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  2. Exchange rate history of the Indian rupee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exchange_rate_history_of...

    This is a list of tables showing the historical timeline of the exchange rate for the Indian rupee (INR) against the special drawing rights unit (SDR), United States dollar (USD), pound sterling (GBP), Deutsche mark (DM), euro (EUR) and Japanese yen (JPY). The rupee was worth one shilling and sixpence in sterling in 1947.

  3. List of circulating fixed exchange rate currencies - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_circulating_fixed...

    Fixed currency Anchor currency Rate (anchor / fixed) Abkhazian apsar: Russian ruble: 0.1 Alderney pound (only coins) [1]: Pound sterling: 1 Aruban florin: U.S. dollar: 1.79

  4. Exchange rate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exchange_rate

    Example of GNP-weighted nominal exchange rate history of a basket of 6 important currencies (US Dollar, Euro, Japanese Yen, Chinese Renminbi, Swiss Franks, Pound Sterling Bilateral exchange rate involves a currency pair, while an effective exchange rate is a weighted average of a basket of foreign currencies, and it can be viewed as an overall ...

  5. History of the rupee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_rupee

    INR value against USD. The rupee was never equal to the dollar. At the time of independence (in 1947), India's currency was pegged to pound sterling, and the exchange rate was a shilling and six pence for a rupee — which worked out to ₹13.33 to the pound. [23]

  6. Pound drops to lowest level against dollar since 1985

    www.aol.com/pound-drops-lowest-level-against...

    It comes after rally by the dollar against global currencies and fears over the impact of significant borrowing by the new government.

  7. Devaluation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Devaluation

    In macroeconomics and modern monetary policy, a devaluation is an official lowering of the value of a country's currency within a fixed exchange-rate system, in which a monetary authority formally sets a lower exchange rate of the national currency in relation to a foreign reference currency or currency basket.

  8. Foreign exchange market - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foreign_exchange_market

    The market convention is to quote most exchange rates against the USD with the US dollar as the base currency (e.g. USDJPY, USDCAD, USDCHF). The exceptions are the British pound (GBP), Australian dollar (AUD), the New Zealand dollar (NZD) and the euro (EUR) where the USD is the counter currency (e.g. GBPUSD, AUDUSD, NZDUSD, EURUSD).

  9. 1976 sterling crisis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1976_sterling_crisis

    GBP/USD exchange rate. The 1976 sterling crisis was a currency crisis in the United Kingdom. Inflation (at close to 25% in 1975, causing high bond yields and borrowing costs), a balance-of-payments deficit, a public-spending deficit, and the 1973 oil crisis were contributors.