In the latest example that the U.S. dollar just ain't what
it used to be, some shops in New York City have begun accepting
euros and other foreign currency as payment for merchandise.
"We had decided that money is money and we'll take it
and just do the exchange whenever we can with our bank,"
Robert Chu, owner of East Village Wines, told Reuters television.
The increasingly weak U.S. dollar, once considered the king
among currencies, has brought waves of European tourists to
New York with money to burn and looking to take advantage of
hugely favorable exchange rates.
"We didn't realize we would take so much in and there
were that many people traveling or having euros to bring in.
But some days, you'd be surprised at how many euros you get,"
Chu said.
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"Now we have to get familiar with other currencies and
the (British) pound and the Canadian dollars we take,"
he said.
While shops in many U.S. towns on the Canadian border have
long accepted Canadian currency and some stores on the Texas-Mexico
border take pesos, the acceptance of foreign money in Manhattan
was unheard of until recently.
Not far from Chu's downtown wine emporium, Billy Leroy of Billy's
Antiques & Props said the vast numbers of Europeans shopping
in the neighborhood got him thinking, "My God, I should
take euros in at the store."
Leroy doesn't even bother to exchange them.
"I'm happy if I take in 200 euros, because what I do is
keep them," he said. "So when I go back to Paris,
I don't have to go through the nightmare of going to an exchange
place."