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Japanese yen

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Template:Short description Template:Redirect Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox currency

File:USD-JPY.webp
USD/JPY exchange rate 1971–2023

The Template:Nihongo is the official currency of Japan. It is the third-most traded currency in the foreign exchange market, after the United States dollar and the euro.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> It is also widely used as a third reserve currency after the US dollar and the euro.

The New Currency Act of 1871 introduced Japan's modern currency system, with the yen defined as Template:Convert of gold, or Template:Convert of silver, and divided decimally into 100 sen or 1,000 rin. The yen replaced the previous Tokugawa coinage as well as the various hansatsu paper currencies issued by feudal han (fiefs). The Bank of Japan was founded in 1882 and given a monopoly on controlling the money supply.<ref name="BOJ">Template:Cite book</ref>

Following World War II, the yen lost much of its pre-war value as Japan faced a debt crisis and hyperinflation. Under the Bretton Woods system, the yen was pegged to the US dollar alongside other major currencies. After this system was abandoned in 1971 with the Nixon Shock, the short-lived Smithsonian Agreement temporarily reinstated a fixed exchange rate. However, since the end of that system in February 1973, the yen has been a floating currency.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Currency intervention by the Ministry of Finance and the Bank of Japan has occurred on limited occasions in recent years, with the intention of moderating the speed of exchange rate movements. Interventions took place intermittently from 1998 to 2003 and from 2010 to 2011 to curb excessive and speculative appreciation of the yen, and again in 2022 and 2024 to slow down speculative selling of the currency.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The first two instances included coordinated interventions with respective countries,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and the IMF has repeatedly stated that Japan is 'committed to a flexible exchange rate'.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Pronunciation and etymology

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The name yen derives from the Japanese word Template:Nihongo krt, which borrows its phonetic reading from Chinese yuan, similar to North Korean won and South Korean won. Originally, the Chinese had traded silver in mass called sycees, and when Spanish and Mexican silver coins arrived from the Philippines, the Chinese called them "silver rounds" (Template:Zh) for their circular shapes.<ref name="Mikami2007">Template:Interlanguage link, an article about the yen in Heibonsha World Encyclopedia, Kato Shuichi(ed.), Vol. 3, Tokyo: Heibonsha, 2007.</ref> The coins and the name also appeared in Japan. While the Chinese eventually replaced Template:Zh with Template:Zh,Template:Efn the Japanese continued to use the same word, which was given the shinjitai form Template:Nihongo2 in reforms at the end of World War II.Template:Cn

The spelling and pronunciation "yen" is standard in English, because when Japan was first encountered by Europeans around the 16th century, Japanese Template:IPA (Template:Nihongo2) and Template:IPA (Template:Nihongo2) were both pronounced Template:IPA. Accordingly, Portuguese missionaries spelled them as "ye".Template:Efn By the middle of the 18th century, Template:IPA and Template:IPA came to be pronounced Template:IPA as in modern Japanese, although some regions retain the Template:IPA pronunciation. Walter Henry Medhurst, who had neither been to Japan nor met any Japanese people, having consulted mainly a Japanese-Dutch dictionary, spelled some "e"s as "ye" in his An English and Japanese, and Japanese and English Vocabulary (1830).Template:Sfnp In the early Meiji era, the American physician and translator James Curtis Hepburn, following Medhurst, spelled all "e"s as "ye" in his A Japanese and English dictionary (1867); in Japanese, e and i are slightly palatalized, somewhat as in Russian.Template:Sfnp That was the first full-scale Japanese-English/English-Japanese dictionary, which had a strong influence on Westerners in Japan and probably prompted the spelling "yen". Hepburn revised most "ye"s to "e" in the 3rd edition (1886)<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> to mirror the contemporary pronunciation, except "yen".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

History

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Template:Split Template:Further

Early history (1868–1876)

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File:5yen-M3.jpg
5 yen coin from 1870 (year 3)
File:50sen-M3.jpg
50 sen coin from 1870 (year 3)

Although the Edo Shogunate collapsed with the Meiji Restoration and a new government was born, the monetary system still took over that of the former entity. During this unstable period, the confusion caused by this form of exchange caused economic turmoil.<ref>Japan Currency Museum (日本貨幣博物館) permanent exhibit, articles: The History of Japanese Currency, FAQs Japanese Currency Template:Webarchive</ref> The gold (counting money) system of eastern Japan and the silver (weighing money) system of the western Japan were not unified, and the difference in the gold-silver ratio caused a large amount of gold to flow overseas at the end of the Tokugawa shogunate. Emperor Meiji responded to this by appointing Ōkuma Shigenobu as head of Japan's monetary reform program. He worked with Inoue Kaoru, Itō Hirobumi, and Shibusawa Eiichi to run the Ministry of Finance, seeking to introduce a modern monetary system into Japan. Ōkuma eventually proposed that coins, which were previously square, be made into circles, and that the names of the traditional currencies, ryō (両), bu (分) and shu (朱), be unified into yen (円), which was accepted by the government.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Other rejected proposals included physical weight units of "Fun" and "Momme" which never made it past the pattern stage.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The first gold yen coins consisted of 2, 5, and 20 yen coins which were struck throughout 1870. Five yen coins were first struck in gold for the Japanese government in 1870 at the San Francisco Mint.<ref name="Frossard">Template:Cite book</ref> During this time a new mint was being established at Osaka, which did not receive the gold bullion needed for coinage until the following year.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Gold bullion was delivered from private Japanese citizens, foreigners, and the Japanese government.<ref name="Hisamitsu">Template:Cite book</ref> Initially the government opted for silver, which would become the standard unit of value leaving gold coinage as a subsidiary.<ref name="GS">Template:Cite book</ref> While gold coinage couldn't be produced domestically in 1870, the mint at Osaka could produce silver coins which included denominations of 5, 10, 20, and 50 sen.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> None of these coins dated "1870" circulated until the Meiji government officially adopted the "yen" as Japan's modern unit of currency on June 27, 1871.<ref>A. Piatt Andrew, Quarterly Journal of Economics, "The End of the Mexican Dollar", 18:3:321–356, 1904, p. 345</ref> This Act formally stipulated the adoption of the decimal accounting system of yen (1, Template:Nihongo2), Template:Vanchor (Template:Frac, Template:Nihongo2), and Template:Vanchor (Template:Frac, Template:Nihongo2). The new currency was gradually introduced beginning from July of that year.

