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Hungarian forint

The forint (sign Ft; code HUF) is the currency of Hungary. It was formerly divided into 100 fillér, but fillér coins are no longer in circulation. The introduction of the forint on 1 August 1946 was a crucial step in the post-World War II stabilisation of the Hungarian economy, and the currency remained relatively stable until the 1980s. Transition to a market economy in the early 1990s adversely affected the value of the forint; inflation peaked at 35% in 1991. Between 2001 and 2022, inflation was in single digits, and the forint has been declared fully convertible.[1] In May 2022, inflation reached 10.7% amid the war in Ukraine and economic uncertainty.[2] As a member of the European Union, the long-term aim of the Hungarian government may be to replace the forint with the euro, although under the current government there is no target date for adopting the euro.[3]

Hungarian forint
Magyar forint (Hungarian)
Hungarian forint banknotes
ISO 4217
CodeHUF (numeric: 348)
Subunit0.01
Unit
Pluralforintok (nominative only)
SymbolFt
Denominations
Subunit
1100fillér
(defunct)
Banknotes500 Ft, 1,000 Ft, 2,000 Ft, 5,000 Ft, 10,000 Ft, 20,000 Ft
Coins
 Freq. used5 Ft, 10 Ft, 20 Ft, 50 Ft, 100 Ft, 200 Ft
Demographics
Date of introduction1 August 1946
ReplacedHungarian adópengő
User(s) Hungary
Issuance
Central bankHungarian National Bank
 Websitewww.mnb.hu
PrinterHungarian Banknote Printing Company
 Websitewww.penzjegynyomda.hu
MintHungarian Mint Ltd.
 Websitewww.penzvero.hu
Valuation
Inflation3.8% (January 2024)
 Sourcewww.ksh.hu
 MethodCPI

History edit

 
Forint of Louis I of Hungary (1342–1382). Reverse: LODOVICVS DEI GRACIA REX. Obverse: S[ANCTVS] IOHANNES B[APTISTA].
 
Forint of Matthias Corvinus of Hungary (1458–1490). Obverse: S[ANCTVS] LADISLAVS REX. Reverse: MATHIAS D[EI] G[RATIA] R[EX] VNGARIE.

The forint's name comes from the city of Florence, where gold coins called fiorino d'oro were minted from 1252. In Hungary, the florentinus (later forint), also a gold-based currency, was used from 1325 under Charles Robert, with several other countries following Hungary's example.[4]

Between 1868 and 1892, the forint was the name used in Hungarian for the currency of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, known in German as the Gulden. It was subdivided into 100 krajczár (krajcár in modern Hungarian orthography; cf German Kreuzer).[5]

The forint was reintroduced on 1 August 1946, after the pengő was rendered worthless by massive hyperinflation in 1945–46, the highest ever recorded. This was brought about by a mixture of the high demand for reparations from the USSR, Soviet plundering of Hungarian industries, and the holding of Hungary's gold reserves in the United States.[6] The different parties in the government had different plans to solve this problem. To the Independent Smallholders' Party–which had won a large majority in the 1945 Hungarian parliamentary election–as well as the Social Democrats, outside support was essential. However, the Soviet Union and its local supporters in the Hungarian Communist Party were opposed to raising loans in the West, and thus the Communist Party masterminded the procedure using exclusively domestic resources. The Communist plan called for tight limits on personal spending, as well as the concentration of existing stocks[clarification needed] in state hands.[7]

The forint replaced the pengő at the theoretical rate of 1 forint = 4×1029 pengő, thus dropping 29 zeroes from the old currency. In reality, with the highest-value note being 100 million B. pengő (1020 pengő), the total amount of pengő in circulation had a value of less than 11000 of a forint. (The "B" stood for a long scale "billion", i.e., a million million.) Of more significance was the exchange rate to the adópengő of 1 forint = 200 million adópengő.[citation needed]

Historically, the forint was subdivided into 100 fillér (comparable to a penny), although fillér coins have been rendered useless by inflation and have not been in circulation since 1999. (Since 2000, one forint has typically been worth about half a US cent or slightly less.) The Hungarian abbreviation for forint is Ft, which is written after the number with a space between. The name fillér, the subdivision of all Hungarian currencies since 1925, comes from the German word Vierer which denoted a four-krajcár-piece. The abbreviation for the fillér was f, also written after the number with a space in between.[citation needed]

When the forint was introduced, its value was defined on the basis of 1 kilogram of gold being 13,210 forints. Therefore, given that gold was fixed at US$35 per Troy ounce, one USD was at that time worth 11.74 forints.

