Originally posted by french frank
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Taking Out Foreign Currency
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostMe too. Plus: the first restaurant you eat at in a place you've never visited before is going to be overpriced and not that great. Saves a lot disappointment to bear that in mind.
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostI wonder what the Bank of England would say?
Seriously, your suggestion is in indeed what I’ve always done down the years, and it’s always worked out well for me. (Blimey, does this make us experts!?).
When I go abroad I always take about £100 more than I think I might need in the foreign currency and also my debit/credit card, just in case.
The last thing I want to be worried about when I go abroad is possible lack of money.
I have enough of that at home ...
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To be honest I find it a bit quaint that people talk about taking foreign currency when they go abroad. I would never bother with that, unless I have some cash left over from my last visit to the country in question; there are always cash machines around at the point of arrival and my bog-standard UK debit card works everywhere. (Last year I took 21 international trips, a little less than usual.)
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostTo be honest I find it a bit quaint that people talk about taking foreign currency when they go abroad. I would never bother with that, unless I have some cash left over from my last visit to the country in question; there are always cash machines around at the point of arrival and my bog-standard UK debit card works everywhere. (Last year I took 21 international trips, a little less than usual.)
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostPlus: the first restaurant you eat at in a place you've never visited before is going to be overpriced and not that great. Saves a lot disappointment to bear that in mind.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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And now the rise in inflation gives a boost to the pound which eases one problem (slightly) and creates another.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostAnd now the rise in inflation gives a boost to the pound which eases one problem (slightly) and creates another.
Does a rise in inflation boost a currency ...?. It normally devalues it, though there was a tiny bounce today for whatever mysterious reason, maybe just a temporary 'correction' after the recent fall.
And the rise in inflation (with lots more to come) is itself a direct result of the 'flash-crash' of the pound following the Brexit vote, so, sadly, it's a two-way 'lose-lose' situation for the UK economy.
Experts/Remoaners 2, Populists/Lievers 0.
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View Post.
Does a rise in inflation boost a currency ...?. It normally devalues it, though there was a tiny bounce today for whatever mysterious reasonIt isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by P. G. Tipps View Post.
Does a rise in inflation boost a currency ...?. It normally devalues it, though there was a tiny bounce today for whatever mysterious reason, maybe just a temporary 'correction' after the recent fall.
And the rise in inflation (with lots more to come) is itself a direct result of the 'flash-crash' of the pound following the Brexit vote, so, sadly, it's a two-way 'lose-lose' situation for the UK economy.
Experts/Remoaners 2, Populists/Lievers 0.
(not only can't remainers see their glass as half-full, they always see it smashed into smithereens on the floor!)
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Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostWell the pound went up around 2% this morning, so Conchis will be holdin’ foldin’. As we Brexiters know, all’s well that ends well.
The pound, despite that increase today, has dropped from around €1.43 to its present level of below €1.16 since the announcement of the opinion poll result almost 7 months ago; tell those living on fixed sterling incomes in Eurozone countries that "all's well that ends well"!...
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