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The private banking sector tended to use Spanish dollar accounts at the fixed exchange rate of $1 = 4s 2d. The Eastern Caribbean group formed a monetary union with British Guiana in 1949 and the currency was known as the British West Indies dollar. Trinidad and Tobago left the arrangement in 1964.
9.1 US dollar as exchange rate anchor. 9.2 Composite exchange rate anchor. 9.3 Monetary aggregate target. 9.4 Inflation-targeting framework. ... Trinidad and Tobago
2006 Series of the Trinidad and Tobago dollar. The currency of the union was replaced by the modern Trinidad and Tobago dollar in 1964, [16] two years after the nation's independence in 1962. [17] The Trinidad and Tobago dollar was launched, and had become the sole currency by 1967. [17] In 1964, Trinidad and Tobago introduced its own dollar.
2.00 BBD = 1.00 USD Caribbean Netherlands: United States dollar: USD: De Nederlandsche Bank (monetary authority) Federal Reserve Bank (U.S. dollar) float Cayman Islands: Cayman Islands dollar: KYD: Cayman Islands Monetary Authority: 1.00 KYD = 1.20 USD Cuba: Cuban peso: CUP: Central Bank of Cuba: 24.00 CUP = 1.00 USD Sint Maarten: Netherlands ...
Price level indexes (PLIs), with the world average set at 100, are calculated by dividing the purchasing power parities (PPPs), where 1 PPP equals 1 US dollar in the US, by the market exchange rates, also equated to 1 US dollar. These ratios are then adjusted to align with the global average, which is standardized at 100.
Trinidad and Tobago: Trinidad and Tobago dollar $ TTD Cent: 100 Tunisia: Tunisian dinar: DT TND Millime: 1000 Turkey: Turkish lira ₺ TRY Kuruş: 100 Turkmenistan: Turkmenistani manat: m TMT Tenge: 100 Turks and Caicos Islands: United States dollar $ USD Cent: 100 Tuvalu: Tuvaluan dollar $ (none) Cent: 100 Australian dollar $ AUD Cent: 100 ...
The exchange rate of $4.80 = £1 sterling (equivalent to the old $1 = 4s 2d) continued until 1976 for the new Eastern Caribbean dollar. [1] For a wider outline of the history of currency in the region see Currencies of the British West Indies.
The Central Bank predicted real GDP growth in Trinidad and Tobago of 2.6% in 2014, up from 1.6% in 2013, as the country's energy sector recovered from maintenance delays that reduced activity in the third quarter of 2013.