Japanese yen denominated paper currency was also conceived with the coins in 1870 as Meiji Tsuho notes by Italian engraver Edoardo Chiossone.<ref name="Chiossone">Template:Cite book</ref> These were released as fiat currency in denominations of 1, 2, 5, 10, 50, and 100 yen along with subsidiary notes of 10, 20, and 50 sen in 1872. Almost concurrently, the government established a series of national banks modeled after the system in the United States which issued national bank notes.

Satsuma Rebellion and aftermath (1877–1887)

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Massive inflation from the Satsuma Rebellion in 1877 caused a glut of non-redeemable fiat currency notes. The issuance of national fiat banknotes was ultimately suspended in 1880 by then prime minister Matsukata Masayoshi.<ref name="SCP20">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="mono">Template:Cite book</ref> New policies were put into place which included the establishment of a centralized banking system.<ref name="BOJ History">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="mono"/> The Bank of Japan hence commenced operations on October 10, 1882, with the authority to print banknotes that could be exchanged for the old Government and National Bank Notes.<ref name="SCP29">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="BOJ1885">Template:Cite web</ref> By May 1883, another act provided the redemption and retirement of national bank notes.<ref name="NB1883AND1896">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Americana1">Template:Cite book</ref> The National Bank Act was amended again in March 1896, providing for the dissolution of the national banks on the expiration of their charters.<ref name="NB1883AND1896"/> This amendment also prohibited national bank notes from circulating after December 31, 1899.<ref name="expired">Template:Cite web</ref> In that year, Japan adopted a gold exchange standard, defining the yen as 0.75 g fine gold or US$0.4985.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

This exchange rate remained in place until Japan left the gold standard in December 1931, after which the yen fell to $0.30 by July 1932 and to $0.20 by 1933.<ref>pp. 347–348, "Average Exchange Rate: Banking and the Money Market", Japan Year Book 1933, Kenkyusha Press, Foreign Association of Japan, Tokyo</ref>

It remained steady at around $0.30 until the start of the Pacific War on December 7, 1941, at which time it fell to $0.23.<ref>pp. 332–333, "Exchange and Interest Rates", Japan Year Book 1938–1939, Kenkyusha Press, Foreign Association of Japan, Tokyo</ref>

The sen and the rin were eventually taken out of circulation at the end of 1953.<ref>Template:Nihongo)</ref>

Fixed rate of the yen to the U.S. dollar

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No true exchange rate existed for the yen between December 7, 1941, and April 25, 1949; wartime inflation reduced the yen to a fraction of its prewar value.

After a period of instability, on April 25, 1949, the U.S. occupation government fixed the value of the yen at ¥360 per USD through a United States plan, which was part of the Bretton Woods system, to stabilize prices in the Japanese economy.<ref>p. 1179, "Japan – Money, Weights and Measures", The Statesman's Year-Book 1950, Steinberg, S. H., Macmillan, New York</ref>

That exchange rate was maintained until 1971, when the United States abandoned the gold standard, ending a key element of the Bretton Woods system, and setting in motion changes that eventually led to floating exchange rates in 1973.Template:Citation needed

Yen and major currencies float

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By 1971, the yen had become undervalued. Japanese exports were costing too little in international markets, and imports from abroad were costing the Japanese too much. This undervaluation was reflected in the current account balance, which had risen from the deficits of the early 1960s, to a then-large surplus of US$5.8 billion in 1971. The belief that the yen, and several other major currencies, were undervalued motivated the United States' actions in 1971.

Following the United States' measures to devalue the dollar in the summer of 1971, the Japanese government agreed to a new, fixed exchange rate as part of the Smithsonian Agreement, signed at the end of the year. This agreement set the exchange rate at ¥308 per US$. However, the new fixed rates of the Smithsonian Agreement were difficult to maintain in the face of supply and demand pressures in the foreign-exchange market. In early 1973, the rates were abandoned, and the major nations of the world allowed their currencies to float.

Yen adoption in Okinawa

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After World War II the United States-administered Okinawa issued a higher-valued currency called the B yen from 1946 to 1958, which was then replaced by the U.S. dollar at the rate of $1 = 120 B yen. Upon the reversion of Okinawa to Japan in 1972 the Japanese yen then replaced the dollar. In light of the dollar's reduction in value from ¥360 to ¥308 just before the reversion, an unannounced "currency confirmation" took place on October 9, 1971, wherein residents disclosed their dollar holdings in cash and bank accounts; dollars held that day amounting to US$60 million were entitled for conversion in 1972 at a higher rate of ¥360.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Japanese government intervention in the currency market

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In the 1970s, Japanese government and business people were very concerned that a rise in the value of the yen would hurt export growth by making Japanese products less competitive and would damage the industrial base. The government, therefore, continued to intervene heavily in foreign-exchange marketing (buying or selling dollars), even after the 1973 decision to allow the yen to float.<ref name=":0">Nanto, Dick K., Japan's Currency Intervention: Policy Issues, RL33178; Congressional Research Service, 2007

https://sgp.fas.org/crs/row/RL33178.pdf Template:Webarchive</ref>

Despite intervention, market pressures caused the yen to continue climbing in value, peaking temporarily at an average of ¥271 per US$ in 1973, before the impact of the 1973 oil crisis was felt (this was retroactively called endaka, although the term was only coined in 1985). The increased costs of imported oil caused the yen to depreciate to a range of ¥290 per US$ to ¥300 per US$ between 1974 and 1976. The re-emergence of trade surpluses drove the yen back up to ¥211 in 1978. This currency strengthening was again reversed by the second oil shock in 1979, with the yen dropping to ¥227 per US$ by 1980.<ref name=":0" />

Yen in the early 1980s

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During the first half of the 1980s, the yen failed to rise in value, though current account surpluses returned and grew quickly. From ¥221 per US$ in 1981, the average value of the yen actually dropped to ¥239 per US$ in 1985. The rise in the current account surplus generated stronger demand for yen in foreign-exchange markets, but this trade-related demand for yen was offset by other factors. A wide differential in interest rates, with United States interest rates much higher than those in Japan, and the continuing moves to deregulate the international flow of capital, led to a large net outflow of capital from Japan. This capital flow increased the supply of yen in foreign-exchange markets, as Japanese investors changed their yen for other currencies (mainly dollars) to invest overseas. This kept the yen weak relative to the dollar and fostered the rapid rise in the Japanese trade surplus that took place in the 1980s.

