The U.S. dollar is hurting, and the once atrophied colón is starting to get a little bit of muscle.
As of Thursday April, 28,2011, the value of a U.S. dollar was ₡493, the strongest the colón has been since 2008 and about the same value it had in 2006, when Costa Rica ’s Central Bank (BCCR) implemented a fluctuating band system and scrapped fixed daily mini-devaluations.
The dollar has steadily declined in 2011. According to the Wall Street Journal’s U.S. Dollar Index, created in 1971, the dollar is currently only 5 percent shy of its lowest ever-recorded value, which was in March 2008. On March 1, 2008 , the dollar was also valued at ₡493 before hitting its lowest mark of ₡491 by the end of the month.
The Costa Rican exchange rate, like the international economic landscape, is cyclical. If the low-point of the U.S. dollar in 2008 was an indication of what is to come, greenbacks should start to make a comeback in coming months.
In his first-ever press conference Wednesday, Ben Bernanke, chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve, said the Federal Open Market Committee found that the U.S. economy is recovering at a “moderate pace” from the 2008-2009 financial crisis.
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