After its 1946 introduction, the forint remained stable for the following two decades, but started to lose its purchasing power as the state-socialist economic system (planned economy) lost its competitiveness during the 1970s and 1980s. After the democratic change of 1989–90, the forint saw yearly inflation figures of about 35% for three years, but significant market economy reforms helped stabilize it.[citation needed]

Coins edit

In 1946, coins were introduced in denominations of 2, 10, 20 fillérs and 1, 2, 5 forints. The silver 5 forint coin was reissued only in the next year; later it was withdrawn from circulation. Five and 50 fillérs coins were issued in 1948. In 1967, a 5 forint coin was reintroduced, followed by a 10 forint in 1971 and 20 forint in 1982.

In 1992, a new series of coins was introduced in denominations of 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100 and (a somewhat different, 500 silver) 200 forint. Production of the 2 and 5 fillér coins ceased in 1992, with all fillér coins withdrawn from circulation by 1999. From 1996, a bicolor 100 forint coin was minted to replace the 1992 version, since the latter was considered too big and ugly, and could easily be mistaken for the 20 forint coin.

Silver 200 forint coins were withdrawn in 1998 (as their nominal value was too low compared to their precious metal content); the 1 and 2 forint coins remained legal tender until 29 February 2008.[8] For cash purchases, the total price is now rounded to the nearest multiple of 5 forint (to 0 or to 5).[9] A new 200 forint coin[10] made of base metal alloy was introduced in place of the 200 forint banknote on 15 June 2009.

Banknotes edit

In 1946, 10 and 100 forint notes were introduced by the Hungarian National Bank. A new series of higher quality banknotes (in denominations of 10, 20 and 100 forints) were introduced in 1947 and 1948. 50 forint notes were added in 1953, 500 forint notes were introduced in 1970, followed by 1,000 forints in 1983, and 5,000 forints in 1991.

A completely redesigned new series of banknotes in denominations of 200, 500, 1,000, 2,000, 5,000, 10,000 and 20,000 forints was introduced gradually between 1997 and 2001. Each banknote depicts a famous Hungarian leader or politician on the obverse and a place or event related to him on the reverse. All of the banknotes are watermarked, contain an embedded vertical security strip and are suitable for visually impaired people. The 1,000 forints and higher denominations are protected by an interwoven holographic security strip. The notes share the common size of 154 mm × 70 mm (6.1 in × 2.8 in). The banknotes are printed by the Hungarian Banknote Printing Corp. in Budapest on paper manufactured by the Diósgyőr Papermill in Miskolc.

Commemorative banknotes have also been issued recently: 1,000 and 2,000 forint notes to commemorate the millennium (in 2000) and a 500-forint note to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the 1956 revolution (in 2006).

The 200-forint banknote was withdrawn from circulation in 2009, as its value inflated over time.[11] The banknote was replaced by a bimetallic 200-forint coin featuring the iconic Széchenyi Chain Bridge.[12]

Forgery of forint banknotes is not significant. However, forged 20,000 forint notes printed on the paper of 2,000 forint notes after dissolving the original ink might come up and are not easy to recognize. Another denomination preferred by counterfeiters was the 1,000 forint note until improved security features were added in 2006.

Worn banknotes no longer fit for circulation are withdrawn, destroyed and turned into briquettes which are donated to public benefit (charitable) organizations to be used as heating fuel.[13]

In 2014, a new revised version of the 1997 banknote series was gradually put into circulation beginning with the 10,000 Ft banknote in 2014 and completed with the 500 Ft banknote in 2019.

In 2022 after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the EUR-HUF exchange rate breached the 400 forints per 1 euro line for the first time, but rates at that level or higher lasted until the end of 2022. Some time later, the forint also depreciated against the US dollar, breaching the same line.[14][15] The forint returned to less than 400 forints per 1 euro in January 2023.[14] Against the US dollar the forint strengthened more markedly, returning to levels below 400 in November 2022 and below 350 in April 2023.

