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Romanian leu

The Romanian leu (Romanian pronunciation: [lew], plural lei [lej]; ISO code: RON; numeric code: 946) is the currency of Romania. It is subdivided into 100 bani (Romanian pronunciation: [banʲ], singular: ban [ban]), a word that means both "money" and "coin" in the Romanian language.

Romanian leu
Leu românesc (Romanian)
100 lei banknote (obverse)50 bani coin (obverse)
ISO 4217
CodeRON (numeric: 946)
earlier: ROK, ROL
Subunit0.01
Unit
Plurallei
Denominations
Subunit
1100ban
Plural
 banbani
Banknotes
 Freq. used1 leu, 5 lei, 10 lei, 50 lei, 100 lei, 200 lei
 Rarely used500 lei 20 lei,
Coins
 Freq. used10, 50 bani
 Rarely used1 ban, 5 bani
Demographics
User(s) Romania
Issuance
Central bankNational Bank of Romania
 Websitewww.bnr.ro
PrinterNational Bank of Romania
 Websitewww.bnr.ro
MintMonetăria Statului
 Websitewww.monetariastatului.ro
Valuation
InflationCurrent value:14,2% (June 2022 / July 2022)[1]
 SourceNational Bank of Romania[2]

Etymology edit

The name of the currency means "lion", and is derived from the Dutch thaler (leeuwendaalder "lion thaler/dollar").[3][4][5] The Dutch leeuwendaalder was imitated in several German and Italian cities. These coins circulated in Romania, Moldova and Bulgaria and gave their name to their respective currencies: the Romanian leu, the Moldovan leu and the Bulgarian lev.[6]

 
Dutch Thaler, depicting a lion, the origin of the Romanian "Leu"

History edit

First leu: 1867–1947 edit

 
20 lei gold coin from 1870 (21mm diameter, 6.43g weight)
 
5 lei coin minted in 1883
 
500-leu banknote of 1936, King Carol II of Romania

In 1860, the Domnitor Alexandru Ioan Cuza attempted to create a national românul ("the Romanian") and the romanat; however, the project was not approved by the Ottoman Empire.[7]

On 22 April 1867, a bimetallic currency was adopted, with the leu equal to 5 grams of 83.5% silver or 0.29032 grams of gold. The first leu coin was minted in Romania in 1870.[7]

Before 1878 the silver Russian ruble was valued so highly as to drive the native coins out of circulation. Consequently, in 1889, Romania unilaterally joined the Latin Monetary Union and adopted a gold standard. Silver coins were legal tender only up to 50 lei. All taxes and customs dues were to be paid in gold and, owing to the small quantities issued from the Romanian mint, foreign gold coins were current, especially French 20-franc pieces (equal at par to 20 lei), Ottoman lira (22.70 lei), Russian rubles (20.60 lei) and British sovereigns (25.22 lei).[citation needed]

Romania left the gold standard in 1914 and the leu's value fell. The exchange rate was pegged at 167.20 lei to US$1 on 7 February 1929, US$1 = 135.95 lei on 5 November 1936, US$1 = 204.29 lei on 18 May 1940, and US$1 = 187.48 lei on 31 March 1941. During Romania's World War II alliance with Nazi Germany, the leu was pegged to the reichsmark at a rate of 49.50 lei to RM 1, falling to 59.5 lei = RM 1 in April 1941. During Soviet occupation, the exchange rate was 1 ruble to 100 lei. After the war, the value of the currency fell dramatically[8] and the National Bank issued a new leu, which was worth 20,000 old lei.[7]

Second leu (ROS): 1947–1952 edit

A revaluation ("Great stabilization", marea stabilizare) took place on 15 August 1947, replacing the old leu at a rate of 20,000 old lei = 1 stabilized leu.[7] No advance warning was given and there were limits for the sums to be converted in the new currency: 5 million old lei for farmers and 3 million old lei for workers and pensioners.[7]

Out of the 48.5 billion old lei in circulation, only around half were changed to stabilized lei.[7] The most affected was the middle and upper classes, who were later also affected by the nationalization of 1948. At the time of its introduction, 150 new lei equalled 1 US dollar.[citation needed]

Third leu (ROL): 1952–2005 edit

 
A 10-lei banknote issued in 1966

On 28 January 1952, another new leu was introduced. Unlike the previous revaluation, different rates were employed for different kinds of exchange (cash, bank deposits, debts etc.) and different amounts. These rates ranged from 20 to 400 "old lei" for one "new" leu. Again, no advance warning was given before the reform took place.[citation needed]

Between 1970 and 1989, the official exchange rate was fixed by the government through law. This exchange rate was used by the government to calculate the value of foreign trade, but foreign currency was not available to be bought and sold by private individuals. Owning or attempting to buy or sell foreign currency was a criminal offence, punishable with a prison sentence that could go up to ten years (depending on the amount of foreign currency found under one's possession). International trade was therefore considered as part of another economic circuit than domestic trade, and given greater priority.[citation needed]

