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Notes -
Funnily enough I was thinking how once again Australia was passing through with a much more mild economic cold than the rest of the West (inflation has consistently been a few points lower than the US). A falling currency is also not necessarily a bad thing for a net exporter.
There's a good rule in economics: never reason from a price change. Always ask why the price is changing. An exchange rate is the price of a currency in terms of another currency.
It depends why the currency is falling. If the purchasing powers of trade partners are increasing, that's probably a good thing - more spending by people buying your products. If your currency is overvalued, that's also a good thing - exports become more profitable. If you are overstimulating your economy or your exports are falling, that's a bad thing, although it's still best for many economies to let the exchange rate (rather than the whole domestic economy) handle the adjustment to the problem, and so the change in the currency value is unpleasant but necessary.
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