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Wikipedia

Kazakhstani tenge

The tenge (/ˈtɛŋɡ/[2] or /tɛŋˈɡ/;[3] Kazakh: теңге, teñge, Kazakh pronunciation: [ˌtʲeŋˈɡʲe]; sign:  ; code: KZT) is the currency of Kazakhstan. It is divided into 100 tiyn (Kazakh: тиын, tıyın also transliterated as tiyin).

Tenge
  • Қазақстан теңгесі / Qazaqstan teñgesi (Kazakh)
  • Казахстанский тенге (Russian)
₸5,000 note
ISO 4217
CodeKZT (numeric: 398)
Subunit0.01
Unit
PluralThe language(s) of this currency do(es) not have a morphological plural distinction.
Symbol
Denominations
Subunit
1100tiyn (тиын)
Banknotes
 Freq. used₸200, ₸500, ₸1,000, ₸2,000, ₸5,000, ₸10,000, ₸20,000
Coins
 Freq. used₸5, ₸10, ₸20, ₸50, ₸100, ₸200
 Rarely used₸1, ₸2
Demographics
User(s) Kazakhstan
Issuance
Central bankNational Bank of Kazakhstan
 Websitewww.nationalbank.kz
PrinterBanknote Factory of the National Bank of Kazakhstan
Valuation
Inflation4.9%[1]
 SourceBasic Macroeconomic Indicators on the homepage

History

After the breakup of the Soviet Union in December 1991, most of the formerly Soviet republics attempted to maintain a common currency. Some politicians hoped to at least maintain "special relations" among former Soviet republics (the "near abroad"). Other reasons were the economic considerations for maintaining the rouble zone. The wish to preserve strong trade relations between former Soviet republics was considered the most important goal.[4]

The break-up of the Soviet Union was not accompanied by any formal changes in monetary arrangements. The Central Bank of Russia was authorized[by whom?] to take over the State Bank of the USSR (Gosbank) on 1 January 1992. It continued to ship Soviet notes and coins to the central banks of the eleven newly independent countries, which had formerly been the main branches of Gosbank in the republics.

The political situation, however, was not favourable for maintaining a common currency.[4] Maintaining a common currency requires a strong political consensus in respect to monetary and fiscal targets, a common institution in charge of implementing these targets, and some minimum of common legislation (concerning the banking and foreign-exchange regulations).[citation needed] These conditions were far from being met amidst the turbulent economic and political situation.

During the first half of 1992, a monetary union with 15 independent states all using the rouble existed. Since it was clear that the situation would not last, each of them was using its position as "free-riders" to issue huge amounts of money in the form of credit.[5] As a result, some countries were issuing coupons in order to "protect" their markets from buyers from other states. The Russian central bank responded in July 1992 by setting up restrictions to the flow of credit between Russia and other states. The final collapse of the rouble zone began when Russia pulled out with the exchange of banknotes by the Central Bank of Russia on Russian territory at the end of July 1993.

As a result, Kazakhstan and other countries still in the rouble zone were "pushed out".[5] On November 12, 1993, the President of Kazakhstan issued a decree "On introducing national currency of Republic of Kazakhstan". The tenge was introduced on 15 November 1993 to replace Soviet currency at a rate of T 1 = Rbls 500. In 1991 a "special group" of designers was set up: Mendybay Alin, Timur Suleymenov, Asimsaly Duzelkhanov and Khayrulla Gabzhalilov. Thus November 15 is celebrated as the "Day of National Currency of Republic of Kazakhstan". In 1995 a tenge-printing factory opened in Kazakhstan. The first consignment of tenge banknotes were printed in the United Kingdom and the first coins were struck in Germany. In February 2019, Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev signed a bill into law that will remove all Russian captions from future tenge banknotes and coins.[6]

Etymology

The word tenge in Kazakh and in most other Turkic languages means a set of scales (cf the old Uzbek tenga or the Tajik borrowed term tanga). The origin of the word is the Mongolic word teng (ᠲᠡᠩ) which means "being equal, balance". The name of this currency is thus similar to the pound, lira, peso, taka, and shekel. The name of the currency is also related to the Russian word for money Russian: деньги/ den'gi, which the Old Russian language borrowed from Turkic sources.[7]

Symbol

 
The symbol for the Kazakhstani tenge.