This inflexibility and the existence of surplus money due to constant economic decline in the 1980s, mixed with the need for more foreign currency and the refusal of the Ceaușescu regime to accept inflation as a phenomenon in order to attain convertibility, led to one of the greatest supply side crises in Romanian history, culminating with the introduction of partial food rationing in 1980 and full rationing for all basic foods in 1986/87. This was a major factor in growing discontent with Ceaușescu, and contributed in part to the fall of the Communist regime in 1989.[citation needed]

In the post-communist period, there has been a switch in the material used for banknotes and coins. Banknotes have switched from special paper to special plastic, while coins switched from aluminum to more common coin alloys (probably partly due to technical limitations of coin-operated vending machines). The transition has been gradual for both, but much faster for the banknotes which are currently all made of plastic. There has been a period in which all banknotes were made of plastic and all coins were made of aluminum, a very distinctive combination.[citation needed]

In the 1990s, after the downfall of communism, inflation ran high due to reform failures, the legalization of owning foreign currency in 1990, reaching rates as high as 300% per year in 1993. By September 2003, one euro was exchanged for more than 40,000 lei, this being its peak value. Following a number of successful monetary policies in the late 1990s and early 2000s, the situation became gradually more stable, with single-digit inflation in 2005.[citation needed]

The Romanian leu was briefly the world's least valued currency unit,[9] from January (when the Turkish lira dropped six zeros) to July 2005. However, the 1,000,000 lei banknote was not the highest Romanian denomination ever; a 5,000,000 lei note had been issued in 1947.[citation needed]

Fourth leu (RON): 2005–present edit

  
1,000,000 old lei
168 mm × 78 mm
100 new lei
147 mm × 82 mm
Same design, different sizes. The images are to scale.

On 1 July 2005, the leu was revalued at the rate of 10,000 "old" lei (ROL) for one "new" leu (RON), thus psychologically bringing the purchasing power of the leu back in line with those of other major Western currencies. The term chosen for the action was "denominare", similar to the English term "redenomination". The adjustment was a difficult one for shoppers and many ATMs were inoperable and in need of reprogramming. The old ROL currency banknotes remained in circulation until 31 December 2006 (coins remained in circulation only until 31 December 2005), but all accounts were converted starting 1 July 2005. There is no conversion time limit between the currencies. Retailers had to display prices in both old and new currency from 1 March 2005 until 30 June 2006. The appreciation of the leu during 2005 was about 20% against a basket of major currencies.[citation needed]

As of 2006, the revaluation was a potential source of confusion, especially to visitors, since both old and new currency values were commonly quoted. When written, the very large amounts in old currency are usually obvious, but in speaking inhabitants might refer to an amount of 5 new lei as simply "fifty" in reference to its value of 50,000 old lei. As of 2020, it is still common to call 100 lei "un milion" or one million and 500 lei "cinci milioane" or five million.[citation needed]

Speculation about joining the Eurozone edit

In 2014, Romania's Convergence Report set a target date of 1 January 2019 for euro adoption. In April 2014, Romania had met four out of the seven criteria for accession to the Eurozone.[10] In recent years, however, Romania had made step backs regarding the adopting of the euro; the 2020 Convergence Report concluded that Romania does not meet any of the four economic criteria necessary for this process.[11] In February 2021, then-Prime Minister Florin Cîțu stated that Romania could join the Eurozone in 2027 or 2028,[12] although Romanian economist Florin Georgescu [ro] announced in December 2021 that this date had been delayed to 2029.[13]

Coins edit

The size and composition of coins changed frequently after the introduction of the currency.

First leu edit

In 1867, copper 1, 2, 5 and 10 bani were issued, with gold 20 lei (known as poli after the French Napoleons) first minted the next year. These were followed, between 1870 and 1873, by silver 50 bani, 1 and 2 lei. Silver 5 lei were added in 1880. Uniquely, the 1867 issue used the spelling 1 banu rather than 1 ban.

 
10 bani 1867 proof copper coin (30mm, 10g)

In 1900, cupronickel 5, 10, and 20 ban coins were introduced, with holed versions following in 1905. The production of coins ceased in 1914, recommencing in 1921 with aluminum 25 and 50 ban pieces. Cupronickel 1 and 2 lei coins were introduced in 1924, followed by nickel brass 5, 10, and 20 lei in 1930. In 1932, silver 100 lei coins were issued. However, inflation meant that in 1935, smaller silver 250 lei coins were introduced with nickel 100 lei coins being issued in 1936, followed by nickel 50 lei in 1937.

In 1941 and 1942, zinc 2, 5, and 20 lei coins were introduced, together with silver 200 and 500 lei. Nickel-clad-steel 100 lei followed in 1943, with brass 200, and 500 lei issued in 1945. In 1946 and 1947, postwar inflation brought the exchange rate even lower, and a new coinage was issued consisting of aluminum 500 lei, brass 2,000, and 10,000 lei, and silver 25,000, and 100,000 lei.