Effect of the Plaza Accord

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Template:Multiple image In 1985, a dramatic change began. Finance officials from major nations signed an agreement (the Plaza Accord) affirming that the dollar was overvalued (and, therefore, the yen undervalued). This agreement, and shifting supply and demand pressures in the markets, led to a rapid rise in the value of the yen. From its average of ¥239 per US$ in 1985, the yen rose to a peak of ¥128 in 1988, virtually doubling its value relative to the dollar. After declining somewhat in 1989 and 1990, it reached a new high of ¥123 to US$ in December 1992. In April 1995, the yen hit a peak of under 80 yen/US$, temporarily making Japan's economy nearly the size of that of the US.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Post-bubble years

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The yen declined during the Japanese asset price bubble and continued to do so afterwards, reaching a low of ¥134 to US$ in February 2002. The Bank of Japan's policy of zero interest rates has discouraged yen investments, with the carry trade of investors borrowing yen and investing in better-paying currencies (thus further pushing down the yen) estimated to be as large as $1 trillion.<ref>Template:Cite news (Note: archive contains original version of article in full)</ref> In February 2007, The Economist estimated that the yen was 15% undervalued against the dollar, and as much as 40% undervalued against the euro.<ref>Template:Cite news (Note: archive contains original version of article in full)</ref>

After the global economic crisis of 2008

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File:Currency gnp weighted comparison 1999 2011.svg
Comparison of the GNP-weighted nominal exchange rates: CHF and JPY versus CNY, EUR, USD, and GBP

However, this trend of depreciation reversed after the global economic crisis of 2008. Other major currencies, except the Swiss franc, have been declining relative to the yen.

On April 4, 2013, the Bank of Japan announced that they would expand their asset purchase program by $1.4 trillion in two years. The Bank of Japan hopes to bring Japan from deflation to inflation, aiming for 2% inflation. The number of purchases is so large that it is expected to double the money supply, but this move has sparked concerns that the authorities in Japan are deliberately devaluing the yen to boost exports.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> However, the commercial sector in Japan worried that the devaluation would trigger an increase in import prices, especially for energy and raw materials.

A period of rapid global inflation from 2022 onwards

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Template:Further Since 2022, the yen has depreciated significantly against its peers, due to a variety of factors. Firstly, Japan's prolonged low-interest-rate policy (to tackle domestic deflation) has created a yield differential with other countriesTemplate:Mdashnotably the USTemplate:Mdashthat have high interest rates (to tackle domestic inflation), prompting investors to seek higher returns in foreign currencies. This interest rate differential directly affects the price of the Yen and serves as one of the drivers behind its depreciation. Widely held expectations of yen depreciation can become self-fulfilling prophecies, affecting the currency's exchange rate.<ref name="Economist 230430" /> To counter this, the BOJ conducted currency interventions of more than JPY 9 trillion selling the dollar and buying the yen in the September–October 2022 and April–May 2024 periods respectively.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Redenomination proposals

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Numerous proposals have been made since the 1990s to redenominate the yen by introducing a new unit or new yen, equal to 100 yen, and nearly worth one U.S. dollar. This has not happened to date, since the yen remains trusted globally despite its low unit value, and due to the huge costs of reissuing new currency and updating currency-reading hardware. The negative impact of postponing upgrades to various computer software until redenomination occurs, in particular, was also cited.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Coins

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Template:For Template:Cleanup The Japan Mint has issued legal tender coins from 1871 to the present.

Currently circulating coinage

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Coins presently minted<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Value Image Technical parameters Description Date of first minting
Diameter Thickness Mass Composition Edge Obverse Reverse
¥1 File:1JPY.JPG 20 mm 1.5 mm 1 g 100% aluminium Smooth Young tree, state title, value Value, year of minting 1955
¥5 File:5JPY.JPG 22 mm 1.5 mm 3.75 g 60–70% copper
30–40% zinc
Smooth Ear of Rice, gear, water, value State title, year of minting 1949 (rarely)<ref name="NIBV">Template:Cite web</ref>
1959
¥10 File:10JPY.JPG 23.5 mm 1.5 mm 4.5 g 95% copper
3–4% zinc
1–2% tin
Reeded Phoenix Hall, Byōdō-in, state title, value Evergreen tree, value, year of minting 1951 (rarely)<ref name="NIBV"/>
Smooth 1959
¥50 File:50JPY.JPG 21 mm 1.7 mm 4 g Cupronickel
75% copper
25% nickel
Reeded Chrysanthemum, state title, value Value, year of minting 1967Template:Efn
¥100 File:100JPY.JPG 22.6 mm 1.7 mm 4.8 g Cupronickel
75% copper
25% nickel
Reeded Cherry blossoms, state title, value Value, year of minting 1967Template:Efn
Template:Coin-yellow-color |¥500 File:500yen-R3.jpg Template:Coin-yellow-color |26.5 mm Template:Coin-yellow-color |1.81 mm Template:Coin-yellow-color |7.1 g Template:Coin-yellow-color |Bi-metallic (75% copper
12.5% zinc
12.5% nickel)
Template:Coin-yellow-color |Reeded helically Template:Coin-yellow-color |Paulownia, state title, value Template:Coin-yellow-color |Bamboo, Mandarin orange, Value, year of minting Template:Coin-yellow-color |2021Template:Efn
Template:Standard coin table notice