Originally a simple letter "Т" was used to denote amounts in tenge, this is still recommended when the tenge symbol is not available.[8] In autumn 2006 the National Bank of Kazakhstan organised a competition for a unique symbol for the currency and received over 30,000 applications. On March 20, 2007, two days before the Nauryz holiday, the National Bank of Kazakhstan approved a graphical symbol for the tenge: ₸. On March 29, 2007, the Bank announced two designers from Almaty, Vadim Davydenko and Sanzhar Amirkhanov, as winners for the design of the symbol of the Kazakhstani tenge. They shared a prize of ₸1,000,000 and the title of "parents" of the tenge symbol.[9] The character was included in Unicode 5.2.0 (August 2009) at code point U+20B8.[10]

Coins

While older coins were struck in Germany, current coins are struck domestically, by the Kazakhstan Mint in Oskemen.

First series (1993)

In 1993, the first series of coins were introduced in denominations of 2, 5, 10, 20, and 50 tiyin featuring the national arms and were struck in bronze. The coins of T 1, T 3, T 5, T 10, and T 20 were struck in cupro-nickel and depicted stylized and mythical animals. The coins of this period circulated alongside tiyin and low denomination tenge notes of equal value. Tiyin coins were withdrawn as of February 7, 2001 and lost their effect as legal currency as of December 31, 2012.[11][12]

Image Denomination Material Diameter Mass Thickness Edge Date of
issue minting withdrawal
  2 tiyin Brass 17.27 mm 2.26 g 1.3 mm Smooth 1 March 1994 1993 31 December 2012
  5 tiyin
  10 tiyin 19.56 mm 3.48 g 1.6 mm
  20 tiyin 21.87 mm 4.71 g 1.7 mm
  50 tiyin 25 mm 7.43 g 2 mm
  T 1 Alloy of "nickel silver" 17.27 mm 2.26 g 1.3 mm Smooth 25 October 1995 1 October 2001
  T 3 19.56 mm 3.48 g 1.6 mm
  T 5 21.87 mm 4.71 g 1.7 mm
  T 10 25 mm 7.43 g 2 mm
  T 20 31 mm 11.37 g Grooved

Second series (1998)

 
₸1, ₸2, ₸5, ₸10, ₸20, ₸50 and ₸100 coins of the second series.

In 1998, a new series of coins was introduced. After the withdrawal of tiyin denominated coins T 1 became the smallest denomination. T 100 were later introduced in 2002 replacing the equivalent notes. A T 2 coin was introduced in 2005. In 2013 the alloy of lower denomination coins was altered.

Second series coins of the Kazakh tenge (1997–2018)[13]
Image Value Technical parameters Description Date of
Diameter Mass Thickness Composition Edge Obverse Reverse minting issue withdrawal lapse
  ₸1 15 mm 1.63 g 1.3 mm Alloy of "nickel silver", yellow color
(since 2013 - carbon steel, galvanic coating yellow metal)
Plain Value Year, Emblem of Kazakhstan 1997~2018 11 November 1998 Current
  ₸2 16 mm 1.84 g 1.3 mm 2005,2006 23 February 2005
  ₸5 17.27 mm 2.18 g 1.3 mm 1997~2018 11 November 1998
  ₸10 19.56 mm 2.81 g 1.3 mm
  ₸20 18.27 mm 2.9 g 1.6 mm Alloy of "nickel silver", white color (since 2013 - carbon steel and galvanic nickel) Grooved Value Year, Emblem of Kazakhstan 1997~2018 11 November 1998 Current
  ₸50 23 mm 4.7 g 1.6 mm
  ₸100 24.5 mm 6.65 g 1.95 mm Inner disk: alloy of "nickel silver", white color
Outer disk: alloy of "nibrass", yellow color.
Grooved with the note - «СТО ТЕНГЕ - ЖYЗ ТЕҢГЕ» (one hundred tenge) 2002~2007 1 July 2002
These images are to scale at 2.5 pixels per millimetre. For table standards, see the coin specification table.

Third series (2019)

In 2019, a new series of coins was introduced into circulation, with the same coin specifications and metallic compositions as the second series. But with the inscriptions of the coins now rendered in Latin-based Kazakh instead of Kazakh-based Cyrillic.

The coins were issued as part of the efforts of the presidential decree issued by former President Nursultan Nazarbayev of its transition of switching from a Cyrillic-based alphabet to a Latin-based alphabet and emphasizing Kazakh culture and distance the country from Russian influence. The designs of the coins were approved by Interim President Qasym-Zhomart Toqaev on March 20, 2019. Previously issued coins bearing the Kazakh Cyrillic script will remain legal tender alongside the new Kazakh Latin inscribed coins. In 2019, the National Bank of Kazakhstan announced the issuance of new ₸200 coins, which were issued into circulation in 2020. This new denomination features inscriptions in Latin-based Kazakh, and like the ₸100 coin, is bi-metallic.[14]

