Currency gold figures
Generally, the excellent digital currencies are mostly imported procts, such as bitcoin, Leyte coin, ether coin and so on. However, the domestic Yuanbao coin, Ruitai coin, bitcoin and the tokens of different crowdfunding projects of European crowdfunding are excellent digital currencies
digital currency (English: digital currency) is an alternative currency in the form of electronic currency. At present, no central bank of any government has indicated that it will issue digital currency, and digital currency does not have to have a benchmark currency and a central bank
it is different from the virtual currency in the virtual world, because it can be used for real goods and services transactions, not limited to online games. The early digital currency (digital gold currency) is a form of electronic currency named after the weight of gold. Today's digital currency, such as bitcoin, lightcoin and ppcoin, is an electronic currency created, issued and circulated by check sum cryptography
Hello, according to your question, at present, there is no saying that RMB can buy digital currency, so this should not happen
when discussing ancient coins, we usually use such a hypothesis, that is:
1 liang gold = 10 Liang silver = 10 Guan copper coin = 10000 Wen copper coin
although the exchange rate of gold, silver and copper has been floating, this assumption is basically reasonable. Wang Zengyu, a contemporary expert of Song Dynasty history, once mentioned in the chapter 7 "overcoming Xianghan" of his new biography of Yuefei that the imperial court wrote to Yuefei: "fourth, pay 60000 stone meters and 400000 Guan for military supplies. At that time, gold and silver had not been used as independent currency. Thus, it can be seen that 400000 Guan copper coins in the early Southern Song Dynasty are equivalent to 100000 taels of silver and 5000 taels of gold, which basically conforms to the above hypothesis in the order of magnitude
in order to discuss the purchasing power of money, we must first mention two famous methods. In his great history of China, Mr. Huang Renyu used the price of gold as the benchmark to calculate the value of copper coin today based on the assumption that 1 liang gold = 10 Liang silver = 10 Guan In his book "hidden rules", Mr. Wang uses both rice price and silver price as the benchmark and gives two figures. However, Mr. Wang prefers to take the data converted from the rice price.