Current exchange rates edit

Current HUF exchange rates
From Google Finance: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRY
From Yahoo! Finance: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRY
From XE.com: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRY
From OANDA: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRY

Historic rates edit

Forints per dollar, euro, etc.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ BBC News Hungary lifts last currency restrictions. 18 June 2001
  2. ^ "1.1.1.2. Consumer price index by aggregate groups of consumption, and consumer price index for pensioners". www.ksh.hu. Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  3. ^ Szakacs, Gergely (18 October 2021). "Hungary's new opposition PM candidate wants stronger ties with EU". Reuters. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  4. ^ Engel, Pál, 1938-2001. (2001). The realm of St. Stephen : a history of medieval Hungary, 895-1526. London: I.B. Tauris. ISBN 1-4175-4080-X. OCLC 56676014.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  5. ^ "A stable currency in search of a stable Empire? The Austro-Hungarian experience of monetary union". History & Policy. 19 April 2017.
  6. ^ "GLOSSARY". www.rev.hu. Retrieved 10 January 2021.
  7. ^ "An Attempt at a New, Democratic Start: 1944–1946". The Institute for the History of the 1956 Revolution.
  8. ^ [1] 21 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine 1 and 2 forint coins were withdrawn from use from 1 March 2008.
  9. ^ [2] 21 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine The sum of total purchases is rounded
  10. ^ [3] 4 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine The new 200 forint coin
  11. ^ "Coins to replace 200 forint banknotes". www.mnb.hu. Retrieved 26 March 2022.
  12. ^ "Coins". www.mnb.hu. Retrieved 26 March 2022.
  13. ^ Calling for MNB-tender for public benefit organizations (MNB-pályázat közhasznú szervezetek számára)
  14. ^ a b "ECB euro reference exchange rate: Hungarian forint (HUF)". European Central Bank (in Hungarian). Retrieved 16 July 2022.
  15. ^ "US Dollar (USD) to Hungarian Forint (HUF) exchange rate history". www.exchangerates.org.uk. Retrieved 16 July 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Gyula Rádóczy; Géza Tasnádi (1992). Magyar papírpénzek 1848–1992 (Hungarian paper money 1848–1992). Danubius Kódex Kiadói Kft. ISBN 963-7434-11-9.
  • Károly Leányfalusi; Ádám Nagy (1998). Magyarország fém- és papírpénzei 1926–1998 (Coins and paper money of Hungary 1926–1998). Magyar Éremgyűjtők Egyesülete, Budapest. ISBN 963-03-6023-3.
  • Károly Léányfalusi; Ádám Nagy (2006). Magyarország fém- és papírpénzei 1946–2006 (Coins and paper money of Hungary 1964–2006). Magyar Éremgyűjtők Egyesülete, Budapest. ISBN 978-963-7122-16-3.
  • Mihály Kupa id. dr. (1993). Corpus notarum pecuniariarum Hungariae I–II. (Magyar Egyetemes Pénzjegytár) (General Hungarian Banknote Catalog). Informatika Történeti Múzeum Alapítvány, Budapest. ISBN 963-04-3658-2.

External links edit

  • , Hungarian National Bank
  • (in Hungarian and English) bankjegy.szabadsagharcos.org (Hungarian banknote catalog)
  • (in Hungarian and English) www.numismatics.hu (Roman and Hungarian related numismatic site)
  • (in Hungarian) papirpenz.hu (pictures of Hungarian banknotes)
  • (in Hungarian) Current HUF/EUR and other rates with charts
  • (in Hungarian, English, German, and French) www.eremgyujtok.hu (homepage of the Hungarian Coin Collectors' Society)
  • (high resolution pictures, also including old forint banknotes)
  • Comprehensive catalog of Hungarian coins
Preceded by:
Hungarian pengő
Reason: inflation
Ratio: 1 forint = 4×1029 pengő (theoretically)
Currency of Hungary
1 August 1946 –
Concurrent with: adópengő until 30 September 1946
Succeeded by:
Current
Preceded by:
Hungarian adópengő
Reason: inflation
Ratio: 1 forint = 200,000,000 adópengő

