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I don't know what year it is

2007-03-17 19:14:52 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Business & Finance Taxes Canada

4 answers

It's worth nothing because the Cruzero is not legal tender anymore, and the notes have been withdrawn from circulation.

The current money in Brazil is the real
Thats worth :
$R 100 TO $c56

2007-03-18 00:53:07 · answer #1 · answered by nonconformiststraightguy 6 · 0 0

if 1000 mil cruzeiros means 1,000,000 cruzeiro reals, and that refers to the 1993-1994 Cruzeiro Real, then it's 2750 reals to the Cruzeiro real (assuming you can still redeem the old money) and then it's 56.137 cents Canadian to 1 Brazilian Real. Therefore, you're looking at $204.13 Canadian.

But then it might be from a different year, and again, it might be expired.

2007-03-17 19:26:46 · answer #2 · answered by Jon S 3 · 0 0

It all depends on what someone expects for their money. It also has nothing to do with exchange rate but different costs of doing business such as different import costs, labor costs, competition vs demand, and simply what people can afford among other things. Now in the Philippines you can get a pizza for 200p ($5) where I live and a fairly good pizza at that. In the US for similiar it costs you $12 for the same thing. If you get a supreme 14" here its about 300p ($7) while in the US $18. You can get a haircut for 60p here ( $1 1/2 dollars) as a guy but in the US $12-15. In the US females get a haircut and your talking $30-35 at a salon ((1300-1450p) while here the same gets a haircut and rebonding/relaxing or a celophane treatment with the haircut. But in the US Min wage is $7.25 (311p) while in the Philippines most jobs are paying closer to 150-200p a day while the better jobs pay 250-300p a day.... still under what a min wage worker in the US makes in 1 hour. Now when you consider that you can see that wage raises the price on US products massively as that farm worker makes at least min wage, that slaughterhouse guy makes min wage, that driver, packager, shipper, warehouse stockman, wholesaler, distributer, retailer all make at least min wage. Now with all those people and all those wages the same is paid for in the Phillipines off of the pay that would take care of just one of those US jobs for a dozen jobs here. Now don't forget here often no health insurance, no SS (SSS in the Philippines) and no pension plans here as there are ways to avoid such here. It has nothing to do with the exchange rate but about cost of labor and labor laws that protect the rich vs the workers. This is why normal Filipino's have almost no lifestyle. They have no money and barely pay rent in a crap boarding house and barely afford food. The little that is left is used for load for there phone or helping family in school. Eating a pizza is a luxury for most lower workers here that they are lucky if they can do twice a year.

2016-03-29 03:51:09 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

20 cents

2007-03-17 19:22:34 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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