Argentina's economy had collapsed in 2001 in the world's largest sovereign default, and a resulting sharp devaluation in 2002 made the country competitive and stimulated exports. The company has focused on developing software for the gaming, mobile and …
He says he would also like to see a "reserved resources policy" introduced in Australia, "so that some of the gas is kept for critically internationally competitive industries". In conversations with people around Kennedy, Mr Katter says the main issue …
Struggling euro zone countries cannot make themselves globally competitive by devaluing the local currency to make their exports cheaper because they belong to the currency union. But Portugal's unexpected increase in G.D.P., which followed 10 …
So devaluation does not, in my view, make us more competitive, which has been one of the main reasons given for devaluation and, I understand, promoted by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund. 3. Practically all of the negative impacts of …
There's a race to devalue currencies in hopes to revive economies and maintain a competitive stance. Countries believe that by printing more of their fiat currency, they can improve their exports to the global economy, because the goods will be cheaper …
It holds that highly accelerated product development – meaning orders of magnitude as well as faster hardware and software development than in the West (weeks vs. years) – can be a more important source of competitive advantage than the product itself …
Almond prices have been increasing overseas, and with the recent devaluation of the Aussie dollar, Australian almonds are more cost competitive, positively affecting company earnings. The company has decided to leave a greenfield almond production area …
Brazil replied the problem originated in the U.S., which was seeking to gain an unfair advantage through a competitive devaluation of the U.S. dollar. Events this passed week showed Brazil had the argument right, but it has a new problem. Sudden …
The Venezuelan bolívar and the Brazilian real are respectively the two currencies that have been devalued the most, with the U.S. dollar rising 43 percent against the real in the last two years, 19 percent of the increase occurring within the last six …