My wife was in Kildare village last night shopping and saw a dress she liked, it was marked at £65.00 sterling. When she went to pay the shop assistant said the price in Euro was €165.00, my wife had calculated this dress should cost no more than €100 Euro based upon the rate of exchange. This was almost a €70 Euro mark up based upon the rate of 1.5. My wife said this was a rip off. The shop assistant said that shipping costs etc had to be taken into account however my wife persisted and refused to pay this price and was offered a 10% discount which she refused. The shop assistant then called the shop owner who refused to sell the dress for anything less than the €165.00 Euro price. My wife offered to pay in sterling as this was the marked price and actually had a friend with her who had the 65 sterling in cash however the shop assistant refused. After some haggling the shop assistant gave a 20% discount on the Euro price. When packing up the dress the shop assistant went to cut off the sterling price tag, my wife told her to leave it on as the dress had been paid for and the tag showing the sterling price was part of the dress as she bought it, in the end after some arguing the tag was left on. From a consumer point of view is this a rip off, can the shop be fined for misleading prices or not displaying the correct prices, or charging what is over the current rate of exchange.