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==History== [[Anne, Queen of Great Britain|Queen Anne's]] proclamation of 1704 was the first attempt to introduce [[pound sterling|sterling]] currency to the [[British West Indies]], however it failed to displace the existing [[Spanish dollar]] currency system right up until the late 1870s. In 1822, the British government coined {{1/4}}, {{frac|1|8}}, and {{frac|1|16}} fractional 'Anchor dollars' for use in [[Mauritius]] and the [[British West Indies]] (but not [[Jamaica]]). A few years later copper fractional dollars were coined for [[Mauritius]], [[Sierra Leone]], and the [[British West Indies]]. The next attempts to introduce British [[Pound sterling|sterling]] silver coinage to the colonies came with an imperial order-in-council dated 1825. This move was inspired by a number of factors. The [[United Kingdom]] was now operating a very successful [[gold standard]] in relation to the [[gold sovereign]] that was introduced in 1816, and there was a desire to extend this system to the colonies. In addition to this, there was that the supply of [[Spanish dollars]] ([[pieces of eight]]) had been cut off as a result of the revolutions in Latin America where most of the [[Spanish dollars]] were minted. The last [[Spanish Dollar]] was in fact minted at [[Potosí|Potosi]] in 1825. There was now a growing desire to have a stable and steady supply of British shillings everywhere the British drum was beating. The 1825 order-in-council was largely a failure because it made sterling silver coinage legal tender at the unrealistic rating in relation to the [[Spanish dollar]] of {{val|p=$|1}} = 4 shillings 4 pence. It succeeded in [[Jamaica]], [[Bermuda]], and [[British Honduras]] because the authorities in those territories set aside the official ratings and used the more realistic rating of {{val|p=$|1}} = 4 shillings. The reality of the rating between the dollar and the pound was based on the silver content of the Spanish [[pieces of eight]] as compared to the gold content of the British [[gold sovereign]]. A second imperial order-in-council was passed in 1838 with the correct rating of {{val|p=$|1}} = 4 shillings 2 pence. In the years following the 1838 order-in-council, the [[British West Indies]] territories began to enact local legislation for the purposes of assimilating their monies of account with the British pound sterling. Gold discoveries in [[Australia]] in 1851 drove the silver dollar out of the West Indies, but it returned again with the great depreciation in the value of silver that followed with [[Germany|Germany's]] transition to the [[gold standard]] between 1871 and 1873. In the years immediately following 1873, there was a fear that the [[British West Indies]] might return to a [[silver standard]]. As such, legislation was passed in the individual territories to demonetize the silver dollars. Even though the British coinage was also silver, it represented fractions of the [[gold sovereign]] and so its value was based on a [[gold standard]]. During this period, and into the nineteenth century, accounts could be kept in either dollars or sterling. [[Jamaica]], [[Bermuda]], and the [[Bahamas]] preferred to use sterling accounts whereas [[British Guiana]] used dollar accounts. British Guiana used dollar accounts for the purpose of assisting in the transition from the Dutch [[guilder]] system of currency to the British pound sterling system. In the [[Eastern Caribbean]] territories the private sector preferred to use dollar accounts whereas the government preferred to use sterling accounts. In some of the [[Eastern Caribbean]] territories, notes were issued by various private banks, denominated in dollars equivalent to 4 [[shillings]] 2 [[penny|pence]]. See [[Antigua dollar]], [[Barbadian dollar]], [[Dominican dollar]], [[Grenadian dollar]], [[Guyanese dollar]], [[Saint Kitts dollar]], [[Saint Lucia dollar]], [[Saint Vincent dollar]] and [[Trinidad and Tobago dollar]]. In 1946, a West Indian Currency Conference saw Barbados, British Guiana, the [[British Leeward Islands|Leeward Islands]], [[Trinidad and Tobago]] and the [[British Windward Islands|Windward Islands]] agree to establish a unified decimal currency system based on a West Indian dollar to replace the current arrangement of having three different Boards of Commissioners of Currency (for Barbados (which also served the Leeward and Windward Islands), British Guiana and Trinidad & Tobago).