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Data from 1992 to 1993 onward are based on FEDAI (Foreign Exchange Dealers' Association of India) indicative rates. Data from 1971 to 1972–73 for the Deutsche Mark and the Japanese Yen are cross rates with the US Dollar. The Euro replaced the Deutsche Mark w.e.f. January 1, 1999.
Pegged exchange rate within horizontal bands (1) Morocco ; Other managed arrangement (12) Kuwait Syria Liberia Myanmar Sierra Leone Zimbabwe Kenya Haiti Kyrgyzstan Tonga Vanuatu Venezuela ; Floating (32) Angola Belarus Madagascar Yemen Albania
Inflation in 1965 was 635%. In late 1965, the 'new rupiah' was brought in, at 1 new rupiah to 1,000 old rupiah. The official exchange rate was set initially at Rp0.25 to US$1 as of 13 December 1965, a rate that did not represent reality, as the multiple exchange-rate system remained in place for the time being.
Singapore continued to use the common currency upon joining Malaysia in 1963 and after Singapore's independence from Malaysia in 1965, [4] but the formal monetary union between Malaysia, Singapore and Brunei stopped in 1967, and Singapore established the Board of Commissioners of Currency, Singapore (BCCS), on 7 April 1967 [5] and issued its ...
In 1994, India and Singapore began their annual naval combat exercise, now called "SIMBEX" Several warships from India and Singapore took part in this interoperable combat exercise. [14] In 2003, India and Singapore signed a Defence Cooperation Agreement, allowing Singapore army and air force to conduct training on Indian soil. [15]
Singapore and India successfully concluded the second review of the India–Singapore Comprehensive Economic Cooperation Agreement (CECA) on 1 June 2018 in the presence of India Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Singapore Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong. [5] It allows for the movement of four types of business people between Singapore and India.
The price index at the end of 1965 had been calculated at 363 times higher than in 1958, and prices had risen approximately seven times over the previous 12 months. [7] In real terms (i.e. with inflation taken into account), a labourer in Jakarta was estimated to have earned 40 per cent of his earnings in 1958. [8]
IDR may refer to: Indonesian rupiah, by ISO 4217 currency code; Devi Ahilyabai Holkar International Airport, Indore, India, by IATA code; Instantaneous Decoding Refresh in H.264/MPEG-4 AVC video, see Network Abstraction Layer; Incentive Distribution Rights, see Master limited partnership