Second leu edit

Coins were issued in 1947 after the revaluation in denominations of 50 bani, 1, 2, and 5 lei and depicted the portrait of King Michael I. This coin series was brief, preceded by the king's abdication less than a year later and replaced following the establishment of communist administration in Romania in 1948, reissued gradually in denominations of 1, 2, 5, and 20 lei in nickel-brass alloy, and later in aluminum. All second leu coins were discontinued and devalued in late 1952.

Third leu edit

Coins were first issued in 1952 in denominations of 1, 3, 5, 10, 25, and 50 bani, with aluminum bronze for 1, 3, and 5 bani, and cupronickel for 10, 25, and 50 bani. These coins featured the state arms and name "Republica Populara Româna".

In 1960, a new series of coins was issued in denominations of 5, 15, & 25 bani and 1 and 3 lei struck in nickel-plated steel. Starting in 1966, the name on all coins was changed to "Republica Socialista Romania" following the ascent of Nicolae Ceaușescu, though all pre-1966 coins of these denominations remained valid. In 1975, the composition of 5 and 15 ban coins was changed to aluminum, and the 25 bani followed suit in 1982. In 1978, an aluminum 5 leu coin was introduced. These denominations remained in use until 1991, particularly the 5 lei, following the lifting of state-mandated exchange rates and price controls.

In 1991, a new coin series with post-communist iconography and new valuations was released in denominations of 1, 5, 10, 20, 50, and 100 lei. These coins gradually lost value with inflation, and a new series was introduced in 1998 with an aluminum-magnesium alloy 500 leu and 1,000 and 5,000 leu coins in 2000.

Fourth leu edit

The coins that are currently in circulation are one ban, made of brass-plated steel; five bani, made of copper-plated steel; ten bani in nickel-plated steel; and fifty bani in nickel brass. These were first introduced into circulation in 2005 with the fourth revaluation and are all currently valid. There are six 50 bani commemorative circulating coins made in 2010, 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015 and 2016.[citation needed]

The current coins of the Romanian leu are by any objective standards of functional austere design, surpassing in lack of decoration even the plainest Communist-era predecessors.[citation needed]

The one ban coin was rarely seen and not in demand by either banks or many retailers; the 'situation' has changed and the coin is not uncommonly found (as of 2015). Supermarkets continue habitually to advertise prices such as 9.99 (lei), and frequently price goods to the precise ban such as 9,47;[14] indeed, as of 2014, very few of the prices displayed at the Carrefour online site (for example) display prices to the nearest 5 or 10 bani. In practice, many retailers round totals to the nearest 5 or 10 bani for cash payments, or even whole leu, although (inter)national supermarket chains generally give exact change. For card payments the exact amount (not rounded) is always charged. The reversion to single ban pricing (and change giving) is perhaps due to the (effective) government drive for shops/businesses to give a receipt, an accurate bon fiscal (to avoid tax evasion) for every transaction. Official notices must be prominently displayed in all shops/restaurants that an accurate receipt must be given.[citation needed]

Banknotes edit

First leu edit

1917 fractional leu
10 bani 25 bani 50 bani
 
 
 

In 1877, state notes were introduced in denominations of 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, and 500 lei. In 1880, these notes were overstamped for issue by the Banca Națională a României, which began to issue regular notes in 1881 in denominations of 20, 100, and 1,000 lei.

In 1914, five leu notes were reintroduced, followed by one and two leu notes in 1915 and 500 lei in 1916. The Ministry of Finance issued very small-sized notes for 10, 25 and 50 bani in 1917. 5,000 lei notes were introduced in 1940, followed by 10,000 and 100,000 lei in 1945 and 1,000,000 and 5,000,000 lei in 1947. In 1945, the Ministry of Finance issued 20 and 100 leu notes to replace those of the National Bank.

Second leu edit

In 1947, the Ministry of Finance introduced 20 lei notes and Banca Națională a României introduced 100, 500 and 1,000 lei notes. In 1949, Banca Republicii Populare Române took over the production of paper money and issued 500 and 1,000 lei notes.[citation needed]

Third leu edit

In 1952, the Ministry of Finance introduced notes for 1, 3, and 5 lei, and the Banca Republicii Populare Române introduced 10, 25 and 100 leu notes. In 1966, the Banca Națională a Republicii Socialiste România took over the production of all paper money, issuing notes for 1, 3, 5, 10, 25, 50 and 100 lei.

In 1991, 500 and 1,000 leu notes were introduced, followed by 200 and 5,000 leu notes in 1992, 10,000 lei in 1994, 50,000 lei in 1996, 100,000 lei in 1998, 500,000 lei in 2000 and 1,000,000 lei in 2003. There was also a commemorative 2,000 lei note introduced in 1999 celebrating the total solar eclipse that occurred on 11 August 1999. The final issues of the 2,000, 10,000, 50,000, 100,000, 500,000, and 1,000,000 lei were polymer notes.