Third series coins of the Kazakh tenge (2019–present)[15]
Image Value Technical parameters Description Date of
Diameter Mass Thickness Composition Edge Obverse Reverse minting issue withdrawal lapse
  ₸1 15 mm 1.63 g 1.3 mm Carbon steel, galvanic coating yellow metal Plain Value Year, Emblem of Kazakhstan 2019~present 26 April 2019 Current
  ₸2 16 mm 1.84 g 1.3 mm
  ₸5 17.27 mm 2.18 g 1.3 mm
  ₸10 19.56 mm 2.81 g 1.3 mm
  ₸20 18.27 mm 2.9 g 1.6 mm Carbon steel and galvanic nickel Grooved Value Year, Emblem of Kazakhstan 2019~present 26 April 2019 Current
  ₸50 23 mm 4.7 g 1.6 mm
  ₸100 24.5 mm 6.65 g 1.95 mm Inner disk: alloy of "nickel silver", white color
Outer disk: alloy of "nibrass", yellow color.
Grooved with the note - «JÚZ TEŃGE» (one hundred tenge)
   ₸200 26 mm 7.5 g 1.9 mm Aluminium-brass center in copper-nickel ring Sixteen indentations ('Spanish flower') with alterned plain and reeded sections 2020~present 28 January 2020
These images are to scale at 2.5 pixels per millimetre. For table standards, see the coin specification table.

Commemorative coins

Commemorative coins are issued in denominations of ₸20, ₸50, ₸100, ₸500, ₸1,000, ₸2,500, ₸5,000 and ₸10,000. Silver and gold bullion coins exist in denominations of ₸1, ₸2, ₸5, ₸10, ₸20, ₸50 and ₸100. Many of the ₸20 and ₸50 commemoratives are also struck in cupro-nickel and occasionally make it out into general circulation as a side coinage with face value.

 
New symbol of tenge (₸) used on info-board of a currency exchange office in Almaty

Banknotes

 
200 tenge (old design)

1993 series

On 15 November 1993, the National Bank of Kazakhstan issued notes in denominations of 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, and 50 tiyn, T 1, T 3, T 5, T 10, T 20, and T 50; T 100 notes followed shortly thereafter. These were followed in 1994 by T 200, T 500, and T 1,000 notes. T 2,000 notes were introduced in 1996, with T 5,000 in 1999 and T 10,000 on 28 July 2003.[16] Notes currently in circulation are:

  • ₸200 - portrait of Al-Farabi
  • ₸500 - portrait of Al-Farabi, fragment of Khodzha Akhmet Yassaui mausoleum
  • ₸1,000 - portrait of Al-Farabi
  • ₸2,000 - portrait of Al-Farabi
  • ₸5,000 - portrait of Al-Farabi
  • ₸10,000 - portrait of Al-Farabi, image of snow leopard.

The text on the reverse side of the 200 tenge banknote is written in Kazakh, although text on the reverse sides of the other banknotes is written in Russian.

1993 Series
Image Value Main Colour Description Date
Obverse Reverse Obverse Reverse Obverse Reverse issue annul
    1 tiyn green green value in numeral and Kazakh, unique geometric design background value in numeral and Kazakh, Kazakhstan coat of arms, unique geometric design background 1993 2001
    2 tiyn light blue light blue
    5 tiyn pink pink
    10 tiyn red red
    20 tiyn blue, grey blue
    50 tiyn brown, yellow brown
    T 1 blue light blue Portrait of Al-Farabi Geometrical constructions and formulations of Al-Farabi 2012–2018
    T 3 green bluish green Portrait of Suinbai Aronuly Alatau landscape
    T 5 brown yellow, orange Portrait of Kurmangazy Kurmangazy mausoleum
    T 10 green light green Portrait of Chokan Ualihanov Ok Zhetpes mountain
    T 20 brown light brown Portrait of Abay Kunanbaev Illustration of golden eagle with the man, drawn from works of Abay Kunanbaev
    T 50 reddish light red Portrait of Abulhair Khan Rock paintings of Mangistau
    T 100 violet pink Portrait of Ablay Khan Hodja Ahmed Yassavi mausoleum
    T 200 brown, red yellow, blue Portrait of Al-Farabi Hodja Ahmed Yassavi mausoleum 1994
    T 500 dark blue, blue blue, violet Portrait of Al-Farabi Hodja Ahmed Yassavi mausoleum
    T 1,000 green, red green, blue, red Portrait of Al-Farabi Hodja Ahmed Yassavi mausoleum
    T 2,000 green, blue green, brown Portrait of Al-Farabi Hodja Ahmed Yassavi mausoleum 1996
    T 5,000 brown, violet brown Portrait of Al-Farabi Hodja Ahmed Yassavi mausoleum 1998
    T 10,000 blue blue, brown Portrait of Al-Farabi Snow leopard against a background of mountains 2003

2006 series

 
Some ₸2,000 notes spelled the word банкі (bank) incorrectly as банқі.

