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.
- 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.
