Word: greenbacker
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...declining dollar, down in value by about 8% against major currencies so far this year, poses the greatest threat to such hopeful scenarios. The weakened greenback has contributed to an increase in inflation, since a falling dollar tends to drive up import prices. But most economists predict that consumer prices will rise this year by no more than 5%. Says University of Minnesota Professor Walter Heller: "I don't think the elements are there for inflation to feed on itself." Still, skittishness about inflation last week led to a dramatic spurt in the bellwether Commodity Research Bureau Index, as investors...
...wizened and near blind old man. He eagerly accepted it and carefully counted the change in Cuban centavos. Moments later, a policeman, obviously summoned by the crowd, was glaring sternly at the vendor. Dollar transactions are not allowed in Cuba, an onlooker explained. The old man ruefully handed the greenback to the visitor...
...dollar's continuing plunge created turmoil in U.S. financial markets. As fears mounted that the greenback's weakness would boost inflation, bond prices dropped and interest rates climbed. The rate on 30-year Treasury bonds, for example, reached a 14-month high of 8.18%. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks closed at 2338.78, down 51.56 points for the week...
...stocks, fueled in part by billions of dollars in Japanese investment money, recovered quickly, and the Dow closed the week at 2390.34, a record. In Tokyo money markets, the price of the U.S. dollar slumped to a doleful 144.7 yen, the first time in postwar history that the greenback was worth less than 145. Only 15 months ago it was 200. As tempers cooled by the end of the week, however, the dollar had climbed back...
...that expected rise in economic activity will be the result of the falling value of the U.S. dollar, which has declined 20% against the Japanese yen and 21% against the West German mark in the past year. Heller pointed out ( that the Reagan Administration's policy of allowing the greenback's value to fall against those currencies has finally begun to stimulate U.S. exports by making American products less expensive overseas. That may soon improve the distressing U.S. trade deficit, which reached $170 billion last year. Nonetheless, the trade statistics do not yet show a clear-cut trend. Figures released...