Papua_New_Guinean_kina

Papua New Guinean kina

Papua New Guinean kina

Currency of Papua New Guinea


The Kina (ISO 4217 currency code: PGK, the currency symbol: K) is the currency of Papua New Guinea. It is divided into 100 toea. The name Kina is derived from Kuanua language of the Tolai region, referring to a callable pearl shell used widely for trading in both the Coastal and Highlands areas of the country.

Quick Facts ISO 4217, Code ...

History

The kina was introduced on 19 April 1975 and circulated along with the Australian dollar until 31 December 1975. The two currencies were equal in value (K1 = A$1). The next day, the dollar ceased to be legal tender in Papua New Guinea.[citation needed]

The kina has been a historically stable currency; the economy has never experienced exorbitant rates of monetary inflation.

During its early years, the kina experienced an appreciation relative to the Australian dollar, reaching a value of approximately A$1.30 in 1980. The kina reached a peak relative to the Australian dollar in 1986 (K1 = A$1.54). The kina remained stable until 1995, when the country started experiencing double-digit annual rates of inflation, causing its value to drop gradually. The kina fell below the Australian dollar in 1996. Elevated rates of inflation persisted, and by 2002, the value of the kina fell below A$0.50. For most of the time since then, with the exception of between September 2008 and March 2009, the kina traded below A$0.50.[1]

The average exchange rate of one kina in September 2022 was: K1 = US$0.2840, which means that US$1 = K3.52.[2]

Coins

In 1975, coins were introduced for 1, 2, 5, 10 and 20 toea and 1 kina. The 1 and 2 toea were minted in bronze, with the others in cupronickel. The 1 kina is round and holed in the centre, this denomination was reduced in size starting from 2006, and the larger coin was demonetised from 31 December 2008. 2008 also saw the introduction of a bimetallic 2 kina coin intended to replace the 2 kina note.[3]

The withdrawal of the 1 and 2 toea coins also occurred in 2006 and as from 19 April 2007 are also no longer legal tender. The obverse of a 1 toea coin displays a birdwing butterfly, while a 2 toea coin has a lionfish on its obverse.[4] In 1980, 50 toea coins were introduced but only issued in commemorative form without a standard design. In 2021, a 50 toea coin was issued for general circulation, utilizing the birdwing butterfly design previously used on the now withdrawn 1 toea coin.[5]

More information Denomination, Circulates since ...

Banknotes

On 19 April 1975, notes were introduced for 2, 5 and 10 kina that replaced the Australian dollar at par, so the colour scheme was the same. They circulated along with the dollar until 1 January 1976 when the dollar ceased to be legal tender. The 20 kina was introduced in 1977, 50 kina in 1988, followed by 100 kina in 2005. All colouration of the individual denominations are the same as current and former Australian decimal currency. Beginning in 1991, Papua New Guinea's banknotes have been produced on polymer, although in 2009 the bank issued Kina & Toea Day commemorative notes on paper substrates.[6]

A new issue of banknotes has been issued starting with the 50 kina in 1999,[7] then the 100 kina in 2005, 2[8][9] and 20 kina in 2007[10] and the 5 and 10 kina in 2008.[11][12] This makes all the denominations of the kina issued in polymer. Paper bank notes ceased being accepted by the Bank of PNG from 31 December 2014, and are no longer legal tender.[13]

More information Banknotes of the Papua New Guinean kina (1975 issue), Image ...
More information Banknotes of the Papua New Guinean kina (1981 issue), Image ...
More information Banknotes of the Papua New Guinean kina (Current issue), Image ...

Exchange rate

More information Current PGK exchange rates ...

See also

History:


References

  1. "Official exchange rate (LCU per US$, period average) - Papua New Guinea, Australia | Data". data.worldbank.org. Retrieved 17 December 2021.
  2. Linzmayer, Owen (2012). "Papua New Guinea". The Banknote Book. San Francisco, CA: www.BanknoteNews.com.
  3. "Banknote World - World Currency & Paper Money Collectors". Archived from the original on 25 March 2016. Retrieved 18 December 2010.
  4. Papua New Guinea BanknoteNews.com. Retrieved 2008-04-29.

Sources

Preceded by:
Australian dollar
Reason: independence
Ratio: at par
Currency of Papua New Guinea
19 April 1975
Concurrent with: Australian dollar until 1 January 1976
Succeeded by:
Current

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Papua_New_Guinean_kina, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.