Notes in circulation at the revaluation were:

  • 10,000 lei (became 1 leu)
  • 50,000 lei (became 5 lei)
  • 100,000 lei (became 10 lei)
  • 500,000 lei (became 50 lei)
  • 1,000,000 lei (became 100 lei)

Fourth series edit

In 2005, polymer notes were introduced for 1 leu, 5, 10, 50, 100 and 500 lei. 200 lei notes were added in 2006. The designs of the 1 leu, 5, 10, 50, and 100 lei notes are based on those of the earlier 10,000, 50,000, 100,000, 500,000, and 1,000,000 leu notes which they replaced. The 10 lei note was redesigned in November 2008 (most of the graphic elements are identical, some of the safety elements were changed, making its safety features similar to the lower-valued notes for 1 leu and 5 lei). The highest-value coin (in general circulation) is 50 bani (around 15 cents US or 9 pence sterling); the 1 leu note (there is no coin) has, therefore, a value of (approximately) 25 cents US or 18 pence sterling, or around 23 euro cents.[citation needed]

In preparation for Romania joining the Eurozone, banknotes of the fourth leu are of equal size to Euro banknotes.

The 20 lei banknote was introduced by the National Bank of Romania in November 2021.[15]

List of current banknotes edit

Current series
Value Image Size Main Colour Description Earlier Series
in circulation
Latest Series
Obverse Reverse Dimensions
(millimetres)
Euro equivalent Obverse Reverse
1 leu     120 × 62 €5 Green Nicolae Iorga and milkweed gentian Cathedral of Curtea de Argeș, The Wallachian Eagle Series 2005[16] Series 2018[17]
5 lei     127 × 67 €10 Violet George Enescu and carnation Romanian Athenaeum
10 lei     133 × 72 €20 Pink and light red Nicolae Grigorescu and althaea Traditional house from Oltenia, Nicolae Grigorescu painting Rodica Series 2005
Series 2008[18]
20 lei     136 x 77 None Olive green Ecaterina Teodoroiu and crocus flavus Mausoleum of Mărășești, Victoria as depicted on the Romanian Victory Medal - Series 2021
50 lei     140 × 77 €50 Yellow Aurel Vlaicu and edelweiss A Vlaicu II airplane design, eagle head Series 2005 Series 2018
100 lei     147 × 82 €100 (ES1) Blue Ion Luca Caragiale and sweet violet National Theatre of Bucharest (old building), Statue of Ion Luca Caragiale, by Constantin Baraschi [ro]
200 lei     150 × 82 None Brown and orange Lucian Blaga and poppies A watermill, The Hamangia Thinker Series 2006[19]
500 lei     153 × 82 €200 (ES1) Gray and violet Mihai Eminescu and tilia Central University Library of Iași, Timpul (the Times) newspaper Series 2005

Exchange rates edit

 
The exchange rate of one Euro in Romanian lei (from 1999)
Current RON 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

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Banca Națională a României - Proiecții BNR".
  2. ^ "Banca Națională a României (http://www.bnr.ro)". www.bnr.ro.
  3. ^ Euro Exhibition - Opening Speech by Mugur Isărescu, NBR Governor, BNR.ro
  4. ^ Numismatic issue - a set of three collector coins dedicated to 140 years since the establishment of military communications, BNR.ro
  5. ^ Romanian New Leu, oanda.com
  6. ^ "Online Etymology Dictionary". www.etymonline.com.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Gruia, Cătălin (2012). (PDF). National Geographic Romania (July 2012). Archived from the original (PDF) on 12 June 2013. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
  8. ^ Romania New Leu 2007-09-29 at the Wayback Machine, Global Financial Data.com
  9. ^ "Romaniam Leu is the least valued currency unit in the world". Banii Noștri. 18 April 2005. Retrieved 28 September 2008.[permanent dead link]
  10. ^ "Central Bank: Romania 2019 euro membership 'not feasible'". EUObserver. 30 September 2015. Retrieved 30 December 2015.
  11. ^ "Questions and answers: Convergence report reviews Member States' progress towards joining the euro area". European Commission. 10 June 2020.
  12. ^ "Florin Cîțu: România poate intra în spațiul Schengen în acest an. Adoptarea monedei euro, în 2027 sau 2028". Digi24 (in Romanian). 19 February 2021. Retrieved 5 July 2021.
  13. ^ Ernst, Iulian (16 December 2021). "Romania to postpone euro adoption target until 2029". bne IntelliNews.
  14. ^ (in Romanian) Gândul, Moneda de 1 ban n-are căutare, 3 November 2005. Accessed on 1 January 2007
  15. ^ "Banca Națională a României - 20 de lei - Ecaterina Teodoroiu". www.bnr.ro. Retrieved 26 November 2021.
  16. ^ http://bnr.ro/apage.aspx?pid=404&actId=144169 Circulara BNR nr. 14/2005 - emisiuni 2005
  17. ^ http://bnr.ro/page.aspx?prid=14179 BNR press release
  18. ^ http://bnr.ro/apage.aspx?pid=404&actId=319974 Circulara BNR nr. 37/2008 - bancnota de 10 lei reproiectată
  19. ^ http://bnr.ro/apage.aspx?pid=404&actId=319974 Circulara BNR nr. 23/2006 - bancnota de 200 lei