hungarian, forint, forint, sign, code, currency, hungary, formerly, divided, into, fillér, fillér, coins, longer, circulation, introduction, forint, august, 1946, crucial, step, post, world, stabilisation, hungarian, economy, currency, remained, relatively, st. The forint sign Ft code HUF is the currency of Hungary It was formerly divided into 100 filler but filler coins are no longer in circulation The introduction of the forint on 1 August 1946 was a crucial step in the post World War II stabilisation of the Hungarian economy and the currency remained relatively stable until the 1980s Transition to a market economy in the early 1990s adversely affected the value of the forint inflation peaked at 35 in 1991 Between 2001 and 2022 inflation was in single digits and the forint has been declared fully convertible 1 In May 2022 inflation reached 10 7 amid the war in Ukraine and economic uncertainty 2 As a member of the European Union the long term aim of the Hungarian government may be to replace the forint with the euro although under the current government there is no target date for adopting the euro 3 Hungarian forintMagyar forint Hungarian Hungarian forint banknotesISO 4217CodeHUF numeric 348 Subunit0 01UnitPluralforintok nominative only SymbolFt DenominationsSubunit 1 100filler defunct Banknotes500 Ft 1 000 Ft 2 000 Ft 5 000 Ft 10 000 Ft 20 000 FtCoins Freq used5 Ft 10 Ft 20 Ft 50 Ft 100 Ft 200 FtDemographicsDate of introduction1 August 1946ReplacedHungarian adopengoUser s HungaryIssuanceCentral bankHungarian National Bank Websitewww wbr mnb wbr huPrinterHungarian Banknote Printing Company Websitewww wbr penzjegynyomda wbr huMintHungarian Mint Ltd Websitewww wbr penzvero wbr huValuationInflation3 8 January 2024 Sourcewww wbr ksh wbr hu MethodCPI Contents 1 History 2 Coins 3 Banknotes 4 Current exchange rates 4 1 Historic rates 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed February 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message nbsp Forint of Louis I of Hungary 1342 1382 Reverse LODOVICVS DEI GRACIA REX Obverse S ANCTVS IOHANNES B APTISTA nbsp Forint of Matthias Corvinus of Hungary 1458 1490 Obverse S ANCTVS LADISLAVS REX Reverse MATHIAS D EI G RATIA R EX VNGARIE The forint s name comes from the city of Florence where gold coins called fiorino d oro were minted from 1252 In Hungary the florentinus later forint also a gold based currency was used from 1325 under Charles Robert with several other countries following Hungary s example 4 Between 1868 and 1892 the forint was the name used in Hungarian for the currency of the Austro Hungarian Empire known in German as the Gulden It was subdivided into 100 krajczar krajcar in modern Hungarian orthography cf German Kreuzer 5 The forint was reintroduced on 1 August 1946 after the pengo was rendered worthless by massive hyperinflation in 1945 46 the highest ever recorded This was brought about by a mixture of the high demand for reparations from the USSR Soviet plundering of Hungarian industries and the holding of Hungary s gold reserves in the United States 6 The different parties in the government had different plans to solve this problem To the Independent Smallholders Party which had won a large majority in the 1945 Hungarian parliamentary election as well as the Social Democrats outside support was essential However the Soviet Union and its local supporters in the Hungarian Communist Party were opposed to raising loans in the West and thus the Communist Party masterminded the procedure using exclusively domestic resources The Communist plan called for tight limits on personal spending as well as the concentration of existing stocks clarification needed in state hands 7 The forint replaced the pengo at the theoretical rate of 1 forint 4 1029 pengo thus dropping 29 zeroes from the old currency In reality with the highest value note being 100 million B pengo 1020 pengo the total amount of pengo in circulation had a value of less than 1 1000 of a forint The B stood for a long scale billion i e a million million Of more