Exchange
in sentence
3719 examples of Exchange in a sentence
The Mexican case, in particular, demonstrates how prolonged trade-related threats, even when unrealized, affect capital flows,
exchange
rates, inflation, interest rates, and, ultimately, economic activity.
After nearly two years of tortuous negotiations, the agreement to halt Iran’s nuclear program, in
exchange
for the gradual lifting of economic sanctions, was concluded.
Traditional recommendations like free trade, competitive
exchange
rates, and sound fiscal policy are worthwhile only to the extent that they achieve other desirable objectives, such as faster economic growth, lower poverty, and improved equity.
The fourth argument is that no major country is currently manipulating its
exchange
rate (the renminbi has appreciated since the mid-2000s), so there is nothing to worry about.
And the lack of diplomatic tension around
exchange
rates today makes this a good moment to raise the topic.
Canada, Australia, and New Zealand, developed economies with floating
exchange
rates, do not want to encourage currency manipulation.
In the current circumstances, with much of Europe lacking competitiveness, a weaker
exchange
rate is precisely what the continent needs.
People can
exchange
their knowhow, learn from each other, and trade.
For example, Article 4 of the Law on the Bank of Japan states that the bank “shall…always maintain close contact with the government and
exchange
views sufficiently, so that its currency and monetary control and the basic stance of the government’s economic policy shall be mutually compatible.”
China’s “influence operations,” they argue, include cultivating ties with Western politicians, establishing Confucius Institutes around the world to promote Chinese language and culture, expanding the global reach of China’s official propaganda networks, and donations to and
exchange
programs with academic institutions.
He even got a Labour Chancellor of the Exchequer, James Callaghan, to introduce in 1966 a Selective Employment Tax, which taxed employment in services more heavily than employment in manufactures – a measure that was reversed in 1973, once it was realized that it would hit the tourist industry, which generated badly needed foreign
exchange.
The country’s balance of payments is under chronic strain, and attracting foreign direct investment – including from the Cuban diaspora – would be easier if the country could bring its reforms to fruition and rationalize its complex
exchange
rates.
In addition, there are also several special
exchange
rates – for things like oil purchases, imports for hotels, and export revenues.
Rationalizing its
exchange
rates would strengthen Cuba’s competitiveness and increase its exports.
In the sequence about small hands, even an ear untuned to the subtleties of that pastoral might have caught (though in a version perverted by the abjectly low level of the exchange) the famous line from e.e. cummings, the American Apollinaire: “Nobody, not even the rain, has such small hands.”
The paper alleged that the men had been enticed into such practices by a Norwegian, who gave them money and gifts in
exchange
for photos of them engaged in homosexual acts.
By creating a system that is heavily dependent on highly rated government bonds, which are deposited at the European Central Bank in
exchange
for liquidity, Europe has given banks – particularly larger institutions – no choice but to purchase such bonds.
And yet the EU is founded on an agreement that, in
exchange
for membership, states relinquish a certain degree of sovereignty in some areas.
Europeans, especially in France, drew the opposite conclusion that intervention could be useful if it were intended to get
exchange
rates right.
But the report gave no guidance about how to judge whether
exchange
rates were appropriate or not.
There was apparent agreement on a new wave of coordinated interventions, but the agreed
exchange
rates did not hold.
In retrospect, it was blamed for triggering a highly politicized debate about
exchange
rates, with every country trying to devise an approach that favored its own interests.
As
exchange
markets became ever bigger during the past 20 years, most commentators assumed that central banks’ ability to influence
exchange
rates through intervention had shrunk radically.
The debate about China’s artificially pegged
exchange
rate has led Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan and French President Nicolas Sarkozy to begin to believe that they, too, might try shaping
exchange
rates.
The political obsession with a better exchange-rate regime amounts to an invitation to private markets to make large amounts of money by betting against those central banks that are pressed by politicians to take a particular view of the
exchange
rate.
The result was a somewhat scripted
exchange
in which China and the US would accomplish little more than professing denuclearization as a shared goal.
By contrast, Xi and Park issued a joint statement proclaiming the importance of faithfully implementing United Nations Security Council resolutions that call for sanctions against North Korea, as well as a multilateral agreement in 2005 that obliges the North to
exchange
its nuclear-weapons programs for economic and diplomatic benefits.
Too often, Africa’s economies
exchange
goods and coordinate policy among themselves less than they do with countries outside of the continent.
Kenya is tasked with developing a regional commodity exchange, improving human resources through education and consultancy services, and building both crude and refined oil pipelines.
The fourth major external factor relates to
exchange
rates.
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