Currencies
in sentence
1239 examples of Currencies in a sentence
It's because it shows off our economies, shows off our
currencies
and gives a platform on which people can plan and build, including businesses.
And third is, and I'm taking this from the great American beat poet Allen Ginsberg, that alternate economies barter and different kinds of currency, alternate
currencies
are also very important, and he talked about buying what he needed just with his good looks.
Throughout it all, the dollar has been one of the most long-standing, stable, reasonable currencies, and we all use it every single day, no matter what the people screaming about tell us, no matter how scared we're supposed to be.
And that's showing you that people are actually placing trust in technology, and it's started to trump and disrupt and interrogate traditional institutions and how we think about
currencies
and money.
So you use the crypto-currency bitcoin, which is easily exchanged for real-world
currencies
and gives quite a high degree of anonymity to its users.
It basically says that mass is concentrated energy, and mass and energy are exchangeable, like two
currencies
with a huge exchange rate.
At the level of the global political economy, imagine for a moment that our national
currencies
have a free-floating exchange rate, with a universal, global, digital currency, one that is issued by the International Monetary Fund, the G-20, on behalf of all humanity.
But it's important the debate doesn't stop here, with printing national
currencies.
Printing international money in this way has several advantages over printing national
currencies.
Transferring money across borders and across
currencies
is really expensive: friction.
You'll be surprised to learn that it's the underlying technology of digital
currencies
like Bitcoin.
And that's what happens to
currencies
when you don't stand behind them.
Also this rise of local
currencies.
And also starting to play around with the idea of alternative
currencies.
As those of you who've taken
currencies
home from your trip know, once you get home, it's actually pretty useless.
The real issue will come with non-US companies operating outside of the US and interacting with Iran via non-dollar
currencies
such as the euro and renminbi.
Europe should defend a firm and unequivocal “No” to US extraterritorial sanctions, notably on companies operating in non-dollar
currencies.
Currencies
that nose-dived in 1997/98 have strengthened substantially; markets that collapsed have turned up.
Asia, Mexico and Brazil adopted and applied IMF strategies; they raised interest rates to the sky to bring about stable currencies; only with stability did they bring down rates as investor confidence returned.
The value of leading coins such as Ether, EOS, Litecoin, and XRP have all fallen by over 80%, thousands of other digital
currencies
have plummeted by 90-99%, and the rest have been exposed as outright frauds.
But it has also become the byword for a libertarian ideology that treats all governments, central banks, traditional financial institutions, and real-world
currencies
as evil concentrations of power that must be destroyed.
The PBOC also has projected a stable exchange-rate environment for this year – despite the steep depreciation of the Japanese yen, the euro, and emerging-economy
currencies
against the dollar – thereby promoting global stability.
At the time most EU countries resorted to pegging their
currencies
to the D-Mark, in the hope of gaining credibility for their efforts to achieve price stability.
In one respect the Bundesbank need not worry: The larger the number and the clout of the countries pegging their
currencies
to the D-Mark, the smaller the impact of the fluctuations of the US dollar exchange rate on the German economy.
But use of hard
currencies
in transition countries should decrease as national
currencies
become more stable and convertible.
On the other hand, should EMU fail, rough sailing is ahead for all European
currencies.
In fact, we document that global trade prices and volumes are driven by the dollar exchange rate, rather than the exchange rate between the two trading partners’
currencies.
Just as the US now has to share the world stage with other economies, the dollar will have to make room for other international
currencies.
In my recent book Exorbitant Privilege: The Rise and Fall of the Dollar, I described a future in which the dollar and the euro would be the dominant global
currencies.
One might think that the SDR, as a basket of four currencies, might be attractive to central banks and governments seeking to hedge their bets.
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