significance was the exchange rate to the adopengo of 1 forint 200 million adopengo citation needed Historically the forint was subdivided into 100 filler comparable to a penny although filler coins have been rendered useless by inflation and have not been in circulation since 1999 Since 2000 one forint has typically been worth about half a US cent or slightly less The Hungarian abbreviation for forint is Ft which is written after the number with a space between The name filler the subdivision of all Hungarian currencies since 1925 comes from the German word Vierer which denoted a four krajcar piece The abbreviation for the filler was f also written after the number with a space in between citation needed When the forint was introduced its value was defined on the basis of 1 kilogram of gold being 13 210 forints Therefore given that gold was fixed at US 35 per Troy ounce one USD was at that time worth 11 74 forints After its 1946 introduction the forint remained stable for the following two decades but started to lose its purchasing power as the state socialist economic system planned economy lost its competitiveness during the 1970s and 1980s After the democratic change of 1989 90 the forint saw yearly inflation figures of about 35 for three years but significant market economy reforms helped stabilize it citation needed Coins editMain article Coins of the Hungarian forint In 1946 coins were introduced in denominations of 2 10 20 fillers and 1 2 5 forints The silver 5 forint coin was reissued only in the next year later it was withdrawn from circulation Five and 50 fillers coins were issued in 1948 In 1967 a 5 forint coin was reintroduced followed by a 10 forint in 1971 and 20 forint in 1982 In 1992 a new series of coins was introduced in denominations of 1 2 5 10 20 50 100 and a somewhat different 500 silver 200 forint Production of the 2 and 5 filler coins ceased in 1992 with all filler coins withdrawn from circulation by 1999 From 1996 a bicolor 100 forint coin was minted to replace the 1992 version since the latter was considered too big and ugly and could easily be mistaken for the 20 forint coin Silver 200 forint coins were withdrawn in 1998 as their nominal value was too low compared to their precious metal content the 1 and 2 forint coins remained legal tender until 29 February 2008 8 For cash purchases the total price is now rounded to the nearest multiple of 5 forint to 0 or to 5 9 A new 200 forint coin 10 made of base metal alloy was introduced in place of the 200 forint banknote on 15 June 2009 Banknotes editMain article Banknotes of the Hungarian forint In 1946 10 and 100 forint notes were introduced by the Hungarian National Bank A new series of higher quality banknotes in denominations of 10 20 and 100 forints were introduced in 1947 and 1948 50 forint notes were added in 1953 500 forint notes were introduced in 1970 followed by 1 000 forints in 1983 and 5 000 forints in 1991 A completely redesigned new series of banknotes in denominations of 200 500 1 000 2 000 5 000 10 000 and 20 000 forints was introduced gradually between 1997 and 2001 Each banknote depicts a famous Hungarian leader or politician on the obverse and a place or event related to him on the reverse All of the banknotes are watermarked contain an embedded vertical security strip and are suitable for visually impaired people The 1 000 forints and higher denominations are protected by an interwoven holographic security strip The notes share the common size of 154 mm 70 mm 6 1 in 2 8 in The banknotes are printed by the Hungarian Banknote Printing Corp in Budapest on paper manufactured by the Diosgyor Papermill in Miskolc Commemorative banknotes have also been issued recently 1 000 and 2 000 forint notes to commemorate the millennium in 2000 and a 500 forint note to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the 1956 revolution in 2006 The 200 forint banknote was withdrawn from circulation in 2009 as its value inflated over time 11 The banknote was replaced by a bimetallic 200 forint coin featuring the