What is the Amero Currency?
How do they intend to put it in place and can it rival the Euro?
Most Commented Posts
- August 8, 2008 -- Should "In God We Trust" Remain On American Currency? (41)
- February 26, 2009 -- Xtian: What right (specifically) would be violated by removing "In God We Trust" from US currency? (41)
- January 27, 2010 -- Do conservatives invest in gold because they have no faith in American currency? (37)
- November 24, 2008 -- Is “In God We Trust” on US currency a true statement? (35)
- January 3, 2009 -- Should the motto “In God We Trust” be removed from U.S. currency? ? (34)
- March 17, 2009 -- R&S what do you feel about "One nation under God" on US currency? (34)
- April 21, 2009 -- What would be the impact on American society if "In God We Trust" were removed from the currency? (34)
- May 7, 2008 -- Who else thinks that "in god we trust" should be removed from US currency? (33)
- January 9, 2009 -- Are coins and currency the same thing? (30)
- March 8, 2010 -- If your good looks were currency, what could you buy? (30)
This entry was posted on Monday, August 3rd, 2009 at 11:03 am and is filed under Currency Trading. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
August 3rd, 2009 at 11:03 am
Here’s a clue — it took 45 years for the European Common Market to evolve to the point of agreeing on the Euro. And they have several large economies, not just one super-economy. And still Sweden, the UK, and Denmark, plus 8 other EU countries, have not adopted the Euro.
Here’s a bigger point — if a world financial crisis deepens severely, the US backs the dollar, Japan the Yen, UK the pound. Which country backs the Euro? Most likely they all wait for Germany or France to make the first move, and then they all squabble about fair share.
August 3rd, 2009 at 11:03 am
The Amero is a theoretical unit of currency that would be used throughout North America. The Amero is seen as a replacement for the three currencies of the three large countries in North America, the Canadian Dollar, the US Dollar, and the Mexican Peso. The Amero can be seen as a correlary to the European Union’s unit of the currency, the Euro, and its name is a play off of that name.
http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-an-amero.htm
A good read on ‘News on the Amero Currency and Amero Dollar’ this site.
http://www.ameroblog.blogspot.com/