For more information about Europe please visit our Europe Blog
| Do Not Forget To Bookmark EuropeWord |
© 2008-2010 EuropeWord.com All Rights Reserved. |
Currency exchange tips |
||
It can be really difficult to understand the way currency works in a new economic system when you travel from one country to another. To understand the whole concept of money exchange, we need to understand the concept of money itself. During the prehistoric times, money as a currency did not exist, rather, goods and services were exchanged or ‘bartered’.
|
||
So as travelers, we need to understand the main reason why at times we might end up spending more than what the currency conversions say. When you go to an exchange counter, you see two types of boards- one that says “we sell” and the other that says “we buy”. What is the difference and why is there a rate difference between the two?” Well, the difference lies in the fact that the bank or the exchanger would sell the local currency to you in exchange of your own currency at a lower rate in order to get more of your currency for less local currency. For example, if the Euro is equivalent to 70 rupees INR, then the exchanger would give you 70 rupees for every Euro you sell him, or for every Euro he buys. On the contrary, if at the end of your holiday, you are left with some extra local currency, the same money exchanger would now buy it back at a higher rate. For example, if you have additional INR left at the end of your perfect little Indian vacation, then a bank would buy it back at 75 rupees in exchange of one Euro, and therefore you end up paying more than what you had brought the local currency for.
|
||