The obverse side of all coins shows the coin's value in kanji characters as well as the country name (through 1945, Template:Nihongo4; after 1945, Template:Nihongo4 (except for the current 5-yen coin with the country name on the reverse). The reverse side of all coins shows the year of mintage, which is not shown in Gregorian calendar years, but instead in the regnal year of the current emperor's reign, with the first year of an era called Template:Nihongo4. Imperial portraits have never appeared on Japanese coins, as the image of the emperor remains sacred.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> The regnal year does not necessarily align with the calendar year. The first coins of the Reiwa era were minted in July 2019.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Examples
File:1yen-M34.jpg
Early 1-yen coin from 1901 (Meiji year 34), 26.96 grams of 90% fine silver
File:20yen-M3.jpg
20 yen coin from 1870 (Meiji year 3)

In 1897, the silver 1 yen coin was demonetized and the sizes of the gold coins were reduced by 50%, with 5, 10 and 20 yen coins issued.

After the war, brass 50 sen, 1 and 5 yen were introduced between 1946 and 1948. The current-type holed brass 5 yen was introduced in 1949, the bronze 10 yen in 1951, and the aluminum 1 yen in 1955.

In 1955 the first unholed, nickel 50 yen was introduced. In 1957, silver 100 yen pieces were introduced, followed by the holed 50 yen coin in 1959. These were replaced in 1967 by the current cupro-nickel 100 yen along with a smaller 50 yen.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

In 1982, the first cupronickel 500 yen coin was introduced. Alongside the 5 Swiss franc coin, the 500 yen coin is one of the highest-valued coin to be used regularly in the world, with a value of US$4.42 Template:As of.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Because of its high face value, the 500 yen coin has been a favorite target for counterfeiters, resulting in the issuance in 2000 of the second nickel-brass 500 yen coin with added security features. Continued counterfeiting of the latter resulted in the issuance in 2021 of the third bi-metallic 500 yen coin with more improvements in security features.

Due to the great differences in style, size, weight and the pattern present on the edge of the coin they are easy for people with visual impairments to tell apart from one another.

Unholed Holed
Smooth edge ¥1 (light)
¥10 (medium)
¥5
Reeded edge ¥100 (medium)
¥500 (heavy)
¥50

Commemorative coins have been minted on various occasions in base metal, silver and gold.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The first of these were silver ¥100 and ¥1,000 Summer Olympic coins issued for the 1964 games. The largest issuance by denomination and total face value were 10 million gold coins of ¥100,000 denomination for the 60th anniversary of reign of the Shōwa Emperor in 1986, totalling ¥1 trillion and utilizing 200,000 kg fine gold. ¥500 commemorative coins have been regularly issued since 1985. In 2008 commemorative ¥500 and ¥1,000 coins were issued featuring Japan's 47 prefectures. Even though all commemorative coins can be spent like ordinary (non-commemorative) coins, they do not normally circulate, and ¥100,000 coins are treated with caution due to the discovery of counterfeits.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

The 1 yen coin is made out of 100% aluminum and can float on water if placed correctly.

Formerly circulated coinage

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Sen

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File:50sen-M3.jpg
50 sen coin from 1870 (year 3 of Meiji)

Template:Main Subsidiary coins of "sen" (one hundredth of a yen) were initially introduced in 1870 with a silver alloy in denominations of 5, 10, 20 and 50 sen. Copper sen coins in denominations of half, 1, and 2 came three years later, as Japan acquired the technology needed to mint them. The removal of silver from sen coinage began in 1889, when Cupronickel 5 sen coins were introduced. By 1920, this included cupro-nickel 10 sen and reduced-size silver 50 sen coins. Production of the latter ceased in 1938, after which a variety of base metals were used to produce 1, 5 and 10 sen coins during the Second World War. While clay 5 and 10 sen coins were produced in 1945, they were not issued for circulation. As with the Rin, coins in denominations of less than 1 yen became invalid at the end of 1953 and were demonetized due to inflation.

Rin

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Template:Main

File:1rin-M6.jpg
One rin coin from 1873 (year 6 of Meiji)

Bronze coins worth one-one thousandth of a yen called "rin" were first introduced in 1873. One rin coins were very small, measuring 15.75 mm in diameter and 0.3 mm in thickness, and co-circulated with mon coins of the old currency system. Their small size was eventually their undoing, and the rin was abandoned in 1884 due to unpopularity.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Efn Five rin coins worth one-two hundredth of a yen also used a bronze alloy. These were successor coins to the equally valued half sen coin which had been previously minted until 1888. The decision to bring back an equally valued coin was in response to rising inflation caused by World War I which led to an overall shortage of subsidiary coins. The mintage period for five rin coins was brief as they were discontinued after only four years of production due to their sharp decline in monetary value. The overall demand for subsidiary coinage ended as Japan slipped into a post-war recession. Coins worth 1 and 5 rin were eventually officially taken out of circulation at the end of 1953 and demonetized.

Banknotes

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Template:Main

Value Image Dimensions Main

Color

Description Date of issue Issue suspended
Obverse Reverse Obverse Reverse
Series F
¥1000 File:New 1000 yen banknote obverse.png File:New 1000 yen banknote reverse.png 150 × 76 mm Blue Kitasato Shibasaburō The Great Wave off Kanagawa (from Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji series by Hokusai) 3 July 2024
¥5000 File:New 5000 yen banknote obverse.png File:New 5000 yen banknote reverse.png 156 × 76 mm Purple Umeko Tsuda Wisteria flowers
¥10,000 File:New 10000 yen banknote obverse.png File:New 10000 yen banknote reverse.png 160 × 76 mm Brown Shibusawa Eiichi Tokyo Station (Marunouchi side)
Series E
¥1000 File:Series E 1K Yen bank of Japan note - front.jpg File:Series E 1K Yen bank of Japan note - back.jpg 150 × 76 mm Blue Hideyo Noguchi Mount Fuji, Lake Motosu and cherry blossoms 1 November 2004 2025 - 2027
¥5000 File:5000 Yenes (2004) (Anverso).jpg File:5000 Yenes (2004) (Reverso).jpg 156 × 76 mm Purple Ichiyō Higuchi Kakitsubata-zu (Painting of irises, a work by Ogata Kōrin)
¥10,000 File:10000 Yenes (Anverso).jpg File:10000 Yenes (Reverso).jpg 160 × 76 mm Brown Fukuzawa Yukichi Statue of hōō (phoenix) from Byōdō-in Temple
Series D
¥2000 File:Series D 2K Yen Bank of Japan note - front.jpg File:Series D 2K Yen Bank of Japan note - back.jpg 154 × 76 mm Green Shureimon The Tale of Genji and portrait of Murasaki Shikibu 19 July 2000

