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100,000-Won Bill (South Korea)


akdrv

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The 100,000-won ($107) bill is likely to make a debut here probable in 2008 as the Ministry of Finance and Economy showed willingness Thursday to back off from its long-standing objection to the idea. The matter has long been a bone of contention. However, we welcome the move of having a higher denomination bank note, though belated considering our position as the 11th largest economic power.

 

A change in the value of the 10,000-won bill, the highest banknote here, shows the necessity of having 100,000-won bills. Since its debut in 1973, inflation has eroded its value to less than one-tenth of what it was. The volume of our gross domestic product (GDP) has made a whopping 60-times increase in the last 30 years and it is ridiculous to keep the 10,000-won bill as the highest denomination. Korea is the country with its highest-denomination banknote having the least face value among OECD member states.

 

http://times.hankooki.com/lpage/opinion/20...19192854040.htm

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It is even interesting in China, which will become even more of an economic superpower, where the largest bill in circulation is 100 Yuan, worth about $12.00. If you have large transactions you carry around piles of Yuan, but then the smallest currency in circulation the 1 Jiao or 1/10th of a Yuan is worth about 1¢ in USA $. There are still a few of the Fen notes in circulation with the date of 1953, but still being circulated in rural areas, they are about 1/10 of a 1¢ US.

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It is even interesting in China, which will become even more of an economic superpower, where the largest bill in circulation is 100 Yuan, worth about $12.00. If you have large transactions you carry around piles of Yuan, but then the smallest currency in circulation the 1 Jiao or 1/10th of a Yuan is worth about 1¢ in USA $. There are still a few of the Fen notes in circulation with the date of 1953, but still being circulated in rural areas, they are about 1/10 of a 1¢ US.

 

China is interesting as it is in many ways two countries - the modern major cities where a night out with a good dinner will cost a pile of red notes, and the countryside, where there are many struggling by with an annual household income of just a few hundred yuan, and every fen counts.

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