The National Bank of Kazakhstan issued a new series of tenge banknotes in 2006. This was not a currency reform as they replaced existing notes at face value.

The 2006 series is far more exotic than its predecessors. The obverse is vertical and the denomination is written in Kazakh. All denominations depict the Astana/Nur-Sultan Bayterek monument, the flag of Kazakhstan, the Coat of arms, the handprint with a signature of president Nursultan Nazarbayev and fragments of the national anthem. The main differences across each denomination are only the colours, denominations and underprint patterns.

On the contrast, the reverse side of the notes are more different. The denomination is written in Russian, and each denomination shows a unique building and geography of Kazakhstan in the outline of its borders.

The first printing of the ₸2,000 and ₸5,000 notes issued in 2006 had misspellings of the word for "bank" (the correct spelling "банкі" bankı was misspelled "*банқі" banqı). The misspelling was a politically sensitive issue due to the cultural and political importance of the Kazakh language.[17]

On 3 October 2016, the ₸2,000, ₸5,000 and ₸10,000 banknotes of the 2006 series lost their legal tender status and are no longer valid. From 4 October 2016 to 3 October 2017, these notes can be exchanged without commission at any second tier bank and branches of the National Bank of Kazakhstan.[18]

2006 Series
Image Value Main Colour Description Date of issue
Obverse Reverse Obverse Reverse
    ₸200 orange Nur-Sultan Bayterek monument, Kazakhstan flag, Kazakhstan coat of arms, handprint with a signature of Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev, fragments of the national anthem, value in numerals and Kazakh words, issuing bank in Kazakh, inscription in Kazakh stating that counterfeiting banknotes is against the law Transport and Communication Ministry and a winged snow leopard on the bridge over River Ishim, outline map of Kazakhstan with Ministry of Defense and the steppes in the background, value in Russian, name of issuing in Kazakh, logo of issuing bank, inscription in Russian stating that counterfeiting banknotes is against the law 2006–2016[18]
    ₸500 blue Ministry of Finance and Akimat (City Hall) of Astana/Nur-Sultan, outline map of Kazakhstan with gulls over the sea in background, value in Russian, name of issuing in Kazakh, logo of issuing bank, inscription in Russian stating that counterfeiting banknotes is against the law
    ₸1,000 brown President Culture Center, outline map of Kazakhstan with mountains in background, value in Russian, name of issuing in Kazakh, logo of issuing bank, inscription in Russian stating that counterfeiting banknotes is against the law
    ₸2,000 green Abai Opera House, outline map of Kazakhstan with mountain lake in background, value in Russian, name of issuing in Kazakh, logo of issuing bank, inscription in Russian stating that counterfeiting banknotes is against the law
    ₸5,000 red Independence Monument and the Kazakhstan Hotel, outline map of Kazakhstan with mountains in background, value in Russian, name of issuing in Kazakh, logo of issuing bank, inscription in Russian stating that counterfeiting banknotes is against the law
    ₸10,000 purple Residence Akorda (presidential palace), outline map of Kazakhstan with canyons in the background, value in Russian, name of issuing in Kazakh, logo of issuing bank, inscription in Russian stating that counterfeiting banknotes is against the law

2011–2017 series

The National Bank of Kazakhstan issued a new series of tenge banknotes dated 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014 in denominations of ₸1,000, ₸2,000, ₸5,000, and ₸10,000.[19][20][21][22] The designs for this series feature the "Kazakh Eli" monument on the front of the notes. On 1 December 2015, a new ₸20,000 banknote was introduced. It contains the issue date of 2013, and is a commemorative note to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the introduction of its national currency, but was not issued until 2015.[23] In 2017, the National Bank of Kazakhstan issued a ₸500 banknote as part of this series, but has caused controversy over an image of a gull on the reverse side of the note and the image of the Moscow business center in Kazakhstan's capital of Nur-Sultan.[24]

