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Old 10-09-2008, 08:07 PM   #2
tw
Read? I only know how to write.
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Posts: 11,933
Quote:
Originally Posted by Aliantha View Post
Our dollar being weaker is good for our export market also, and with the cost of imported products then becoming more expensive, people are encouraged to buy Australian, which in turn boost our economy and keeps it stable, at least in house.
That reasoning works to a certain extent. Buy Australian does not make a stronger economy. The strongest economies buy the best - believe in the free market - regardless of where it is made.

Furthermore, an economy heavily dependent on commodity exports is then very dependent on other imports to maintain that economy. That part gets forgotten. The productivity of higher tech industries then gets stifled as the necessary import costs are higher.

Example - a lower dollar means gasoline prices go higher.

Lower dollar is a double edge sword - with good and bad points. But the bottom line: a lower dollar means a lower standard of living. If an economy does not fix its problems, one way that economics takes revenge is to lower the dollar's value and therefore lower the country's standard of living. As a result, the people either work more productively or work more hours.

Another example of 'no free money'.

But again, how have the commodity markets affected the Australian economy?
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