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Currency stacked in the game's "bank" Monopoly money (symbol: ₩) is a type of play money used in the board game Monopoly.It is different from most currencies, including the American currency or British currency upon which it is based, in that it is smaller, one-sided, and does not have different imagery for each denomination.
March 22, 1975 50 hwan 22.86 mm 3.69 g Copper 70% Zinc 18% Nickel 12% Geobukseon, value, bank title (Hangul) Value (digit), "Republic of Korea", year of minting 1959 (Korean calendar 4292) October 20, 1959 March 22, 1975 100 hwan 26.0 mm 6.74 g Cupronickel Copper 75% Nickel 25% Syngman Rhee, value, bank title (Hangul) October 30, 1959 June 10, 1962
Reporting on mm2 Asia’s annual report for the year to March 2021, Nexia TS Public Accounting Corporation noted a “material uncertainty” regarding the group’s ability to continue as a going ...
The National Bank of Ukraine has issued four banknote series since 1996. All banknotes in denominations of ₴1, ₴2, ₴5, ₴10, ₴20, ₴50, ₴100, ₴200, ₴500 and ₴1,000 issued after 2003 (of the third and fourth series) are considered legal tender. All of them depict an important person in Ukraine's history on the obverse and a ...
In 1945, paper money production resumed essentially unaltered from before the war, with the government issuing notes of 1, 5 and 10 cents and 1 dollar, and the three banks issuing notes of 5, 10, 50, 100 and 500 dollars. 1-dollar notes were replaced by coins in 1960, with only the 1-cent note issued by the government after 1965.
Back in 2019, a new largest denomination was issued, the 100,000-sum banknote (as of October 2019 worth US$10.55), which made the situation easier. The smallest denomination, the 1 tiyin , is worth less than 1 ⁄ 9400 of a US cent making it the "world's most worthless coin" that was still legal tender until 1 March 2020.
In July 2023, a new Ks. 20,000/- banknote was announced amidst economic instability from the aftermath of the 2021 Myanmar coup d'état. The reasoning was not explained, but was likely to commemorate the birth of a white elephant and the construction of the Maravijaya Buddha statue in Naypyidaw .
Banknotes come in denominations of 5, 10, 20, 50, and 100 SRD. [5] Years of high inflation have greatly reduced the purchasing power of the Surinamese dollar. To ease handling of cash, banknotes of 200 and 500 SRD were announced in August 2023 and introduced by the end of March 2024. [6] [7]