iconic Szechenyi Chain Bridge 12 Forgery of forint banknotes is not significant However forged 20 000 forint notes printed on the paper of 2 000 forint notes after dissolving the original ink might come up and are not easy to recognize Another denomination preferred by counterfeiters was the 1 000 forint note until improved security features were added in 2006 Worn banknotes no longer fit for circulation are withdrawn destroyed and turned into briquettes which are donated to public benefit charitable organizations to be used as heating fuel 13 In 2014 a new revised version of the 1997 banknote series was gradually put into circulation beginning with the 10 000 Ft banknote in 2014 and completed with the 500 Ft banknote in 2019 In 2022 after Russia s invasion of Ukraine the EUR HUF exchange rate breached the 400 forints per 1 euro line for the first time but rates at that level or higher lasted until the end of 2022 Some time later the forint also depreciated against the US dollar breaching the same line 14 15 The forint returned to less than 400 forints per 1 euro in January 2023 14 Against the US dollar the forint strengthened more markedly returning to levels below 400 in November 2022 and below 350 in April 2023 Current exchange rates editCurrent HUF exchange ratesFrom Google Finance AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRY From Yahoo Finance AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRY From XE com AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRY From OANDA AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRY Historic rates edit Forints per dollar euro etc Most traded currencies from 31 December 1990 Year nbsp USD nbsp EUR nbsp DEM nbsp GBP nbsp CHF nbsp JPY 1990 61 45 84 06 40 47 116 58 47 41 0 4524 1991 75 62 100 84 49 83 141 48 55 85 0 6035 1992 83 97 101 10 51 96 127 03 57 61 0 6732 1993 100 70 112 03 58 06 148 90 68 11 0 9022 1994 110 69 135 77 71 47 173 11 84 46 1 1105 1995 139 47 178 45 97 38 215 40 121 19 1 3539 1996 164 93 206 90 106 17 280 30 122 22 1 4174 1997 203 50 223 44 113 59 337 22 139 82 1 5650 1998 219 03 257 12 130 65 362 30 158 94 1 9242 1999 252 52 254 92 130 34 408 30 158 85 2 4706 2000 284 73 264 94 135 46 425 47 173 92 2 4770 2001 279 03 246 33 125 95 404 15 166 23 2 1251 2002 225 16 235 90 120 61 362 67 162 37 1 8966 2003 207 92 262 23 134 08 370 66 168 30 1 9443 2004 180 29 245 93 125 74 347 83 159 34 1 7584 2005 213 58 252 73 129 22 368 40 162 33 1 8200 2006 191 62 252 30 129 00 375 77 156 99 1 6111 2007 172 61 253 35 129 54 344 84 152 42 1 5244 2008 187 91 264 78 135 38 272 36 177 78 2 0823 2009 188 07 270 84 138 48 303 17 182 34 2 0363 2010 208 65 278 75 142 52 323 37 222 68 2 5652 2011 240 68 311 13 159 08 371 15 255 91 3 1051 2012 220 93 291 29 148 93 355 39 241 06 2 5696 2013 215 67 296 91 151 81 356 76 242 14 2 0542 2014 259 13 314 89 161 00 403 75 261 85 2 1686 2015 286 63 313 12 160 10 424 96 289 38 2 3812 2016 293 69 311 02 159 02 361 62 289 41 2 5134 2017 258 82 310 14 158 57 349 48 265 24 2 2984 2018 280 94 321 51 164 38 355 25 285 16 2 5454 2019 294 74 330 52 168 99 387 82 304 39 2 7137 2020 297 36 365 13 186 68 406 16 337 41 2 8864 2021 325 71 369 00 188 66 440 03 356 90 2 8293 2022 375 68 400 25 204 64 451 98 406 93 2 8437 Sources arfolyam iridium hu Currencies of nearby countries from 31 December 2010 Year nbsp PLN nbsp CZK nbsp RON nbsp BGN nbsp HRK nbsp RSD nbsp RUB nbsp TRY 2010 70 40 11 12 65 07 142 54 37 75 2 62 6 83 135 33 2011 70 51 12 05 72 07 159 06 41 27 2 96 7 47 125 57 2012 71 50 11 62 65 71 148 93 38 59 2 56 7 26 123 29 2013 71 60 10 84 66 29 151 81 38 94 2 59 6 55 101 10 2014 73 88 11 35 70 23 161 00 41 13 2 60 4 45 111 36 2015 73 46 11 58 69 22 160 10 40 98 2 58 3 88 97 86 2016 70 29 11 51 68 53 159 02 41 13 2 52 4 78 83 29 2017 74 35 12 13 66 57 158 57 41 59 2 62 4 49 68 68 2018 74 82 12 47 69 01 164 39 43 38 2 72 4 05 53 31 2019 77 50 13 01 69 08 168 99 44 42 2 81 4 74 49 57 2020 79 29 13 87 74 99 186 68 48 35 3 11 3 96 39 70 2021 80 30 14 84 74 56 188 66 49 10 3 14 4 35 24 30 2022 85 35 16 