2011–2017 Series
Image Value Main Color Description Date of issue
Obverse Reverse Obverse Reverse
[2] [3] ₸500 Blue Flag, skyscrapers, "Kazakh Eli" monument in Astana/Nur-Sultan (representing the "Independence of Kazakhstan" and the "Continuation of Generations"), Emblem of Kazakhstan and Flag of Kazakhstan Outline of Kazakhstan, seagulls 2017
[4] [5] ₸1,000 Yellow, brown, orange and blue "Kazakh Eli" monument in Astana/Nur-Sultan (representing the "independence of Kazakhstan" and the "Continuation of Generations"), pigeons, Emblem of Kazakhstan and Flag of Kazakhstan Outline of Kazakhstan, mountains and landscape of the Ustyurt Plateau 2014
[6] [7] ₸2,000 Green "Kazakh Eli" monument in Astana/Nur-Sultan (representing the "independence of Kazakhstan" and the "Continuation of Generations"), Khan Shatyr tent, pigeons, Emblem of Kazakhstan and Flag of Kazakhstan Outline of Kazakhstan, Ertis/Irtysh river 2012
[8] [9] ₸5,000 Red, blue, yellow, and green "Kazakh Eli" monument in Astana/Nur-Sultan (representing the "independence of Kazakhstan" and the "Continuation of Generations"), Palace of Independence, pigeons, Emblem of Kazakhstan and Flag of Kazakhstan Outline of Kazakhstan, Monument of Independence, Hotel "Kazakhstan" (Almaty/Alma Ata), Zailijsky Alatau ridge of Tjan-Shan mountain range 2011
[10] [11] ₸10,000 Violet and blue "Kazakh Eli" monument in Astana/Nur-Sultan (representing the "independence of Kazakhstan" and the "Continuation of Generations"), Palace of Independence, pigeons, Emblem of Kazakhstan and Flag of Kazakhstan Outline of Kazakhstan, Residence Ak Orda (Palace of the President), Astana/Nur-Sultan 2012
[12] [13] ₸20,000 Blue-gray and violet "Kazakh Eli" monument in Astana/Nur-Sultan (representing the "independence of Kazakhstan" and the "Continuation of Generations"), pigeons, Emblem of Kazakhstan, Flag of Kazakhstan and the Mangilik El triumphal arch Outline of Kazakhstan, Residence Ak Orda (Palace of the President) and Government buildings in Astana/Nur-Sultan, arranged in order by the principle of separation of powers, as written in the Constitution of the Republic of Kazakhstan 2015[25]

New series with security features 2008

Since 2008, a number of commemorative designs have been issued, including notes celebrating the 2011 Asian Winter Games hosted in Nur-Sultan. Commemoratives can typically be found in these denominations: ₸1,000, ₸2,000, ₸5,000, and ₸10,000.

Digital tenge

The National Bank of Kazakhstan publicly released plans to develop a national digital currency.[26]

Commemorative banknotes

  • T 5,000 (2001)
  • ₸5,000 (2008)
  • ₸1,000 (2010)
  • ₸1,000 (2011)
  • ₸2,000 (2011)
  • ₸10,000 (2011)
  • ₸1,000 (2013)

1,000 tenge banknote issued in 2013 to commemorate the "Kul Tigin" – the monument of the Turkic runic writing.

  • ₸10,000 (2016)

The National Bank of Kazakhstan issued a 10,000 tenge commemorative banknote to commemorate the 25th anniversary of independence from the Soviet Union. The commemorative note contains an image of Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev,[27] and was launched into circulation on the Day of the First President, December 1, 2016.

  • ₸20,000 (2021)

The National Bank of Kazakhstan issued a 20,000 tenge commemorative banknote to commemorate the 30th anniversary of independence from the Soviet Union. The commemorative note features images of the first president of Kazakhstan, "Elbasy" Nursultan Nazarbayev, the Akorda Presidential Palace, a view of the capital city of Nur-Sultan and the official logo for the celebrations. The commemorative note is also the first to feature inscriptions in Kazakh-based Latin instead of Kazakh-based Cyrillic. The commemorative note was issued on December 16, 2021.[28]

Exchange rates and inflation

On September 2, 2013, the National Bank of Kazakhstan moved the tenge from a managed float and pegged it to the US dollar and the rouble.[29]

On February 11, 2014, the Kazakh National Bank chose to devalue the tenge by 19% against the U.S. dollar in response to a weakening of the Russian ruble.[30]

On August 20, 2015, The Kazakhstan National Bank has done away with the currency band with respect to conversion rate of tenge. Now, the tenge is a free-floating currency and its exchange rate against the major currencies are determined by demand and supply in the market. Due to this change, the tenge lost 30% of its value in a single day.[31]

