Exchange
in sentence
3719 examples of Exchange in a sentence
In principle, Germany could try to boost domestic demand by leveraging up; but, unless the
exchange
rate adjusts upward to shrink the tradable sector at the margin, doing so would be inflationary.
An international currency is used and held beyond the issuing country’s borders, and plays the role of unit of account, medium of exchange, and store of value for residents and non-residents alike.
But, with an undervalued
exchange
rate and strong expectations for the RMB to appreciate in the future, foreign importers of Chinese products refuse to use the RMB to settle transactions, while foreign exporters are happy to accept RMB.
Instead, it decided – every time – to kowtow to its most powerful shareholders and their vested interests (such as Big Pharma and the financial industry), arguably in
exchange
for additional resources for its soft-loan window (the International Development Association) and, less frequently, capital increases for the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) and International Finance Corporation.
The regulation’s impact could be bolstered by two other proposals: automatic
exchange
of tax information among jurisdictions and a requirement that multinationals report revenues on a country-by-country basis.
It happened in the early 1990s when sterling weakened after exiting the ERM
(exchange
rate mechanism), but global economic conditions are now less robust.
Abandoning "convertibility," i.e. a fixed
exchange
rate system, was supposed to be a disaster - and it was.
After the Doha Securities Market lost one-fifth of its capitalization between January and October 2008, the Qatar Investment Authority injected $5.3 billion into its own domestic banking sector by buying a 20% stake in each of the five banks listed on the domestic
exchange.
As the unprecedented
exchange
of white-hot rhetoric and overt military threats between the leaders of two nuclear-armed countries continues to escalate, reasonable people around the world are asking whether there is a peaceful way out of this unfolding crisis.
The answer, according to some, is to pursue a “double freeze,” in which North Korea freezes its nuclear and missile activities in
exchange
for the US and South Korea freezing their joint military exercises.
Should the ECB disappoint expectations, bond and foreign-exchange markets would confront an abrupt and damaging unwinding of positions: long-term interest rates would rise, stock markets would sink, and the
exchange
rate would appreciate.
Senior US officials, including Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld, have recently suggested that Saddam Hussein and his top henchmen might be given an amnesty for their past crimes in
exchange
for leaving Iraq and averting war.
After all, with the Chinese economy undergoing wholesale economic transformation, estimating a long-term equilibrium
exchange
rate that will anchor speculation is virtually impossible, particularly given persistent doubts about data quality, disclosure, and opaque policymaking processes.
The key to stabilizing the
exchange
rate lies in creating a credible development policy.
China has it within its power to stabilize its
exchange
rate via credible reforms, particularly policies that redirect resources to invigorate domestic demand and pull resources toward the newer high-value sectors.
He has met with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un three times this year, and agreed to convert the Korean Armistice Agreement into a full peace treaty, improve inter-Korean
exchange
and cooperation, and work toward “complete denuclearization” on the peninsula.
The change to a less pejorative term is warranted by a shift in attitudes toward sex workers that contributed to Amnesty International’s decision in May to urge governments to repeal laws criminalizing the
exchange
of sex for money by consenting adults.
In every modern society, humans
exchange
money or other valued items for things that they desire and could not otherwise obtain.
It regulates the harvesting and
exchange
of more than 35,000 wildlife species across a range of locales.
Instead, the US has placed all of its chips on monetary easing, unleashing what I have called a currency war, in which global investors, chasing higher yields, flood into emerging countries, driving up their
exchange
rates.
This resulted in a significant reduction in the interest-rate differential with other countries, which, together with a more active intervention policy in the spot and future markets, brought the
exchange
rate to a much more competitive level, despite the global currency war.
With low interest rates, price stability, a more competitive
exchange
rate, a lower tax burden, plentiful resources for investment, and the reduction of electricity tariffs, Brazil is strengthening its potential for more rapid expansion.
Baseline regulation would be the typical mixture of the two, but individual banks could opt for substantially higher capital requirements in
exchange
for permission to engage in riskier investments and operations.
In other words, they could reduce the constraints of one regulatory measure in
exchange
for tightening those of the other.
The
exchange
rate has been adjusted, and, given international conditions, is relatively stable, underpinning Ukraine’s international competitiveness.
But fixed
exchange
rates often lead to undervaluation (as in China) or overvaluation (as in Argentina at the beginning of the 2000’s, and, in a different context, several eurozone countries now).
The touchstone is currently the renminbi – not so much because of China’s bilateral relationship with the US, but because other emerging and developing countries monitor the renminbi-dollar
exchange
rate in setting their own policy.
With floating
exchange
rates, it is not.
This rule normally ensures a modicum of coherence and avoids overreactions in
exchange
rates, but it is insufficient in deflationary times.
To make matters worse, in
exchange
for these loans, Merkel obtained much greater control over all eurozone governments’ budgets through a demand-sapping, democracy-constraining fiscal straitjacket: tougher eurozone rules and a fiscal compact.
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