Indian Exchange Rates

 
 We always give you the BEST and profitable Exchange Rate for all major currencies. Below we are giving the TENTATIVE/ INDICATIVE RATE LIST which is not the final Rate list. For the Final rate please Contact Us.

18 Thursday, December, 2008 at 10.00 AM
Currencies Symbol Buying Selling
US Dollar USD 44.50 49.70
Sterling Pound GBP 69.60 76.80
Euro EUR 64.55 71.10
Australian Dollar AUD 31.85 34.85
Bahrain Dinar BHD 117.05 133.55
Canadian Dollar CAD 36.90 41.40
Danish Kroner DKK 8.40 9.70
Egyptian Pound EGP 6.20 8.85
Hongkong Dollar HKD 5.50 6.60
Japanese Yen / 100 JPY 50.55 55.95
Jordan Dinar JOD 59.05 68.80
Kuwait Dinar KWD 146.40 175.65
Malaysian Ringitt MYR 12.20 14.70
NewZealand Dollar NZD 25.90 29.90
Omani Rial OMR 114.45 130.45
Qatar Rial QAR 12.20 14.70
Saudi Rial SAR 11.70 13.55
Singapore Dollar SGD 30.20 35.10
South African Rand ZAR 4.15 5.10
Swiss Franc CHF 41.60 47.30
Thai Baht / 100 THB 125.90 147.90
UAE Dirham AED 12.05 13.60
Rates are subject to change without prior notice

Pakistani Exchange Rates

   

 
Remittance Buying Selling
 US Dollar TT 81 81.5
 US Dollar DD 81 81.5
Currency Notes
 Australian Dollar 54.25 55.25
 Bahrain Dinar 210.65 211.65
 Canadian Dollar 68.1 68.5
 China Yuan 11.95 12.45
 Danish Krone 13.7 13.9
 Euro 103.3 105.3
 Hong Kong Dollar 10.25 10.45
 Indian Rupee 1.6 1.7
 Japanese Yen 0.821 0.831
 Kuwaiti Dinar 298.25 299.25
 Malaysian Ringgit 22.4 23.4
 NewZealand $ 47.6 48.6
 Norwegians Krone 11.7 11.9
 Omani Riyal 208.4 209.4
 Qatari Riyal 22.05 22.25
 Saudi Riyal 21.3 21.7
 Singapore Dollar 53.8 54.8
 Swedish Korona 10.15 10.35
 Swiss Franc 68.4 69.4
 Thai Bhat 2.1 2.4
 U.A.E Dirham 21.9 22.3
 UK Pound Sterling 127.15 129.15
 US Dollar 81 81.5
 
 
 

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Economical Collapse

We actually see this happening every time there is an economic recession. People can no longer pay for various goods and services, and so have to rely on friends and neighbors instead. Where there is no money to facilitate transactions, gift economies reemerge and new kinds of money are created. Ordinarily, though, people and institutions fight tooth and nail to prevent that from happening. The habitual first response to economic crisis is to make and keep more money -- to accelerate the conversion of anything you can into money. On a systemic level, the debt surge is generating enormous pressure to extend the commodification of the commonwealth. We can see this happening with the calls to drill for oil in Alaska, commence deep-sea drilling, and so on. The time is here, though, for the reverse process to begin in earnest -- to remove things from the realm of goods and services, and return them to the realm of gifts, reciprocity, self-sufficiency, and community sharing. Note well: this is going to happen anyway in the wake of a currency collapse, as people lose their jobs or become too poor to buy things. People will help each other and real communities will reemerge.In the meantime, anything we do to protect some natural or social resource from conversion into money will both hasten the collapse and mitigate its severity. Any forest you save from development, any road you stop, any cooperative playgroup you establish; anyone you teach to heal themselves, or to build their own house, cook their own food, make their own clothes; any wealth you create or add to the public domain; anything you render off-limits to the world-devouring machine, will help shorten the Machine's lifespan. Think of it this way: if you already do not depend on money for some portion of life's necessities and pleasures, then the collapse of money will pose much less of a harsh transition for you. The same applies to the social level. Any network or community or social institution that is not a vehicle for the conversion of life into money will sustain and enrich life after money.

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