Current KZT exchange rates
From Google Finance: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD RUB EUR JPY
From Yahoo! Finance: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD RUB EUR JPY
From XE.com: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD RUB EUR JPY
From OANDA: AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD RUB EUR JPY
Historical average exchange rates[32]
USD EUR RUB
1999 119.52 130.00 4.82
2000 142.13 134.40 5.05
2001 146.74 132.40 5.04
2002 153.28 144.68 4.89
2003 n/a 168.79 4.87
2004 136.04 169.04 4.72
2005 132.88 165.42 4.70
2006 126.09 158.27 4.64
2007 122.55 167.75 4.79
2008 120.30 177.04 4.86
2009 147.50 205.67 4.66
2010 147.35 195.67 4.85
2011 146.62 204.11 5.00
2012 (Jan) 148.38 191.27 4.73
2014-4-14 182.02 252.72 5.11
2016-9-30 335.64 377.42 5.33
Annual inflation rate,%[33]
1994 1160.262
1995 60.388
1996 28.763
1997 11.321
1998 1.880
1999 18.095
2000 10.001
2001 6.582
2002 6.686
2003 7.001
2004 7.011
2005 7.868
2006 8.400
2007 18.772
2008 9.484
2009 6.377
2010 7.969
2011 7.429
2012 6.0
2013 5.83
2014 6.72
2015 6.65
2016 14.56
2017 7.43
2018 6.03

See also

References

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  2. ^ . Lexico. Archived from the original on February 28, 2021. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  3. ^ "tenge in Collins Dictionary". Collins Dictionary. Retrieved 8 August 2022.
  4. ^ a b Odling-Smee, J. ao (2001). "The IMF and the rouble area, 1991-93" (PDF). Retrieved 2014-12-16.
  5. ^ a b Dąbrowski, M (1995). "The reasons for the collapse of the Ruble zone" (PDF). Retrieved 2014-12-16.
  6. ^ "С казахстанских тенге исчезнут надписи на русском языке". Interfax.ru (in Russian). 2019-02-22. Retrieved 2019-02-22.
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  11. ^ Указ Президента Республики Казахстан от 7 февраля 2001 года № 549 «О некоторых вопросах функционирования национальной валюты Республики Казахстан».
  12. ^ "Указ Президента Республики Казахстан от 9 ноября 2011 года № 170". base.spinform.ru. Retrieved 2021-02-05.
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  14. ^ [1] 2022-08-09 at the Wayback Machine Қазақстан Ұлттық Банкі. Retrieved on 2021-08-28.
  15. ^ The national Bank of Kazakhstan. Каталог монет. Available at:https://nationalbank.kz/ru/catalog/coins?page=1 2022-01-09 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ Linzmayer, Owen (2012). "Kazakhstan". The Banknote Book. San Francisco, CA: www.BanknoteNews.com.
  17. ^ "Kazakh central bank misspells 'bank' on money". NBC News.
  18. ^ a b "Tenge Banknotes Of 2006 Withdrawn In Kazakhstan". kazworld.info.
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  21. ^ Kazakhstan new 2,000-tenge note confirmed 2015-02-06 at the Wayback Machine BanknoteNews.com. April 8, 2013. Retrieved on 2015-02-05.
  22. ^ Kazakhstan new 1,000-tenge note confirmed 2015-02-04 at the Wayback Machine BanknoteNews.com. January 5, 2015. Retrieved on 2015-02-05.
  23. ^ Kazakhstan new 20,000-tenge note (B144) confirmed 2015-12-08 at the Wayback Machine BanknoteNews.com. December 3, 2015. Retrieved on 2015-12-03.
  24. ^ What Future for the 'Wikipedia Seagull' on Kazakhstan's Brand New Banknotes? 2020-01-29 at the Wayback Machine Global Voices (https://globalvoices.org 2017-12-12 at the Wayback Machine) December 8, 2017. Retrieved on 2017-12-12.
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  26. ^ "Digital tenge: the advantages of launching E-Currency". unicaselaw.com.
  27. ^ "Kazakhstan Presented Tenge Note With President Nazarbayev". kazworld.info.
  28. ^ Kazakstan – New commemorative banknote. 2021-12-02 at the Wayback Machine MRI Bankers' Guide to Foreign Currency (https://mriguide.com 2021-12-02 at the Wayback Machine). Retrieved on 2021-12-01.
  29. ^ Kazakhstan to peg tenge to U.S. dollar, euro, rouble on Sept. 2 https://www.reuters.com/article/kazakhstan-currency-idUSL6N0GT1Y020130828 2022-05-01 at the Wayback Machine
  30. ^ Kazakhstan devalues tenge by almost 20% 2022-12-27 at the Wayback Machine, The Financial Times, 11 February 2014
  31. ^ "Blog Travel to Central Asia-Kazakhstan and Astana". astana-almaty.blogspot.com. 2015-08-20. Retrieved 2021-02-05.
  32. ^ The National Bank of Kazakhstan. "Official Foreign Exchange Rates on average for the period". Retrieved 2012-02-20.
  33. ^ The National Bank of Kazakhstan. "Price Indices Data". Retrieved 2012-02-20.

