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Rupiah

Sample of Rupiah banknote

The rupiah is the monetary unit of Indonesia (currency code IDR).

The name derives from the Indian monetary unit rupee. Indonesia used the Dutch guilder from 1610 to 1817, when the Dutch East Indies guilder was introduced. The rupiah was first introduced by during the World War II Japanese occupation, and after the end of the war the Java Bank briefly issued its own Java rupiah as a replacement. The Netherlands' Nica guilder and various guerrilla-linked currencies were also in use around the archipelago.

Four years after independence, the Indonesian rupiah was introduced on November 2, 1949 as the new national currency. The Riau islands and the Indonesian half of New Guinea (Irian Barat) had their own variants of the rupiah, but these were subsumed into the national rupiah in 1964 and 1971 respectively. Devalued by rampant inflation, on December 13, 1965 the New Rupiah was introduced at a rate of 1000 old rupiah to one new rupiah.

The Asian economic crisis of 1997–1998 reduced the rupiah's value by 35% overnight and was a major factor in the overthrow of President Suharto's government. The rupiah had traded at about 2000–3000 rupiah per 1 US dollar, but reached a low of 16800 rupiah per dollar in June 1998.

The rupiah is a freely convertible currency, but trades at a penalty due to continued high inflation. As of April 2005, 1 US dollar is approximately equal to 9,500 rupiah.

Indonesian currency comes in whole units only, as sen (1/100 rupiah) have been eliminated due to inflation.

Coins and Banknotes

  • Coins:
    • 25 Rupiah
    • 50 Rupiah
    • 100 Rupiah
    • 500 Rupiah
    • 1,000 Rupiah
  • Banknotes:
    • 1,000 Rupiah
    • 5,000 Rupiah
    • 10,000 Rupiah
    • 20,000 Rupiah
    • 50,000 Rupiah
    • 100,000 Rupiah

External links


Rupees

Indian Rupee | Mauritian Rupee | Nepalese Rupee | Pakistani Rupee | Seychelles Rupee | Sri Lankan Rupee | Indonesian Rupiah | Maldivian Rufiyah

Formerly used Rupees include: Burmese Rupee | French Indian Rupee | German East African Rupie | Gulf Rupee | Portuguese Indian Rupia



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Currencies of Asia and the Pacific
Central Afghan Afghani | Kazakstani Tenge | Kyrgyzstani Som | Mongolian Tugrug | Russian Ruble | Tajikistani Somoni | Turkmenistani Manat | Uzbekistani Som
East Chinese Renminbi | (Hong Kong dollar) | Japanese Yen | (Macanese Pataca) | North Korean Won | South Korean Won | Taiwan Dollar
South-East Brunei dollar | Cambodian Riel | Indonesian Rupiah | Laos Kip | Malaysian ringgit | Myanmar Kyat | Philippine peso | Singapore dollar | Thai Baht | US Dollar (East Timor) | Vietnamese dong
South Bangladeshi Taka | Bhutanese Ngultrum | Indian Rupee | Maldives Rufiyah | Nepalese Rupee | Pakistani Rupee | Sri Lankan Rupee
West Armenian Dram | Azer Manat | Bahraini Dinar | Egyptian pound | Georgian Lari | Iranian Rial | Iraqi dinar | New Israeli sheqel | Jordanian dinar | Kuwaiti dinar | Lebanese pound | Omani Rial | Qatari Riyal | Saudi Riyal | Syrian pound | New Turkish Lira | UAE dirham | Yemeni rial
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