External links edit

  • Current legal tender pictures
  • Site with historical and current Romanian coins
  • The Banknotes of Romania (in English and German)
  • The Banknotes of the Socialist Republic of Romania (in English and German)
  • The Banknotes of Romania - Nearly Complete

romanian, romanian, pronunciation, plural, code, numeric, code, currency, romania, subdivided, into, bani, romanian, pronunciation, banʲ, singular, word, that, means, both, money, coin, romanian, language, românesc, romanian, banknote, obverse, bani, coin, obv. The Romanian leu Romanian pronunciation lew plural lei lej ISO code RON numeric code 946 is the currency of Romania It is subdivided into 100 bani Romanian pronunciation banʲ singular ban ban a word that means both money and coin in the Romanian language Romanian leuLeu romanesc Romanian 100 lei banknote obverse 50 bani coin obverse ISO 4217CodeRON numeric 946 earlier ROK ROLSubunit0 01UnitPluralleiDenominationsSubunit 1 100banPlural banbaniBanknotes Freq used1 leu 5 lei 10 lei 50 lei 100 lei 200 lei Rarely used500 lei 20 lei Coins Freq used10 50 bani Rarely used1 ban 5 baniDemographicsUser s RomaniaIssuanceCentral bankNational Bank of Romania Websitewww wbr bnr wbr roPrinterNational Bank of Romania Websitewww wbr bnr wbr roMintMonetăria Statului Websitewww wbr monetariastatului wbr roValuationInflationCurrent value 14 2 June 2022 July 2022 1 SourceNational Bank of Romania 2 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 First leu 1867 1947 2 2 Second leu ROS 1947 1952 2 3 Third leu ROL 1952 2005 2 4 Fourth leu RON 2005 present 2 5 Speculation about joining the Eurozone 3 Coins 3 1 First leu 3 2 Second leu 3 3 Third leu 3 4 Fourth leu 4 Banknotes 4 1 First leu 4 2 Second leu 4 3 Third leu 4 4 Fourth series 4 5 List of current banknotes 5 Exchange rates 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksEtymology editThe name of the currency means lion and is derived from the Dutch thaler leeuwendaalder lion thaler dollar 3 4 5 The Dutch leeuwendaalder was imitated in several German and Italian cities These coins circulated in Romania Moldova and Bulgaria and gave their name to their respective currencies the Romanian leu the Moldovan leu and the Bulgarian lev 6 nbsp Dutch Thaler depicting a lion the origin of the Romanian Leu History editSee also History of Romanian coins First leu 1867 1947 edit nbsp 20 lei gold coin from 1870 21mm diameter 6 43g weight nbsp 5 lei coin minted in 1883 nbsp 500 leu banknote of 1936 King Carol II of RomaniaIn 1860 the Domnitor Alexandru Ioan Cuza attempted to create a national romanul the Romanian and the romanat however the project was not approved by the Ottoman Empire 7 On 22 April 1867 a bimetallic currency was adopted with the leu equal to 5 grams of 83 5 silver or 0 29032 grams of gold The first leu coin was minted in Romania in 1870 7 Before 1878 the silver Russian ruble was valued so highly as to drive the native coins out of circulation Consequently in 1889 Romania unilaterally joined the Latin Monetary Union and adopted a gold standard Silver coins were legal tender only up to 50 lei All taxes and customs dues were to be paid in gold and owing to the small quantities issued from the Romanian mint foreign gold coins were current especially French 20 franc pieces equal at par to 20 lei Ottoman lira 22 70 lei Russian rubles 20 60 lei and British sovereigns 25 22 lei citation needed Romania left the gold standard in 1914 and the leu s value fell The exchange rate was pegged at 167 20 lei to US 1 on 7 February 1929 US 1 135 95 lei on 5 November 1936 US 1 204 29 lei on 18 May 1940 and US 1 187 48 lei on 31 March 1941 During Romania s World War II alliance with Nazi Germany the leu was pegged to the reichsmark at a rate of 49 50 lei to RM 1 falling to 59 5 lei RM 1 in April 1941 During Soviet occupation the exchange rate was 1 ruble to 100 lei After the war the value of the currency fell dramatically 8 and the National Bank issued a new leu which was worth 20 000 old lei 7 Second leu ROS 1947 1952 edit A revaluation Great stabilization marea stabilizare took place on 15 August 1947 replacing the old leu at a rate of 20 000 old lei 1 stabilized leu 7 No advance warning was given and there were limits for the sums to be converted in the new currency 5 million old lei for farmers and 3 million old lei for workers and pensioners 7 Out of the 48 5 billion old lei in circulation only around half were changed to stabilized lei 7 The most affected was the middle and upper classes who were later also affected by the nationalization of 1948 At the time of its introduction 150 new lei equalled 1 US dollar citation needed Third leu ROL 1952 2005 edit nbsp A 10 lei banknote issued in 1966On 28 January 1952 another new leu was introduced Unlike the previous revaluation different rates were employed for different kinds of exchange cash bank deposits debts etc and different amounts These rates ranged from 20 to 400 old lei for one new leu Again no advance warning was given before the reform took place citation needed Between 1970 and 1989 the official exchange rate was fixed by the government through law This exchange rate was used by the government to calculate the value of foreign trade but foreign currency was not available to be bought and sold by private individuals Owning or attempting to buy or sell foreign currency was a criminal offence punishable with a prison sentence