External links

  • Currency exchange rates in Kazakhstan
  • The banknotes of Kazakhstan (in English and German)
  • Coins of Kazakhstan
  • Banknotes of Kazakhstan
  • Catalog of the coins of Kazakhstan (Numista)
  • Kazakhstan Tenge: detailed catalog of banknotes
  • Coins of Kazakhstan at CISCoins.net

kazakhstani, tenge, redirects, here, symbol, used, japan, japanese, postal, mark, tenge, redirects, here, other, uses, tenge, disambiguation, tenge, kazakh, теңге, teñge, kazakh, pronunciation, ˌtʲeŋˈɡʲe, sign, code, currency, kazakhstan, divided, into, tiyn, . redirects here For the symbol used in Japan see Japanese postal mark Tenge redirects here For other uses see Tenge disambiguation The tenge ˈ t ɛ ŋ ɡ eɪ 2 or t ɛ ŋ ˈ ɡ eɪ 3 Kazakh tenge tenge Kazakh pronunciation ˌtʲeŋˈɡʲe sign code KZT is the currency of Kazakhstan It is divided into 100 tiyn Kazakh tiyn tiyin also transliterated as tiyin TengeҚazakstan tengesi Qazaqstan tengesi Kazakh Kazahstanskij tenge Russian 5 000 noteISO 4217CodeKZT numeric 398 Subunit0 01UnitPluralThe language s of this currency do es not have a morphological plural distinction Symbol DenominationsSubunit 1 100tiyn tiyn Banknotes Freq used 200 500 1 000 2 000 5 000 10 000 20 000Coins Freq used 5 10 20 50 100 200 Rarely used 1 2DemographicsUser s KazakhstanIssuanceCentral bankNational Bank of Kazakhstan Websitewww wbr nationalbank wbr kzPrinterBanknote Factory of the National Bank of KazakhstanValuationInflation4 9 1 SourceBasic Macroeconomic Indicators on the homepage Contents 1 History 1 1 Etymology 1 2 Symbol 2 Coins 2 1 First series 1993 2 2 Second series 1998 2 3 Third series 2019 2 4 Commemorative coins 3 Banknotes 3 1 1993 series 3 2 2006 series 3 3 2011 2017 series 3 4 New series with security features 2008 4 Digital tenge 5 Commemorative banknotes 6 Exchange rates and inflation 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditAfter the breakup of the Soviet Union in December 1991 most of the formerly Soviet republics attempted to maintain a common currency Some politicians hoped to at least maintain special relations among former Soviet republics the near abroad Other reasons were the economic considerations for maintaining the rouble zone The wish to preserve strong trade relations between former Soviet republics was considered the most important goal 4 The break up of the Soviet Union was not accompanied by any formal changes in monetary arrangements The Central Bank of Russia was authorized by whom to take over the State Bank of the USSR Gosbank on 1 January 1992 It continued to ship Soviet notes and coins to the central banks of the eleven newly independent countries which had formerly been the main branches of Gosbank in the republics The political situation however was not favourable for maintaining a common currency 4 Maintaining a common currency requires a strong political consensus in respect to monetary and fiscal targets a common institution in charge of implementing these targets and some minimum of common legislation concerning the banking and foreign exchange regulations citation needed These conditions were far from being met amidst the turbulent economic and political situation During the first half of 1992 a monetary union with 15 independent states all using the rouble existed Since it was clear that the situation would not last each of them was using its position as free riders to issue huge amounts of money in the form of credit 5 As a result some countries were issuing coupons in order to protect their markets from buyers from other states The Russian central bank responded in July 1992 by setting up restrictions to the flow of credit between Russia and other states The final collapse of the rouble zone began when Russia pulled out with the exchange of banknotes by the Central Bank of Russia on Russian territory at the end of July 1993 As a result Kazakhstan and other countries still in the rouble zone were pushed out 5 On November 12 1993 the President of Kazakhstan issued a decree On introducing national currency of Republic of Kazakhstan The tenge was introduced on 15 November 1993 to replace Soviet currency at a rate of T 1 Rbls 500 In 1991 a special group of designers was set up Mendybay Alin Timur Suleymenov Asimsaly Duzelkhanov and Khayrulla Gabzhalilov Thus November 15 is celebrated as the Day of National Currency of Republic of Kazakhstan In 1995 a tenge printing factory opened in Kazakhstan The first consignment