The issuance of yen banknotes began in 1872, two years after the currency was introduced. Denominations have ranged from 1 yen to 10,000 yen; since 1984, the lowest-valued banknote is the 1,000 yen note. Before and during World War II, various bodies issued banknotes in yen, such as the Ministry of Finance and the Imperial Japanese National Bank. The Allied forces also issued some notes shortly after the war. Since then, the Bank of Japan has been the exclusive note issuing authority. The bank has issued five series after World War II.

Japan is generally considered a cash-based society, with 38% of payments in Japan made by cash in 2014.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Possible explanations are that cash payments protect one's privacy, merchants do not have to wait for payment, and it does not carry any negative connotation like credit.

At present, portraits of people from the Meiji period and later are printed on Japanese banknotes. The reason for this is that from the viewpoint of preventing forgery, it is desirable to use a precise photograph as an original rather than a painting for a portrait.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Series E banknotes were introduced in 2004 in ¥1000, ¥5000, and ¥10,000 denominations.

Series F banknotes were introduced on 3 July 2024. They were announced on 9 April 2019 by Finance Minister Tarō Asō.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The ¥1000 bill features Kitasato Shibasaburō and The Great Wave off Kanagawa, the ¥5000 bill features Tsuda Umeko and Wisteria flowers, and the ¥10,000 bill features Shibusawa Eiichi and Tokyo Station. The Ministry decided to not redesign the ¥2000 note due to low circulation.

The EURion constellation pattern is present in the Series D, E and F banknotes.

Determinants of value

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Beginning in December 1931, Japan gradually shifted from the gold standard system to the managed currency system.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The relative value of the yen is determined in foreign exchange markets by the economic forces of supply and demand. The supply of the yen in the market is governed by the desire of yen holders to exchange their yen for other currencies to purchase goods, services, or assets. The demand for the yen is governed by the desire of foreigners to buy goods and services in Japan and by their interest in investing in Japan (buying yen-denominated real and financial assets).

Since the 1990s, the Bank of Japan, the country's central bank, has kept interest rates low to spur economic growth. Short-term lending rates have responded to this monetary relaxation and fell from 3.7% to 1.3% between 1993 and 2008.<ref>Bank of Japan: "Statistics" Template:Webarchive. 2008.</ref> Low interest rates and low inflation, combined with a ready liquidity, prompted investors to borrow yen in Japan and invest it in other countries (such as the US) with significantly higher bank rates, a practice known as the carry trade. This has helped to keep the exchange rate of the yen low compared to other currencies, particularly the US dollar.<ref name="Economist 230430">Template:Cite news</ref>

Template:Most traded currencies

International reserve currency

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Template:Main The special drawing rights (SDR) valuation is an IMF basket of the world's major reserve currencies, including the Japanese yen. Its share of 8.33% as of 2016 has declined from 18% as of 2000.<ref name="new weight">Template:Cite web</ref>

Template:Reserve currencies plot

Historical exchange rate

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Before the war commenced, the yen traded on an average of 3.6 yen to the dollar. After the war the yen went as low as 600 yen per USD in 1947, as a result of currency overprinting in order to fund the war, and afterwards to fund the reconstruction.

When MacArthur and the US forces entered Japan in 1945, they decreed an official conversion rate of 15 yen to the USD. Within 1945–1946: the rate tanked to 50 yen to the USD because of the ongoing inflation. During the first half of 1946, the rate fluctuated to 66 yen to the USD and eventually plummeting to 600 yen to the dollar by 1947 because of the failure of the economic remedies. Eventually, the peg was officially moved to 270 yen to the dollar in 1948 before being adjusted again from 1949 to 1971 to 360 yen to the dollar.

Beginning in 2022 the yen/dollar rate has become increasingly weaker with each passing month. By July 2024, the price fell to upper ¥161 per $1, marking the lowest exchange rate for the yen in 37.5 years on a nominal effective exchange rate<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and the lowest real effective exchange rate since the start of statistics by the Bank of Japan in 1970.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> One of the main reasons behind this fall was the US moving towards higher interest rates, while Japan remained "ultra-low". Other factors include the strength of the US economy and its labor market, while Japan continues to lag behind its peers to bring its economy back to its pre-pandemic size. Japan's trade balance staying in the red is also likely feeding into the weaker yen.<ref name="Bloom 220610">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Interviewed by Asahi Shimbun Digital in September 2022, Izuru Kato, chief economist at Totan Research, expressed concern about the sharp fall in its value since 2022.<ref name="Kato 220902">Template:Cite news</ref> and Moneypost reported that the exchange rate instability had made it impossible to exchange the currency for Japanese yen at some exchange offices.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> With the rate returning to ¥150 in November 2023, concern deepened as Nikkei sources expected the yen to depreciate further in the future.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The Economist (London) expressed concern over the performance of the Bank of Japan, suggested that a systemic risk is posed to the world financial system.<ref name="Economist 231102">Template:Cite news</ref> Other reports of a weakening of the Japanese yen include the Noto Peninsula earthquake in January 2024, where previous earthquakes had seen a temporary appreciation of the yen against the US dollar, but this earthquake reversed the trend and weakened the yen against the US dollar.<ref>Template:Cite web (OpEd)</ref> Goldman Sachs expects the Japanese yen to remain very weak in the coming months.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Average spot rates v USD