that could go up to ten years depending on the amount of foreign currency found under one s possession International trade was therefore considered as part of another economic circuit than domestic trade and given greater priority citation needed This inflexibility and the existence of surplus money due to constant economic decline in the 1980s mixed with the need for more foreign currency and the refusal of the Ceaușescu regime to accept inflation as a phenomenon in order to attain convertibility led to one of the greatest supply side crises in Romanian history culminating with the introduction of partial food rationing in 1980 and full rationing for all basic foods in 1986 87 This was a major factor in growing discontent with Ceaușescu and contributed in part to the fall of the Communist regime in 1989 citation needed In the post communist period there has been a switch in the material used for banknotes and coins Banknotes have switched from special paper to special plastic while coins switched from aluminum to more common coin alloys probably partly due to technical limitations of coin operated vending machines The transition has been gradual for both but much faster for the banknotes which are currently all made of plastic There has been a period in which all banknotes were made of plastic and all coins were made of aluminum a very distinctive combination citation needed In the 1990s after the downfall of communism inflation ran high due to reform failures the legalization of owning foreign currency in 1990 reaching rates as high as 300 per year in 1993 By September 2003 one euro was exchanged for more than 40 000 lei this being its peak value Following a number of successful monetary policies in the late 1990s and early 2000s the situation became gradually more stable with single digit inflation in 2005 citation needed The Romanian leu was briefly the world s least valued currency unit 9 from January when the Turkish lira dropped six zeros to July 2005 However the 1 000 000 lei banknote was not the highest Romanian denomination ever a 5 000 000 lei note had been issued in 1947 citation needed Fourth leu RON 2005 present edit nbsp nbsp 1 000 000 old lei168 mm 78 mm 100 new lei147 mm 82 mmSame design different sizes The images are to scale On 1 July 2005 the leu was revalued at the rate of 10 000 old lei ROL for one new leu RON thus psychologically bringing the purchasing power of the leu back in line with those of other major Western currencies The term chosen for the action was denominare similar to the English term redenomination The adjustment was a difficult one for shoppers and many ATMs were inoperable and in need of reprogramming The old ROL currency banknotes remained in circulation until 31 December 2006 coins remained in circulation only until 31 December 2005 but all accounts were converted starting 1 July 2005 There is no conversion time limit between the currencies Retailers had to display prices in both old and new currency from 1 March 2005 until 30 June 2006 The appreciation of the leu during 2005 was about 20 against a basket of major currencies citation needed As of 2006 the revaluation was a potential source of confusion especially to visitors since both old and new currency values were commonly quoted When written the very large amounts in old currency are usually obvious but in speaking inhabitants might refer to an amount of 5 new lei as simply fifty in reference to its value of 50 000 old lei As of 2020 it is still common to call 100 lei un milion or one million and 500 lei cinci milioane or five million citation needed Speculation about joining the Eurozone edit Main article Romania and the euro In 2014 Romania s Convergence Report set a target date of 1 January 2019 for euro adoption In April 2014 Romania had met four out of the seven criteria for accession to the Eurozone 10 In recent years however Romania had made step backs regarding the adopting of the euro the 2020 Convergence Report concluded that Romania does not meet any of the four economic criteria necessary for this process 11 In February 2021 then Prime Minister Florin Cițu stated that Romania could join the Eurozone in 2027 or 2028 12 although Romanian economist Florin Georgescu ro announced in December 2021 that this date had been delayed to 2029 13 Coins editMain article Coins of the Romanian leu The size and composition of coins changed frequently after the introduction of the currency First leu edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1867 copper 1 2 5 and 10 bani were issued with gold 20 lei known as poli after the French Napoleons first minted the next year These were followed between 1870 and 1873 by silver 50 bani 1 and 2 lei Silver 5 lei were added in 1880 Uniquely the 1867 issue used the spelling 1 banu rather than 1 ban nbsp 10 bani 1867 proof copper coin 30mm 10g In 1900 cupronickel 5 10 and 20 ban coins were introduced with holed versions following in 1905 The production of coins ceased in 1914 recommencing in 1921 with aluminum 25 and 50 ban pieces Cupronickel 1 and 2 lei coins were introduced in 1924 followed by nickel brass 5 10 and 20 lei in 1930 In 1932 silver 100 lei coins were issued However inflation meant that in 1935 smaller silver 250 lei coins were introduced with nickel 100 lei coins being issued in 1936 followed by nickel 50 lei in 1937 In 1941 and 1942 zinc 2 5 and 20 lei coins were introduced together with