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English: Graph showing U.S. dollar and Japanese yen exchange rate from January, 1950. 日本語: 1950年1月からのアメリカドルと日本円の為替レートのグラフ。 Date
The data on exchange rate for Japanese Yen is in per 100 Yen. The end year rate for 1998–99 pertain to March 26, 1999 of Deutsche Mark rate. Data from 1971 to 1991–92 are based on official exchange rates. Data from 1992 to 1993 onward are based on FEDAI (Foreign Exchange Dealers' Association of India) indicative rates.
1971: The Smithsonian Agreement revalued the yen from 360 to 308 per dollar. 1973–1: The yen was weakened during the energy crisis. 1978: The yen was strengthened to 180 per dollar, resulting in the first endaka. 1979–1984: yen remained between 200–250 per dollar. 1985: The Plaza Accord revalued the yen from 250 to 160 per dollar. 1986 ...
These are average rates for the previous year, so the latest rates in the September 2024 report would be for 2023. This means that before the report is published, the table would be missing the rates for two years, both for the current year and the previous year. After the report is published, only the current year's rates would be missing.
Beginning in 2022 the yen/dollar rate has become increasingly weaker with each passing month. By July 2024, the price fell to upper ¥161 per $1, marking the lowest exchange rate for the yen in 37.5 years on a nominal effective exchange rate [77] and the lowest real effective exchange rate since the start of statistics by the Bank of Japan in 1970.
The Plaza Accord was a joint agreement signed on September 22, 1985, at the Plaza Hotel in New York City, between France, West Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States, to depreciate the U.S. dollar in relation to the French franc, the German Deutsche Mark, the Japanese yen and the British pound sterling by intervening in currency markets.
View history; Tools. Tools. move to sidebar hide. Actions ... This is a list of circulating fixed exchange rate currencies, ... Singapore dollar: 1 Bulgarian lev: Euro:
In 1946, following the Second World War, Japan removed the old currency (旧円券) and introduced the "New Yen" (新円券). [1] Meanwhile, American occupation forces used a parallel system, called B yen, from 1945 to 1958. Since then, together with the economic expansion of Japan, the yen has become one of the major currencies of the world. [9]