<ref name="The Eastern Caribbean Currency Union">{{cite book | last1 = Van Beek | first1 = Fritz | title = The Eastern Caribbean Currency Union: Institutions, Performance, and Policy Issues | chapter = The Financial System | publisher = International Monetary Fund | year = 2000 | url = http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/cat/longres.aspx?sk=3632.0 | access-date = 2013-02-26}}</ref><ref>[https://api.parliament.uk/historic-hansard/commons/1946/jun/05/west-indies-decimal-currency WEST INDIES (DECIMAL CURRENCY)], 05 June 1946, British House of Commons Hansard</ref> In 1949, the British government formalized the dollar system of accounts in British Guiana and the Eastern Caribbean territories by introducing the [[British West Indies]] dollar (BWI$) at the already existing conversion rate of {{val|p=$|4.80}} per pound sterling (or {{val|p=$|1}} = 4 shillings 2 pence). It was one of the many experimental political and economic ventures tested by the British government to form a uniform system within the British West Indies territories. The symbol "BWI$" was frequently used and the currency was known verbally as the "Beewee" (slang for British West Indies) dollar. Shortly thereafter in 1950, the British Caribbean Currency Board (BCCB) was set up in Trinidad<ref name="Small States, Smart Solutions">{{cite book | last1 = Favaro | first1 = Edgardo | editor-first1 = Edgardo M. | editor-last1 = Favaro | title = Small States, Smart Solutions: Improving Connectivity and Increasing the Effectiveness of Public Services | chapter = Banking Supervision in OECS Countries | publisher = World Bank Publications | year = 2008 | doi = 10.1596/978-0-8213-7460-3 | isbn = 978-0-8213-7460-3 | url = https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/6416 | access-date = 2013-02-26}}</ref> with the sole right to issue notes and coins of the new unified currency and given the mandate of keeping full foreign exchange cover to ensure convertibility at {{val|p=$|4}}.80 per pound sterling.<ref name = "The Eastern Caribbean Currency Union" /> In 1951, the British Virgin Islands joined the arrangement, but this led to discontent because that territory was more naturally drawn to the currency of the neighbouring [[United States Virgin Islands|U.S. Virgin Islands]]. In 1961, the British Virgin Islands withdrew from the arrangement and adopted the U.S. dollar. Until 1955, the BWI$ existed only as banknotes in conjunction with sterling fractional coinage. Decimal coins replaced the sterling coins in 1955. These decimal coins were denominated in cents, with each cent worth one halfpenny in sterling. In 1958, the [[West Indies Federation]] was established and the BWI$ was its currency. However, although [[Jamaica]] (including the [[Cayman Islands]] and the [[Turks and Caicos Islands]]) was part of the West Indies Federation, it retained the [[Jamaican pound]], despite adopting the BWI$ as legal tender from 1954.<ref name="Alternative Monetary Regimes for Jamaica">{{cite web|url=http://old.psoj.org/archives/hanke.pdf|title=Alternative Monetary Regimes for Jamaica by Steve H. Hanke and Kurt Schuler, pp. 19 and 43–44|access-date=18 April 2017|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120425122953/http://old.psoj.org/archives/hanke.pdf|archive-date=25 April 2012}}</ref> Jamaica, the Cayman Islands, and the Turks and Caicos Islands were already long established users of the sterling accounts system of pounds, shillings, and pence. In 1964 Jamaica ended the legal tender status of the BWI$<ref name = "Alternative Monetary Regimes for Jamaica" /> and [[Trinidad and Tobago]] withdrew from the currency union (adopting the [[Trinidad and Tobago dollar]]) forcing the movement of the headquarters of the BCCB to Barbados<ref name = "The Eastern Caribbean Currency Union" /> and soon the "BWI$" dollar lost its regional support. In 1965, the British West Indies dollar of the now defunct [[West Indies Federation]] was replaced at par by the Eastern Caribbean dollar and the BCCB was replaced by the [[Eastern Caribbean Currency Authority]] or ECCA<ref name = "Small States, Smart Solutions" /> (established by the Eastern Caribbean Currency Agreement 1965). [[British Guiana]] withdrew from the currency union the following year. [[Grenada]], which had used the Trinidad and Tobago dollar from 1964, rejoined the common currency arrangement in 1968.<ref name = "The Eastern Caribbean Currency Union" /> Barbados withdrew from the currency union in 1972, following which the ECCA headquarters were moved to St. Kitts.<ref name = "The Eastern Caribbean Currency Union" /> Between 1965 and 1983, the Eastern Caribbean Currency Authority issued the EC$, with banknotes from 1965 and coins from 1981. The EC$ is now issued by the [[Eastern Caribbean Central Bank]], based in the city of [[Basseterre]], in Saint Kitts and Nevis. The bank was established by an agreement (the Eastern Caribbean Central Bank Agreement) signed at [[Port of Spain]] on 5 July 1983. The exchange rate of {{val|p=$|4.80}} = £1 sterling (equivalent to the old {{val|p=$|1}} = 4s 2d) continued until 1976 for the new Eastern Caribbean dollar.<ref name = ECCB/> For a wider outline of the history of currency in the region see [[Currencies of the British West Indies]].
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