Finance & economics | Pretty green

Why the dollar is strong and why that is a problem

Every fresh lurch upwards prompts some big questions

Mandatory Credit: Photo by KHALED ELFIQI/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock (13371945c)An Egyptian man waits outside a currency exchange office with a large-scale image of the US dollar, in Cairo, Egypt , 07 September 2022.Foreign currency exchange in Egypt, Cairo - 07 Sep 2022

Here are a few familiar descriptions of the dollar: “the cleanest shirt in the laundry basket”, “the least-ugly mug in a beauty contest”, “the one-eyed man in the kingdom of the blind”. Nobody, it seems, loves the dollar; they just really dislike the alternatives. And that aversion is only growing. The dxy, an index of the dollar against half a dozen major currencies, is at a 20-year high (see chart 1). Among the dirtiest of the dirty linen are sterling, the euro and the yen (see chart 2).

This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Pretty green”

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