[edit]

The table below shows the monthly average of the U.S. dollar–yen spot rate (JPY per USD) at 17:00 JST:<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Year Month
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
1949–1971 360
1972 308
1973 301.15 270.00 265.83 265.50 264.95 265.30 263.45 265.30 265.70 266.68 279.00 280.00
1974 299.00 287.60 276.00 279.75 281.90 284.10 297.80 302.70 298.50 299.85 300.10 300.95
1975 297.85 286.60 293.80 293.30 291.35 296.35 297.35 297.90 302.70 301.80 303.00 305.15
1976 303.70 302.25 299.70 299.40 299.95 297.40 293.40 288.76 287.30 293.70 296.45 293.00
1977 288.25 283.25 277.30 277.50 277.30 266.50 266.30 267.43 264.50 250.65 244.20 240.00
1978 241.74 238.83 223.40 223.90 223.15 204.50 190.80 190.00 189.15 176.05 197.80 195.10
1979 201.40 202.35 209.30 219.15 219.70 217.00 216.90 220.05 223.45 237.80 249.50 239.90
1980 237.73 244.07 248.61 251.45 228.06 218.11 220.91 224.34 214.95 209.21 212.99 209.79
1981 202.19 205.76 208.84 215.07 220.78 224.21 232.11 233.62 229.83 231.40 223.76 219.02
1982 224.55 235.25 240.64 244.90 236.97 251.11 255.10 258.67 262.74 271.33 265.02 242.49
1983 232.90 236.27 237.92 237.70 234.78 240.06 240.49 244.36 242.71 233.00 235.25 234.34
1984 233.95 233.67 225.52 224.95 230.67 233.29 242.72 242.24 245.19 246.89 243.29 247.96
1985 254.11 260.34 258.43 251.67 251.57 248.95 241.70 237.20 236.91 214.84 203.85 202.75
1986 200.05 184.62 178.83 175.56 166.89 167.82 158.65 154.11 154.78 156.04 162.72 162.13
1987 154.48 153.49 151.56 142.96 140.47 144.52 150.20 147.57 143.03 143.48 135.25 128.25
1988 127.44 129.26 127.23 124.88 124.74 127.20 133.10 133.63 134.45 128.85 123.16 123.63
1989 127.24 127.77 130.35 132.01 138.40 143.92 140.63 141.20 145.06 141.99 143.55 143.62
1990 145.09 145.54 153.19 158.50 153.52 153.78 149.23 147.46 138.96 129.73 129.01 133.72
1991 133.65 130.44 137.09 137.15 138.02 139.83 137.98 136.85 134.59 130.81 129.64 128.07
1992 125.05 127.53 132.75 133.59 130.55 126.90 125.66 126.34 122.72 121.14 123.84 123.98
1993 125.02 120.97 117.02 112.37 110.23 107.29 107.77 103.72 105.27 106.94 107.81 109.72
1994 111.49 106.14 105.12 103.48 104.00 102.69 Template:098.54 Template:099.86 Template:098.79 Template:098.40 Template:098.00 100.17
1995 Template:099.79 Template:098.23 Template:090.77 Template:083.53 Template:085.21 Template:084.54 Template:087.24 Template:094.56 100.31 100.68 101.89 101.86
1996 105.81 105.70 105.85 107.40 106.49 108.82 109.25 107.84 109.76 112.30 112.27 113.74
1997 118.18 123.01 122.66 125.47 118.91 114.31 115.10 117.89 120.74 121.13 125.35 129.52
1998 129.45 125.85 128.83 131.81 135.08 140.35 140.66 144.76 134.50 121.33 120.61 117.40
1999 113.14 116.73 119.71 119.66 122.14 120.81 119.76 113.30 107.45 106.00 104.83 102.61
2000 105.21 109.34 106.62 105.35 108.13 106.13 107.90 108.02 106.75 108.34 108.87 112.21
2001 117.10 116.10 121.21 123.77 121.83 122.19 124.63 121.53 118.91 121.32 122.33 127.32
2002 132.66 133.53 131.15 131.01 126.39 123.44 118.08 119.03 120.49 123.88 121.54 122.17
2003 118.67 119.29 118.49 119.82 117.26 118.27 118.65 118.81 115.09 109.58 109.18 107.87
2004 106.39 106.54 108.57 107.31 112.27 109.45 109.34 110.41 110.05 108.90 104.86 103.82
2005 103.27 104.84 105.30 107.35 106.94 108.62 111.94 110.65 111.03 114.84 118.45 118.60
2006 115.33 117.81 117.31 117.13 111.53 114.57 115.59 115.86 117.02 118.59 117.33 117.26
2007 120.59 120.49 117.29 118.81 120.77 122.64 121.56 116.74 115.01 115.77 111.24 112.28
2008 107.60 107.18 100.83 102.41 104.11 106.86 106.76 109.24 106.71 100.20 Template:096.89 Template:091.21
2009 Template:090.35 Template:092.53 Template:097.83 Template:098.92 Template:096.43 Template:096.58 Template:094.49 Template:094.90 Template:091.40 Template:090.28 Template:089.11 Template:089.52
2010 Template:091.26 Template:090.28 Template:090.56 Template:093.43 Template:091.79 Template:090.89 Template:087.67 Template:085.44 Template:084.31 Template:081.80 Template:082.43 Template:083.38
2011 Template:082.63 Template:082.52 Template:081.82 Template:083.34 Template:081.23 Template:080.49 Template:079.44 Template:077.09 Template:076.78 Template:076.72 Template:077.50 Template:077.81
2012 Template:076.94 Template:078.47 Template:082.37 Template:081.42 Template:079.70 Template:079.27 Template:078.96 Template:078.68 Template:078.17 Template:078.97 Template:080.92 Template:083.60
2013 Template:089.15 Template:093.07 Template:094.73 Template:097.74 101.01 Template:097.52 Template:099.66 Template:097.83 Template:099.30 Template:097.73 100.04 103.42
2014 103.94 102.02 102.30 102.54 101.78 102.05 101.73 102.95 107.16 108.03 116.24 119.29
2015 118.25 118.59 120.37 119.57 120.82 123.7 123.31 123.17 120.13 119.99 122.58 121.78
2016 118.18 115.01 113.05 109.72 109.24 105.44 103.97 101.28 101.99 103.81 108.33 116.01
2017 114.69 113.13 113.02 110.08 112.24 110.89 112.50 109.90 110.67 112.94 112.89 112.96
2018 110.74 107.90 106.01 107.49 109.74 110.02 111.41 111.06 111.91 112.81 113.36 112.38
2019 108.97 110.36 111.22 111.63 109.76 108.07 108.23 106.34 107.40 108.12 108.88 109.18
2020 109.38 109.96 107.67 107.83 107.23 107.64 106.76 106.00 105.61 105.21 104.30 103.75
2021 103.79 105.44 108.81 109.10 109.17 110.12 110.26 109.85 110.15 113.14 113.99 113.84
2022 114.84 115.24 118.67 126.31 128.82 134.10 136.39 135.28 143.09 147.16 142.17 134.85
2023 130.28 132.69 133.86 133.40 137.39 141.33 141.20 144.73 147.65 149.59 149.88 144.09
2024 146.59 149.41 149.70 153.57 156.21 157.90 157.86 146.29 143.31 149.60 153.82 153.72
2025 156.42 152.03
Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Month

