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  2. Pound (currency) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pound_(currency)

    Countries where a unit of the national currency is "pound" (dark blue) or "lira" (light blue). Pound is the name of various units of currency.It is used in some countries today and previously was used in many others.

  3. Pakistani rupee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pakistani_rupee

    The rupee was pegged to British Pound until 1982 when the government of General Zia-ul-Haq changed to a managed float. As a result, the rupee devalued by 38.5% between 1982–83 and 1987–88 and the cost of importing raw materials increased rapidly, causing pressure on Pakistani finances and damaging much of the industrial base.

  4. Pound sterling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pound_sterling

    Pound sterling is the official currency of the United Kingdom and its territories.

  5. 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.

  6. Pound sign - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pound_sign

    The £ grapheme in a selection of fonts The pound sign (£) is the symbol for the pound unit of sterling – the currency of the United Kingdom and its associated Crown Dependencies and British Overseas Territories and previously of Great Britain and of the Kingdom of England.

  7. Lakh - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lakh

    A lakh (/ l æ k, l ɑː k /; abbreviated L; sometimes written lac [1]) is a unit in the Indian numbering system equal to one hundred thousand (100,000; scientific notation: 10 5). [1] [2] In the Indian 2, 2, 3 convention of digit grouping, it is written as 1,00,000. [3]

  8. Government shutdown odds are rising. Economic experts aren’t ...

    www.aol.com/finance/government-shutdown-odds...

    Washington could be barreling toward yet another spending crisis, but the initial reaction from economic watchers was to play down the prospect of a protracted shutdown.

  9. History of the rupee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_rupee

    India was then a part of the sterling area, and the rupee was devalued on the same day by the same percentage so that the new dollar exchange rate in 1949 became ₹4.76 — which is where it stayed till the rupee devaluation of 1966 made it ₹7.50 to the dollar and the pound moved to ₹21.