When Ruble went to her reward, I figured there would never be a suitable replacement for her. |
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The last essay, by Blair Ruble, deals with the problems attendant on the creation of new civic or national symbols. |
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Furthermore, because of the instability of Ruble, the solution was to use the dollar tariffs. |
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The currency is subdivided into 100 tiyin, and was introduced in November 1993 after the fall of the USSR to replace the Russian ruble. |
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The newspaper wrote that the increase could seriously devaluate the Belarusian ruble. |
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The State Bank reopens and is empowered to issue a new ruble, the chervonets, backed by gold reserves and a balanced state budget. |
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The Russian Central Bank has been busily buying dollars, which keeps the ruble artificially low. |
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In the intervening years the ruble collapsed along with other Asiatic currencies. |
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The ruble appreciated by over 9 per cent against the US dollar in 2003, despite active intervention by the central bank. |
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But it rapidly became clear that even a 1.2 billion ruble loan would not be enough to cover the general contractor's debts. |
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Since Putin began flexing his muscles in the Crimea last fall, the ruble has lost 10 percent of its value against the dollar. |
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When money leaves, turning rubles into dollars, Euros, and everything else, that puts pressure on the ruble. |
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For our dollar to be strong relative to the ruble, as my grandfather used to say, is like peeing oneself in a dark suit. |
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The ruble zone has broken down with Ukraine's defection to a coupon system and eventually to its own currency. |
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The feeble ruble has helped push down currencies around the region, sometimes by double-digit figures. |
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Again there were some criticisms of the IMF, both in the Southeast Asia crisis and in the ruble crisis in Russia last fall and late last summer. |
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The Yavlinsky plan would establish the ruble as a common currency and place other national currencies in a secondary position. |
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The Central Asian republics remain within the ruble zone and thus are hostages to Russian monetary policy. |
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Monetary policy continued to be guided by the dual objective of reducing inflation and limiting real appreciation of the ruble. |
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In a humiliating turn of events, the ruble has lost about half its value against the dollar so far this year. |
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In the wake of the East Asian financial crisis in 1997 and the ruble crisis in 1998, the Canadian dollar came under substantial downward pressure. |
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The decision by Moscow's financial reformers to cut the Central Asian republics loose from the ruble was primarily designed to help control Russia's escalating inflation. |
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A sharp decline in the value of Russia's ruble since early September is rippling across Central Asia, where economies are dependent on transfers from workers in Russia, and on imports too. |
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The manat, consisting of 100 gopik, was introduced in 1992 and remains tied to the Russian ruble with widely fluctuating exchange rates. |
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The lack of confidence in the ruble is based on political risks. |
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Economic growth since the 1998 financial crisis has been mainly driven by temporary factors such as the gain in competitiveness from the post-crisis real depreciation of the ruble and the upturn in oil prices. |
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However, in certain countries, the Group may issue invoices denominated in foreign currencies, mostly the U. S. dollar, Canadian dollar, Hungarian forint, Russian ruble and Polish zloty. |
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The tumbling ruble and the drop in the price of oil have helped steer Kazakhstan's economy into a cul-de-sac, slowing growth projections, forcing officials to recalculate the budget, and suggesting the tenge is overvalued. |
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But in Russia, the wooden ruble seems to be widely accepted. |
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The need for fuel declined in the Soviet Union from the 1970s to the 1980s, both per ruble of gross social product and per ruble of industrial product. |
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It's followed by Azerbaijan's manat, Belarus's ruble and Georgia's lari. |
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