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1 A stronger currency makes Japanese exports less competitive and hurts the economy.
2 Obviously a much stronger currency will have a downward impact on inflation.
3 A stronger currency makes it more difficult for firms to compete on price abroad.
4 A stronger currency would be another weapon against inflation, reducing the cost of imported goods.
5 But a stronger currency makes exports less competitive.
6 Brazil also benefited from higher commodity prices, as well as stricter disclosure rules and a stronger currency .
7 Not everyone can have a stronger currency .
8 A stronger currency eats into profits because exports become more expensive and the value of overseas earnings decreases.
9 Markets surged on Monday after Beijing's weekend vow on optimism a stronger currency would boost the fast-growing economy's purchasing power.
10 The figure was slightly above analysts' expectations and comes despite fears that a stronger currency would hurt the region's exporters.
11 It is because even though a stronger currency makes exports dearer, it cheapens imports, on which manufacturers are increasingly reliant.
12 A stronger currency , the real BRBY, has contributed to factories' woes, fueling cheaper imports as Brazilian exports become more expensive abroad.
13 On Monday, the renminbi touched a near five-month peak, as China's central bank signalled it was comfortable with the stronger currency .
14 Insight's Thomas argues a central bank which backs its words with action will ultimately have its wish for a stronger currency granted.
15 Rather, Ms Yellen and her colleagues worry that China's slowdown is affecting the US economy via a stronger currency and volatile markets.
16 A stronger currency eats into profits because cars exported from Japan become more expensive and the value of earnings made overseas decreases.
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This collocation consists of: Stronger currency across language varieties