silver 200 and 500 lei Nickel clad steel 100 lei followed in 1943 with brass 200 and 500 lei issued in 1945 In 1946 and 1947 postwar inflation brought the exchange rate even lower and a new coinage was issued consisting of aluminum 500 lei brass 2 000 and 10 000 lei and silver 25 000 and 100 000 lei Second leu edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Coins were issued in 1947 after the revaluation in denominations of 50 bani 1 2 and 5 lei and depicted the portrait of King Michael I This coin series was brief preceded by the king s abdication less than a year later and replaced following the establishment of communist administration in Romania in 1948 reissued gradually in denominations of 1 2 5 and 20 lei in nickel brass alloy and later in aluminum All second leu coins were discontinued and devalued in late 1952 Third leu edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Coins were first issued in 1952 in denominations of 1 3 5 10 25 and 50 bani with aluminum bronze for 1 3 and 5 bani and cupronickel for 10 25 and 50 bani These coins featured the state arms and name Republica Populara Romana In 1960 a new series of coins was issued in denominations of 5 15 amp 25 bani and 1 and 3 lei struck in nickel plated steel Starting in 1966 the name on all coins was changed to Republica Socialista Romania following the ascent of Nicolae Ceaușescu though all pre 1966 coins of these denominations remained valid In 1975 the composition of 5 and 15 ban coins was changed to aluminum and the 25 bani followed suit in 1982 In 1978 an aluminum 5 leu coin was introduced These denominations remained in use until 1991 particularly the 5 lei following the lifting of state mandated exchange rates and price controls In 1991 a new coin series with post communist iconography and new valuations was released in denominations of 1 5 10 20 50 and 100 lei These coins gradually lost value with inflation and a new series was introduced in 1998 with an aluminum magnesium alloy 500 leu and 1 000 and 5 000 leu coins in 2000 Fourth leu edit The coins that are currently in circulation are one ban made of brass plated steel five bani made of copper plated steel ten bani in nickel plated steel and fifty bani in nickel brass These were first introduced into circulation in 2005 with the fourth revaluation and are all currently valid There are six 50 bani commemorative circulating coins made in 2010 2011 2012 2014 2015 and 2016 citation needed The current coins of the Romanian leu are by any objective standards of functional austere design surpassing in lack of decoration even the plainest Communist era predecessors citation needed The one ban coin was rarely seen and not in demand by either banks or many retailers the situation has changed and the coin is not uncommonly found as of 2015 Supermarkets continue habitually to advertise prices such as 9 99 lei and frequently price goods to the precise ban such as 9 47 14 indeed as of 2014 very few of the prices displayed at the Carrefour online site for example display prices to the nearest 5 or 10 bani In practice many retailers round totals to the nearest 5 or 10 bani for cash payments or even whole leu although inter national supermarket chains generally give exact change For card payments the exact amount not rounded is always charged The reversion to single ban pricing and change giving is perhaps due to the effective government drive for shops businesses to give a receipt an accurate bon fiscal to avoid tax evasion for every transaction Official notices must be prominently displayed in all shops restaurants that an accurate receipt must be given citation needed Banknotes editMain article Banknotes of the Romanian leu First leu edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message 1917 fractional leu10 bani 25 bani 50 bani nbsp nbsp nbsp In 1877 state notes were introduced in denominations of 5 10 20 50 100 and 500 lei In 1880 these notes were overstamped for issue by the Banca Națională a Romaniei which began to issue regular notes in 1881 in denominations of 20 100 and 1 000 lei In 1914 five leu notes were reintroduced followed by one and two leu notes in 1915 and 500 lei in 1916 The Ministry of Finance issued very small sized notes for 10 25 and 50 bani in 1917 5 000 lei notes were introduced in 1940 followed by 10 000 and 100 000 lei in 1945 and 1 000 000 and 5 000 000 lei in 1947 In 1945 the Ministry of Finance issued 20 and 100 leu notes to replace those of the National Bank Second leu edit In 1947 the Ministry of Finance introduced 20 lei notes and Banca Națională a Romaniei introduced 100 500 and 1 000 lei notes In 1949 Banca Republicii Populare Romane took over the production of paper money and issued 500 and 1 000 lei notes citation needed Third leu edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1952 the Ministry of Finance introduced notes for 1 3 and 5 lei and the Banca Republicii Populare Romane introduced 10 25 and 100 leu notes In 1966 the Banca Națională a Republicii Socialiste Romania took over the production of all paper money issuing notes for 1 3 5 10 25 50 and 100 lei In 1991 500 and 1 000 leu notes were introduced followed by 200 and 5 000 leu notes in 1992 10 000 lei in 1994 50 000 lei in 1996 100 000 lei in 1998 500 000 lei in 2000 and 1 000 000 lei in 2003 There was also a commemorative 2 000 lei note introduced in 1999 celebrating the total solar eclipse that occurred on 11 