1. Harrods said that while it would accept euros, it would price its goods in sterling. 2. The manufacturers say the strong dollar is pricing American goods out of international markets. 3. The lower priced Japanese goods cut into the market for competing Korean products. 4. A higher dollar lets Japanese exporters price their goods more competitively abroad without sacrificing profits in terms of yen. 5. A rising dollar lets Japanese companies price their goods more competitively abroad without sacrificing profits in terms of yen. 6. Although the United Nations pays its staff in U.S. dollars, many Australian-run businesses prefer to price goods in the Australian currency. 7. Americans traveling overseas found their dollars bought little, and imported goods were often priced out of reach. 8. Although Russian rubles are the only legal tender, many stores price their goods in dollars and site small exchange booths on the premises. 9. Although rubles are the only legal tender, many stores price their goods in dollars and site small exchange booths on the premises. 10. He, however, assured that not many products used imported materials and that most Malaysian goods were affordably priced. |