71. A stronger yen makes Japanese goods more expensive in dollar terms. 72. A stronger dollar makes the price of Japanese goods cheaper on overseas markets. 73. A stronger yen makes Japanese goods less competitive abroad and could hurt corporate earnings if sales suffer as a result. 74. A stronger yen makes Japanese goods more expensive overseas and can reduce the yen value of dollar profits repatriated back to Japan. 75. A weaker dollar makes U.S. products cheaper in Japan and Japanese goods more expensive in the United States. 76. A weaker dollar tends to make U.S. products cheaper in Japan and Japanese goods more expensive in the United States. 77. A weaker yen makes cars and other Japanese goods cheaper in the foreign market where they compete with South Korean products. 78. A weaker dollar could shrink the surplus by making Japanese goods more exensive in the United States and U.S. goods cheaper in Japan. 79. A weaker yen makes it easier to sell Japanese goods in the U.S. market by making them cheaper in dollar terms. 80. A stronger dollar makes Japanese goods cheaper abroad, and thus more competitive. |
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