August 1999 The final issues of the 2 000 10 000 50 000 100 000 500 000 and 1 000 000 lei were polymer notes Notes in circulation at the revaluation were 10 000 lei became 1 leu 50 000 lei became 5 lei 100 000 lei became 10 lei 500 000 lei became 50 lei 1 000 000 lei became 100 lei Fourth series edit In 2005 polymer notes were introduced for 1 leu 5 10 50 100 and 500 lei 200 lei notes were added in 2006 The designs of the 1 leu 5 10 50 and 100 lei notes are based on those of the earlier 10 000 50 000 100 000 500 000 and 1 000 000 leu notes which they replaced The 10 lei note was redesigned in November 2008 most of the graphic elements are identical some of the safety elements were changed making its safety features similar to the lower valued notes for 1 leu and 5 lei The highest value coin in general circulation is 50 bani around 15 cents US or 9 pence sterling the 1 leu note there is no coin has therefore a value of approximately 25 cents US or 18 pence sterling or around 23 euro cents citation needed In preparation for Romania joining the Eurozone banknotes of the fourth leu are of equal size to Euro banknotes The 20 lei banknote was introduced by the National Bank of Romania in November 2021 15 List of current banknotes edit Current series Value Image Size Main Colour Description Earlier Seriesin circulation Latest SeriesObverse Reverse Dimensions millimetres Euro equivalent Obverse Reverse1 leu nbsp nbsp 120 62 5 Green Nicolae Iorga and milkweed gentian Cathedral of Curtea de Argeș The Wallachian Eagle Series 2005 16 Series 2018 17 5 lei nbsp nbsp 127 67 10 Violet George Enescu and carnation Romanian Athenaeum10 lei nbsp nbsp 133 72 20 Pink and light red Nicolae Grigorescu and althaea Traditional house from Oltenia Nicolae Grigorescu painting Rodica Series 2005Series 2008 18 20 lei nbsp nbsp 136 x 77 None Olive green Ecaterina Teodoroiu and crocus flavus Mausoleum of Mărășești Victoria as depicted on the Romanian Victory Medal Series 202150 lei nbsp nbsp 140 77 50 Yellow Aurel Vlaicu and edelweiss A Vlaicu II airplane design eagle head Series 2005 Series 2018100 lei nbsp nbsp 147 82 100 ES1 Blue Ion Luca Caragiale and sweet violet National Theatre of Bucharest old building Statue of Ion Luca Caragiale by Constantin Baraschi ro 200 lei nbsp nbsp 150 82 None Brown and orange Lucian Blaga and poppies A watermill The Hamangia Thinker Series 2006 19 500 lei nbsp nbsp 153 82 200 ES1 Gray and violet Mihai Eminescu and tilia Central University Library of Iași Timpul the Times newspaper Series 2005Exchange rates edit nbsp The exchange rate of one Euro in Romanian lei from 1999 Current RON exchange ratesFrom Google Finance AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRYFrom Yahoo Finance AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRYFrom XE com AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRYFrom OANDA AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD TRYSee also editEconomy of Romania History of coins in Romania Banknotes of the Romanian leu Romania and the euro List of currencies in EuropeReferences edit Banca Națională a Romaniei Proiecții BNR Banca Națională a Romaniei http www bnr ro www bnr ro Euro Exhibition Opening Speech by Mugur Isărescu NBR Governor BNR ro Numismatic issue a set of three collector coins dedicated to 140 years since the establishment of military communications BNR ro Romanian New Leu oanda com Online Etymology Dictionary www etymonline com a b c d e f Gruia Cătălin 2012 Metamorfozele leului PDF National Geographic Romania July 2012 Archived from the original PDF on 12 June 2013 Retrieved 21 April 2013 Romania New Leu Archived 2007 09 29 at the Wayback Machine Global Financial Data com Romaniam Leu is the least valued currency unit in the world Banii Noștri 18 April 2005 Retrieved 28 September 2008 permanent dead link Central Bank Romania 2019 euro membership not feasible EUObserver 30 September 2015 Retrieved 30 December 2015 Questions and answers Convergence report reviews Member States progress towards joining the euro area European Commission 10 June 2020 Florin Cițu Romania poate intra in spațiul Schengen in acest an Adoptarea monedei euro in 2027 sau 2028 Digi24 in Romanian 19 February 2021 Retrieved 5 July 2021 Ernst Iulian 16 December 2021 Romania to postpone euro adoption target until 2029 bne IntelliNews in Romanian Gandul Moneda de 1 ban n are căutare 3 November 2005 Accessed on 1 January 2007 Banca Națională a Romaniei 20 de lei Ecaterina Teodoroiu www bnr ro Retrieved 26 November 2021 http bnr ro apage aspx pid 404 amp actId 144169 Circulara BNR nr 14 2005 emisiuni 2005 http bnr ro page aspx prid 14179 BNR press release http bnr ro apage aspx pid 404 amp actId 319974 Circulara BNR nr 37 2008 bancnota de 10 lei reproiectată http bnr ro apage aspx pid 404 amp actId 319974 Circulara BNR nr 23 2006 bancnota de 200 leiExternal links edit nbsp Wikinews has related news Romania redenominates its currency Current legal tender pictures Site with historical and current Romanian coins The Banknotes of Romania in English and German The Banknotes of the Socialist Republic of Romania in English and German The Banknotes of Romania Nearly Complete Portals nbsp Europe nbsp Money nbsp Numismatics nbsp Romania Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Romanian leu amp oldid 1205325322, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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