Schools brief | Buck up

Global trade’s dependence on dollars lessens its benefits

Policymakers around the world yearn to be free of the greenback’s grip

CRASHING CURRENCIES hurt. They make imports more expensive, cutting into household budgets and raising businesses’ costs. But economics has long held that this pain brings with it its own salve. More expensive imports should drive new demand for home-made replacements and thus for the workers who make them, geeing up the economy. What is more, a devalued currency means exports are suddenly cheaper to buyers abroad. That, too, should boost demand. When the value of the Colombian peso collapsed in the summer of 2014, it was on the basis of these assumptions that the country’s finance minister greeted the fall as “a blessing in disguise”.

This article appeared in the Schools brief section of the print edition under the headline “Buck up”

What Putin fears

From the August 29th 2020 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

A computer covered in hazard tape.

AI needs regulation, but what kind, and how much?

Different countries are taking different approaches to regulating artificial intelligence

A toolbox filled with regular tools and speech bubbles.

LLMs will transform medicine, media and more

But not without a helping (human) hand


A flamme under a container diffusing letters turned into a speech bubble.

How AI models are getting smarter

Deep neural networks are learning diffusion and other tricks


The race is on to control the global supply chain for AI chips

The focus is no longer just on faster chips, but on more chips clustered together

A short history of AI

In the first of six weekly briefs, we ask how AI overcame decades of underdelivering