Exchange
in sentence
3719 examples of Exchange in a sentence
If there are large dollar debts outstanding, and many firms find themselves in the same position, the additional demand for dollars will cause the
exchange
rate to depreciate even further.
After a few days or weeks, the
exchange
rate is likely to be weaker than is warranted by the need to adjust the current account.
Notice that if in the long run the debt is reduced sufficiently, and the terms-of-trade shock abates somewhat, the real
exchange
rate need not depreciate that much, and may even end up appreciating a bit.
This is overshooting on steroids: a very sharp initial loss of value for the domestic currency, followed by a gain that may leave the
exchange
rate, measured in inflation-adjusted terms, stronger than it was at the start.
But intervention requires that the authorities first have both the reserves and the will to abandon (at least temporarily) their hands-off commitment to a floating
exchange
rate.
Participating countries could allow their currencies to float, or they could operate a fixed
exchange
rate.
And, while real
exchange
rates appreciate and competitiveness suffers, leading to rising unemployment, the abundant credit postpones the adjustment.
An organization like Hamas, which supports permanent war – and with which Israel negotiated for five years for the release of one abducted Israeli soldier, Gilad Shalit, in
exchange
for more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners – is exactly the enemy that Israel needs to justify its hardline stance.
In
exchange
for a guarantee, the eurozone’s major banks would have to agree to abide by the ECB’s instructions.
Greece, and probably other Mediterranean countries, will default and regain the freedom to print money and devalue their
exchange
rates.
The Council says that it invited officially approved Chinese writers because it wanted to create greater understanding of Chinese literature and promote cultural
exchange
between the two countries.
Only then we will know if the trade-off at least made sense, even if for many it was unacceptable: authentic social justice and progress in
exchange
for authoritarian rule, international ostracism, and a cultural desert.
The Right Revolution for FranceIs France about to
exchange
the fake revolution of May 1968 for a sham counter-revolution this year, or have the French given Nicolas Sarkozy a mandate for real change to modernize their country?
By relenting just a little to intense global pressure to revalue its
exchange
rate, the Chinese leadership has masterfully stifled the growing chorus of demands to rein in its growing trade surplus.
On the surface, at least, the mini-revaluation hardly seems to have compromised China’s ability to bend
exchange
markets to its will.
It can hold the fort because it maintains one of the world’s strictest regimes of
exchange
and capital controls.
After that, China will be able to keep its
exchange
rate pegged only by slavishly following US interest-rate policy, which makes no sense for such a large and diverse region.
It is a lot easier to exit from a fixed
exchange
rate regime when the pressures on the currency are upwards.
Should we ever expect to see wild gyrations in China’s
exchange
rate of the sort one routinely sees in, say, the Australian dollar or the South African rand?
For those peoples and countries now marginalized from the process of technological development, production, and
exchange
I believe that only one viable option exists: a new assertion of themselves as independent states, regionally integrated in as many ways as possible.
Beyond privacy laws, companies must cope with customers with varying expectations, competitors with varying levels of integrity, and the various relationships that form the context of data
exchange.
China is reforming its policy, as a part of a move to a more market-determined
exchange
rate.
In the US-China relationship, the RMB
exchange
rate has become a touchstone for broader anxieties about competition from China.
Not so long ago, we were comforted by theorizing that floating
exchange
rates would mediate international adjustments in a timely and orderly way.
That would require some agreement about appropriate “equilibrium”
exchange
rates, with a fairly wide band that would allow for uncertainty and permit the market to exert its own discipline.
Floating
exchange
rates were supposed to prevent countries from manipulating their currencies, but, by accumulating large quantities of US treasury bills, East Asian countries, especially China, kept their
exchange
rates artificially low.
In a July referendum, Greek voters delivered the outcome for which Tsipras campaigned, soundly rejecting the conditions – including strict austerity – which Greece’s creditors had demanded in
exchange
for a new bailout.
The promise of greater
exchange
of goods, services, and capital across the Pacific, as well as the creation of international standards (for example, for intellectual-property rights), is simply too appealing to ignore.
They will no longer be able to adjust to payments imbalances and their macroeconomic consequences by
exchange
rate movements - as, for example, the U.K. did very successfully in 1992.
Economists who advocate the euro argue that anything which
exchange
rate adjustments can do can also be done by movements of commodity prices and wages.
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