It seems I am dealing with a chokoraa hapa who doesn't even understand the concept of purchasing power.You know your currency is Tanzania shillings? 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Let me make the explanation simpler for you. Assume you have two currencies, currency A and currency B. If 1 shilling of currency A equals 20 shillings of currency B, it means that currency A is stronger than currency B. In this context, currency A has more purchasing power compared to currency B. This means that with 1 shilling of currency A, you can buy more goods or services than you can with 20 shillings of currency B. So, in terms of purchasing power, currency A is stronger and more valuable.
Dont mix relative strength of a currency with the purchasing power.
The subject here is purchasing power and not relative strength.