answer to this, because it is really different under different circumstances.
In terms of daily consumption, in Japan, 100 yen can buy three or four cheap eggs, a notebook, a cup of cheap instant noodles and even a bottle of cheap mineral water. Domestically, the value of these things is probably around 3 yuan.
While eating a simple meal in Japan costs about 1000 to 3,000 yen, and eating a fast food in China is almost 15-30 yuan. 100 yen here is about 2 yen.
Therefore, judging from the simplest daily consumption, 100 yen is almost equal to RMB 2.5 yuan, which is more accurate.
Judging from the salary, the average salary of fresh graduates in Japan is about 200,000 yen per month in the first three years when they just started working. Our recent graduates in China earned an average salary of about 3,000 RMB in the year before they started to work. The exchange difference here is 100 yen equals 1.6 RMB.
The average wage of ordinary working class in Japan is about 5 million yen a year. The average working class in China earns about 5w a year. 100 yen here is equal to 1 RMB.
So in terms of salary, 100 yen is almost equal to RMB 1.5 yuan.
In terms of transportation, taking public transportation facilities in Japan, buses and subways in the city generally start at 200 yen, high-speed rail 100km is about 3,000 yen, and taxis start at 2km at 550 yen. And in China? Generally, local buses start at 1 yuan or 2 yuan, and you can get a 20% or 60% discount with your card, even if you start at 1.5 yuan. The subway usually starts in 3 yuan. High-speed rail 100km is about 30 yuan.
Therefore, from the perspective of transportation, 100 yen is almost equal to RMB 10 yuan.
To give a simple example from the purchasing power of big items, it costs about 35 million yen to buy a house of 100 square meters in Osaka, Japan. It costs about 5 million yuan to buy a house of 100 square meters in China and Shanghai.
It costs about1/kloc-0 million yen to buy an Audi A8 in Japan. Buying an Audi A8 in China costs about1000000 RMB.
Buying an apple 1 1 in Japan costs about150,000 yen, and buying an apple 1 1 in China costs about 8,000 RMB.
Therefore, judging from the purchasing power of large items, the conversion between 100 yen and RMB is extremely unstable, but the difference is getting bigger and bigger.
However, on the whole, 100 yen, compared with RMB in Japanese eyes, is still almost equal to 3 yuan money in daily life. There is no way to compare it with big-ticket consumption. After all, China's inflation is too high and prices are too high, so it really can't be compared.