58 80 88 204 64 53 11 3 41 5 15 20 07 Sources arfolyam iridium hu nbsp The cost of one Euro in forints from 1999 See also editEconomy of Hungary Hungary and the euro List of currencies in EuropeReferences edit BBC News Hungary lifts last currency restrictions 18 June 2001 1 1 1 2 Consumer price index by aggregate groups of consumption and consumer price index for pensioners www ksh hu Retrieved 16 July 2022 Szakacs Gergely 18 October 2021 Hungary s new opposition PM candidate wants stronger ties with EU Reuters Retrieved 16 January 2022 Engel Pal 1938 2001 2001 The realm of St Stephen a history of medieval Hungary 895 1526 London I B Tauris ISBN 1 4175 4080 X OCLC 56676014 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link A stable currency in search of a stable Empire The Austro Hungarian experience of monetary union History amp Policy 19 April 2017 GLOSSARY www rev hu Retrieved 10 January 2021 An Attempt at a New Democratic Start 1944 1946 The Institute for the History of the 1956 Revolution 1 Archived 21 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine 1 and 2 forint coins were withdrawn from use from 1 March 2008 2 Archived 21 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine The sum of total purchases is rounded 3 Archived 4 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine The new 200 forint coin Coins to replace 200 forint banknotes www mnb hu Retrieved 26 March 2022 Coins www mnb hu Retrieved 26 March 2022 Calling for MNB tender for public benefit organizations MNB palyazat kozhasznu szervezetek szamara a b ECB euro reference exchange rate Hungarian forint HUF European Central Bank in Hungarian Retrieved 16 July 2022 US Dollar USD to Hungarian Forint HUF exchange rate history www exchangerates org uk Retrieved 16 July 2022 Krause Chester L Clifford Mishler 1991 Standard Catalog of World Coins 1801 1991 18th ed Krause Publications ISBN 0873411501 Pick Albert 1994 Standard Catalog of World Paper Money General Issues Colin R Bruce II and Neil Shafer editors 7th ed Krause Publications ISBN 0 87341 207 9 Further reading editGyula Radoczy Geza Tasnadi 1992 Magyar papirpenzek 1848 1992 Hungarian paper money 1848 1992 Danubius Kodex Kiadoi Kft ISBN 963 7434 11 9 Karoly Leanyfalusi Adam Nagy 1998 Magyarorszag fem es papirpenzei 1926 1998 Coins and paper money of Hungary 1926 1998 Magyar Eremgyujtok Egyesulete Budapest ISBN 963 03 6023 3 Karoly Leanyfalusi Adam Nagy 2006 Magyarorszag fem es papirpenzei 1946 2006 Coins and paper money of Hungary 1964 2006 Magyar Eremgyujtok Egyesulete Budapest ISBN 978 963 7122 16 3 Mihaly Kupa id dr 1993 Corpus notarum pecuniariarum Hungariae I II Magyar Egyetemes Penzjegytar General Hungarian Banknote Catalog Informatika Torteneti Muzeum Alapitvany Budapest ISBN 963 04 3658 2 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hungarian forint Official Daily Exchange Rates Archive Hungarian National Bank in Hungarian and English bankjegy szabadsagharcos org Hungarian banknote catalog in Hungarian and English www numismatics hu Roman and Hungarian related numismatic site in Hungarian papirpenz hu pictures of Hungarian banknotes in Hungarian Current HUF EUR and other rates with charts in Hungarian English German and French www eremgyujtok hu homepage of the Hungarian Coin Collectors Society Hungarian banknotes high resolution pictures also including old forint banknotes Comprehensive catalog of Hungarian coins Hungarian National Bank Information on forint banknotes and their security features and forint coins Preceded by Hungarian pengoReason inflationRatio 1 forint 4 1029 pengo theoretically Currency of Hungary 1 August 1946 Concurrent with adopengo until 30 September 1946 Succeeded by Current Preceded by Hungarian adopengoReason inflationRatio 1 forint 200 000 000 adopengo Portals nbsp Europe nbsp Hungary nbsp Money nbsp Numismatics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hungarian forint amp oldid 1209196358, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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