Average monthly real effective exchange rate

[edit]

The table below shows monthly averages of real effective exchange rates. A higher figure indicates a stronger yen, while a lower figure indicates a weaker yen with the value of 100 being the 2020 average. Data from 1970 onwards are presented in the Broad range, while data from 1969 and earlier are presented in the Narrow range.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Year Month
Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
1964 Template:056.84 Template:056.41 Template:056.40 Template:056.94 Template:060.09 Template:059.97 Template:059.93 Template:060.40 Template:060.92 Template:061.63 Template:061.27 Template:061.52
1965 Template:062.61 Template:062.12 Template:062.28 Template:063.00 Template:062.54 Template:062.28 Template:061.91 Template:062.02 Template:062.89 Template:063.51 Template:063.10 Template:063.18
1966 Template:063.69 Template:063.76 Template:063.49 Template:064.06 Template:063.35 Template:063.05 Template:063.11 Template:062.41 Template:063.16 Template:063.30 Template:062.62 Template:063.26
1967 Template:063.71 Template:063.74 Template:063.88 Template:063.89 Template:062.98 Template:062.56 Template:062.36 Template:062.51 Template:063.41 Template:064.36 Template:064.17 Template:065.34
1968 Template:065.59 Template:065.66 Template:065.49 Template:065.35 Template:065.24 Template:064.61 Template:064.60 Template:064.92 Template:066.52 Template:066.30 Template:066.44 Template:066.00
1969 Template:066.01 Template:065.74 Template:066.05 Template:066.16 Template:066.24 Template:065.95 Template:066.34 Template:066.85 Template:067.54 Template:066.65 Template:066.60 Template:066.80
1970 Template:075.02 Template:074.58 Template:074.86 Template:074.93 Template:074.41 Template:074.28 Template:073.79 Template:073.45 Template:074.15 Template:075.03 Template:074.89 Template:074.97
1971 Template:074.89 Template:074.71 Template:074.65 Template:075.43 Template:075.29 Template:075.25 Template:075.52 Template:075.14 Template:080.37 Template:081.83 Template:081.50 Template:082.60
1972 Template:083.65 Template:085.23 Template:086.25 Template:086.88 Template:086.52 Template:086.83 Template:087.18 Template:087.21 Template:087.44 Template:088.13 Template:087.95 Template:088.22
1973 Template:088.43 Template:093.68 Template:099.43 Template:099.33 Template:099.69 Template:097.63 Template:096.06 Template:096.44 Template:098.40 Template:096.87 Template:094.10 Template:096.67
1974 Template:094.83 Template:096.83 Template:098.09 100.51 Template:098.97 Template:098.17 Template:096.24 Template:093.02 Template:094.59 Template:095.45 Template:094.32 Template:094.31
1975 Template:094.07 Template:095.36 Template:096.45 Template:096.57 Template:096.16 Template:094.88 Template:095.39 Template:095.41 Template:096.77 Template:096.54 Template:095.61 Template:094.70
1976 Template:096.02 Template:097.17 Template:098.03 100.70 100.62 100.61 102.21 102.09 105.77 104.53 102.72 103.28
1977 104.31 106.33 107.79 110.47 109.90 110.34 112.03 110.70 112.16 117.24 119.79 119.61
1978 117.86 117.68 121.74 128.01 126.35 130.89 138.18 144.39 143.49 145.01 138.74 134.75
1979 132.12 128.56 124.63 119.48 118.54 116.75 116.01 113.13 110.68 107.59 100.07 100.74
1980 101.44 Template:098.70 Template:098.22 Template:098.82 106.14 109.72 107.31 105.42 110.53 113.48 112.34 113.93
1981 118.07 117.44 115.05 112.89 112.33 111.26 107.35 106.89 107.79 105.70 108.10 110.60
1982 107.74 103.82 102.40 102.07 103.56 Template:098.88 Template:097.17 Template:096.67 Template:096.62 Template:094.31 Template:096.37 103.85
1983 107.56 105.95 106.12 106.47 108.31 106.33 105.83 104.67 106.28 110.38 109.37 110.31
1984 111.25 110.07 112.50 113.19 112.37 110.11 107.66 106.84 108.62 109.03 109.05 108.73
1985 107.09 105.28 106.41 106.88 106.86 107.15 108.57 109.10 109.93 119.08 123.62 123.33
1986 123.96 132.45 135.48 138.53 144.34 143.03 149.58 151.97 150.87 149.01 142.55 141.60
1987 143.91 143.51 144.86 152.72 153.64 149.13 142.96 144.92 148.60 147.75 152.16 157.69
1988 157.86 156.01 157.01 158.89 159.12 156.73 151.78 151.83 151.42 156.40 159.58 157.76
1989 154.20 152.76 150.37 149.97 145.10 140.27 140.84 140.20 137.70 139.34 135.86 133.87
1990 130.73 129.33 123.74 119.75 122.90 122.12 123.67 122.54 130.03 138.48 138.24 133.76
1991 133.87 135.15 132.79 135.39 135.04 134.32 135.67 135.35 136.21 141.27 140.12 139.57
1992 142.41 140.21 136.24 136.13 137.56 139.94 137.51 136.29 141.26 145.52 146.06 146.09
