Exchange
in sentence
3719 examples of Exchange in a sentence
The rump euro’s weakened
exchange
rate would lead to renewed economic growth, job creation, and a stronger tax base in southern European countries.
The automatic
exchange
of financial information based on the OECD’s Common Reporting Standard has allowed governments to collect close to €85 billion ($99 billion) in additional tax revenue worldwide; this money can help fund better social policies.
This is partly because much of world trade and finance is indexed to the dollar, leading many countries to try to mimic Fed policies to stabilize their
exchange
rates.
By moving away from the renminbi peg to the US dollar – an undoubtedly risky move – China demonstrated its willingness to allow market forces to establish the
exchange
rate in the long term.
Never mind that, as a member of the eurozone, Germany has no
exchange
rate to manipulate.
Changing the
exchange
rate would not diminish the incentive for Germans to save.
Moreover, allowing the
exchange
rate to appreciate would discourage investment in capital-intensive traded-goods sectors.
LONDON – Donald Trump’s call to bar Muslims from the United States provoked the following
exchange
with two young friends of mine: “If the choice was between Muslim immigration and preserving liberal moral values,” I asked, “which would you choose?”
It should start from the empirical observation that no economy has grown on a sustained basis without relying on markets and free
exchange.
In his classic 1944 book International Currency Experience, Ragnar Nurkse argued that reflationary policies following the collapse of the gold standard of the 1920s operated by lowering currencies’ foreign
exchange
value, with the 1931 devaluation of the British pound unleashing a spate of competitive devaluations worldwide.
The rationale for favoring weak currencies was that a competitive
exchange
rate would prevent a further contraction in domestic output and prices (deflation).
We no longer live in a world dominated, as Nurkse’s was, by fixed
exchange
rates.
The term “devaluation” is not appropriate when describing currency fluctuations within a system of floating
exchange
rates.
Assad now appears prepared to give up his chemical weapons in
exchange
for remaining in power.
But a predictable monetary policy aimed at delivering medium-term price stability – with a flexible
exchange
rate where appropriate – benefits both the private sector and, most importantly, the poor.
Investors can count on an exceptionally high degree of
exchange
convenience and capital certainty.
The strategy ran aground in 2000, when Prime Minister Ehud Barak offered to give up almost all the occupied territories and accept a Palestinian state in
exchange
for real peace.
The regime’s nuclear program has many components, and discussions could founder on what is to be proscribed, permitted, and reversed, and in
exchange
for what concessions by the US.
Instead, in
exchange
for meager progress on debt reduction, Europe risks causing lasting damage to its growth potential.
What is needed is a grand bargain, with countries that lack policy credibility undertaking structural reforms without delay, in
exchange
for more room within the EU for growth-generating measures, even at the cost of higher short-term deficits.
In 1989, a United States National Research Council report, Improving Risk Communication, recommended that one-way communication from experts to non-experts be replaced with an “interactive process of
exchange
of information and opinion.”
Yet such information
exchange
remains a problem – and not only in Italy – more than 20 years later.
For a time, tensions between the two countries rose to the point that France announced the postponement of the “Blaesheim talks,” a regular
exchange
of views by French and German leaders on European issues that began in 2001.
The Currency QuandaryTwo views about today's prevailing
exchange
rates exist: the dollar is overvalued dollar and the yen needs a deep depreciation.
Empirical models that try to quantify the impact of
exchange
rate changes suggest that without an aggressive monetary policy response, a 40 % euro appreciation would knock 2.5% off European growth.
Because America has low inflation and is financially stable, the
exchange
rate is not the risk factor it was in the 1970s.
Alexander II sold Alaska;Lenin withdrew from Ukraine in
exchange
for peace with Germany; and Gorbachev pulled back from central Europe in an effort to end the Cold War.
Call them members – or even sellers of their own cognitive surplus through an
exchange
set up for that purpose.
If you can reach that same person after he has left his job for advice, both you and the former rep can benefit from a fair
exchange.
With the EU accounting for half of British trade turnover, the impact on exporters could be devastating (despite a more competitive
exchange
rate).
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