10 countries where the US dollar buys more than just stability

10 countries where the US dollar buys more than just stability

From Ecuador to Zimbabwe, nations rely on the US dollar for stability, trade, and survival—making it more than currency, but a global lifeline and power tool.

Business Today Desk
  • Sep 19, 2025,
  • Updated Sep 19, 2025 10:28 AM IST
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After hyperinflation wrecked its sucre in 2000, Ecuador bet its future on the US dollar. Two decades later, it’s still the country’s safety net—and a lesson in economic survival.

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El Salvador scrapped the colón in 2001 and embraced the dollar. But when it added Bitcoin in 2021, the world watched a financial experiment unfold—though USD still rules the streets.

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Panama’s love affair with the dollar began in 1904 with the Panama Canal. Today, its own balboa barely exists, leaving Uncle Sam’s money as the nation’s economic lifeline.

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Newly independent in 2002, Timor-Leste had no strong currency of its own. Its solution? Adopt the US dollar, ensuring stability while it rebuilt from conflict.

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The Federated States of Micronesia run entirely on dollars, thanks to a special Compact of Free Association with Washington—turning US aid into daily bread and butter.

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Palau doesn’t mint its own bills. Instead, the US dollar fuels every purchase, from tourism to tuna exports—an invisible thread tying it to Washington’s financial pulse.

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Hyperinflation once made trillion-dollar banknotes worthless in Zimbabwe. The US dollar became a lifeboat. Even with a revived local currency, most trust USD more than their own.

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In the Marshall Islands, the dollar is more than money—it’s leverage. Aid, defense, and trade all flow through USD, weaving American influence deep into Pacific life.

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Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, and other US territories don’t just wave the American flag—they spend its currency. For travelers, it feels like the mainland, minus the passport stamp.

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