1993 145.07 151.19 155.81 160.89 163.44 169.43 171.59 178.56 173.69 170.94 169.99 166.32
1994 164.09 170.65 172.27 174.85 172.72 172.35 176.40 173.22 173.68 173.81 173.97 170.57
1995 169.61 170.38 182.00 193.97 191.35 191.26 184.04 170.97 161.88 159.48 157.46 158.02
1996 151.68 150.54 150.03 148.45 150.17 146.29 145.44 146.15 143.81 141.04 139.92 138.72
1997 134.34 129.37 130.53 129.86 137.50 142.70 143.14 141.96 139.71 140.99 136.38 137.71
1998 142.75 143.57 138.72 134.02 132.12 128.71 127.33 123.75 132.15 145.16 145.03 147.76
1999 152.38 148.27 146.33 146.37 143.32 144.92 145.88 153.60 163.05 163.66 165.44 168.50
2000 162.97 156.40 161.77 164.01 162.57 163.77 161.06 162.07 164.68 163.58 162.86 157.10
2001 149.26 149.77 144.39 142.62 145.00 145.25 142.37 144.10 146.64 144.34 142.90 137.43
2002 131.53 129.68 132.08 131.66 134.85 136.45 140.47 140.64 138.40 134.89 136.24 134.86
2003 135.69 133.74 134.92 133.37 134.10 132.29 132.45 132.98 136.27 140.96 140.39 140.47
2004 140.04 139.10 137.38 138.32 133.74 136.69 135.74 134.57 134.77 135.60 138.13 136.97
2005 137.34 133.68 132.80 130.79 132.12 130.72 127.03 126.91 126.30 122.57 119.18 118.46
2006 119.50 116.36 117.04 115.83 119.90 117.88 116.12 115.99 114.83 113.28 112.68 111.18
2007 108.22 106.54 109.24 106.57 104.47 102.38 101.65 106.90 107.27 104.61 107.50 106.21
2008 109.12 107.79 113.15 109.93 109.18 106.31 105.42 105.52 110.51 122.97 129.91 137.00
2009 137.51 136.05 128.82 125.28 124.95 123.55 125.77 124.36 127.70 127.10 127.82 126.84
2010 124.50 126.81 125.81 121.10 125.49 128.28 130.53 132.58 132.64 133.64 131.82 130.63
2011 129.83 128.13 128.53 123.86 126.80 127.55 128.54 132.20 134.77 135.86 133.74 133.98
2012 134.95 130.59 124.53 126.39 130.18 131.89 131.84 131.32 130.30 128.09 124.56 119.56
2013 111.68 106.05 105.13 101.81 Template:098.91 103.09 101.16 103.03 101.21 101.77 Template:099.96 Template:096.51
2014 Template:096.11 Template:097.68 Template:097.53 Template:099.23 100.09 Template:099.82 Template:099.99 Template:099.17 Template:095.94 Template:095.80 Template:089.64 Template:088.47
2015 Template:090.59 Template:090.25 Template:090.07 Template:090.44 Template:089.14 Template:087.04 Template:087.96 Template:089.50 Template:092.39 Template:091.85 Template:090.64 Template:091.80
2016 Template:095.47 Template:097.04 Template:097.57 Template:099.57 101.09 104.48 106.10 108.28 107.59 106.96 104.06 Template:097.80
2017 Template:097.79 Template:098.46 Template:098.36 100.78 Template:098.38 Template:098.62 Template:096.40 Template:097.59 Template:095.93 Template:094.74 Template:094.94 Template:094.36
2018 Template:094.12 Template:095.30 Template:097.00 Template:095.54 Template:095.37 Template:095.93 Template:096.18 Template:097.85 Template:096.78 Template:096.78 Template:096.62 Template:097.10
2019 Template:099.20 Template:096.92 Template:096.21 Template:096.00 Template:098.51 Template:099.79 Template:099.33 102.87 101.64 100.47 Template:099.19 Template:098.56
2020 Template:097.49 Template:097.35 101.60 102.99 103.42 100.94 100.76 100.24 Template:099.75 Template:099.35 Template:098.68 Template:097.44
2021 Template:097.05 Template:095.02 Template:093.12 Template:091.83 Template:091.04 Template:090.25 Template:091.11 Template:091.44 Template:091.15 Template:088.25 Template:087.59 Template:087.75
2022 Template:086.66 Template:085.89 Template:083.97 Template:079.30 Template:079.44 Template:075.97 Template:075.70 Template:077.01 Template:074.55 Template:073.71 Template:075.20 Template:077.67
2023 Template:078.95 Template:077.16 Template:077.49 Template:077.54 Template:076.04 Template:074.34 Template:074.37 Template:073.08 Template:072.33 Template:072.50 Template:071.44 Template:073.40
2024 Template:072.58 Template:070.72 Template:070.81 Template:069.87 Template:068.90 Template:068.37 Template:068.27 Template:072.87 Template:073.49 Template:071.23 Template:071.11 Template:071.84
2025 Template:071.34 Template:072.83
Year Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
Month

Template:Multiple image Template:Multiple image Template:Multiple image Template:Multiple image Template:Multiple image Template:Multiple image Template:Exchange rate

See also

[edit]

Older currency

[edit]

Notes

[edit]

Template:Notelist

References

[edit]

Citations

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Template:Reflist

Sources

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Further reading

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