Why Different Currencies Have Different Values?

Different currencies have different values because they're like playground coins, some are worth more than others depending on where you are.

Imagine you and your friend each have a bag of coins to buy snacks at the school canteen. Your bag has green coins, and your friend’s has blue coins. At your school, green coins are worth 1 snack each, but at your friend's school, blue coins are worth 2 snacks each. So even though both bags have the same number of coins, the value depends on where you're using them.

Why Coins Change Value

Sometimes, a currency (like money) becomes more valuable because the country has more stuff to trade or people want it more. It’s like if your school got a new snack machine, suddenly, green coins might be worth more snacks!

Other times, a currency loses value if there are too many of them around, like if your friend printed extra blue coins and now each one is only worth 1 snack instead of 2.

So, just like playground coins, currencies can go up or down in value depending on what's happening in the countries that use them.

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Examples

  1. A toy from America costs more in Europe because the dollar is stronger than the euro.
  2. Inflation makes a country's money worth less over time.
  3. If many people want to buy something from another country, its currency might get stronger.

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