First, the development history of the yen
The earliest issue of Japanese yen paper money was in 188 1 year, when Japan followed the example of the west and issued 1 batch of paper money. Then, in the first half of the 20th century, Japanese heroes died very early, and those great men who were able to defend them were all pressed on the 1000 yuan paper money. However, the yen depreciated by nearly 30 times from 1945 to 1949. By 1984, the Bank of Japan announced the issuance of new currency. Then until 2004, the revision was announced again. 1000 yen was replaced by Hideki Noguchi, a bacteriologist known as Japan's national treasure, and 5,000 yen was replaced by a talented Japanese female writer. It reflects the rise of women's status. Printing Japanese paper money is not a problem for most countries. However, Japan is very worried about this. In fact, this has pinned the pride of the Japanese who belong to the past and their expectations for the future.
2. Why has the yen been falling?
In recent months, the yen has been in a downward trend, so many netizens speculate that the yen will face the possibility of falling in the next time. Some netizens also believe that the decline of the yen may be related to the Japanese epidemic. But the yen may appreciate. However, the biggest reason may be that the dollar does not allow the yen to depreciate sharply. At present, the financial system all over the world takes the dollar as its basic hegemony and will not allow the yen to depreciate sharply. Japan's own economic strength is also relatively strong.
To sum up, the rise and fall of the yen depends on many factors, such as economic development and external environmental factors, as well as its own strength. However, the fluctuation of the yen should not be obvious. After all, Japan has a relatively strong economic strength.