of tenge banknotes were printed in the United Kingdom and the first coins were struck in Germany In February 2019 Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev signed a bill into law that will remove all Russian captions from future tenge banknotes and coins 6 Etymology Edit The word tenge in Kazakh and in most other Turkic languages means a set of scales cf the old Uzbek tenga or the Tajik borrowed term tanga The origin of the word is the Mongolic word teng ᠲᠡᠩ which means being equal balance The name of this currency is thus similar to the pound lira peso taka and shekel The name of the currency is also related to the Russian word for money Russian dengi den gi which the Old Russian language borrowed from Turkic sources 7 Symbol Edit The symbol for the Kazakhstani tenge Originally a simple letter T was used to denote amounts in tenge this is still recommended when the tenge symbol is not available 8 In autumn 2006 the National Bank of Kazakhstan organised a competition for a unique symbol for the currency and received over 30 000 applications On March 20 2007 two days before the Nauryz holiday the National Bank of Kazakhstan approved a graphical symbol for the tenge On March 29 2007 the Bank announced two designers from Almaty Vadim Davydenko and Sanzhar Amirkhanov as winners for the design of the symbol of the Kazakhstani tenge They shared a prize of 1 000 000 and the title of parents of the tenge symbol 9 The character was included in Unicode 5 2 0 August 2009 at code point U 20B8 10 Coins EditWhile older coins were struck in Germany current coins are struck domestically by the Kazakhstan Mint in Oskemen First series 1993 Edit In 1993 the first series of coins were introduced in denominations of 2 5 10 20 and 50 tiyin featuring the national arms and were struck in bronze The coins of T 1 T 3 T 5 T 10 and T 20 were struck in cupro nickel and depicted stylized and mythical animals The coins of this period circulated alongside tiyin and low denomination tenge notes of equal value Tiyin coins were withdrawn as of February 7 2001 and lost their effect as legal currency as of December 31 2012 11 12 Image Denomination Material Diameter Mass Thickness Edge Date ofissue minting withdrawal 2 tiyin Brass 17 27 mm 2 26 g 1 3 mm Smooth 1 March 1994 1993 31 December 2012 5 tiyin 10 tiyin 19 56 mm 3 48 g 1 6 mm 20 tiyin 21 87 mm 4 71 g 1 7 mm 50 tiyin 25 mm 7 43 g 2 mm T 1 Alloy of nickel silver 17 27 mm 2 26 g 1 3 mm Smooth 25 October 1995 1 October 2001 T 3 19 56 mm 3 48 g 1 6 mm T 5 21 87 mm 4 71 g 1 7 mm T 10 25 mm 7 43 g 2 mm T 20 31 mm 11 37 g GroovedSecond series 1998 Edit 1 2 5 10 20 50 and 100 coins of the second series In 1998 a new series of coins was introduced After the withdrawal of tiyin denominated coins T 1 became the smallest denomination T 100 were later introduced in 2002 replacing the equivalent notes A T 2 coin was introduced in 2005 In 2013 the alloy of lower denomination coins was altered Second series coins of the Kazakh tenge 1997 2018 13 Image Value Technical parameters Description Date ofDiameter Mass Thickness Composition Edge Obverse Reverse minting issue withdrawal lapse 1 15 mm 1 63 g 1 3 mm Alloy of nickel silver yellow color since 2013 carbon steel galvanic coating yellow metal Plain Value Year Emblem of Kazakhstan 1997 2018 11 November 1998 Current 2 16 mm 1 84 g 1 3 mm 2005 2006 23 February 2005 5 17 27 mm 2 18 g 1 3 mm 1997 2018 11 November 1998 10 19 56 mm 2 81 g 1 3 mm 20 18 27 mm 2 9 g 1 6 mm Alloy of nickel silver white color since 2013 carbon steel and galvanic nickel Grooved Value Year Emblem of Kazakhstan 1997 2018 11 November 1998 Current 50 23 mm 4 7 g 1 6 mm 100 24 5 mm 6 65 g 1 95 mm Inner disk alloy of nickel silver white colorOuter disk alloy of nibrass yellow color Grooved with the note STO TENGE ZhYZ TEҢGE one hundred tenge 2002 2007 1 July 2002These images are to scale at 2 5 pixels per millimetre For table standards see the coin specification table Third series 2019 Edit In 2019 a new series of coins was introduced into circulation with the same coin specifications and metallic compositions as the second series But with the inscriptions of the coins now rendered in Latin based Kazakh instead of Kazakh based Cyrillic The coins were issued as part of the efforts of the presidential decree issued by former President Nursultan Nazarbayev of its transition of switching from a Cyrillic based alphabet to a Latin based alphabet and emphasizing Kazakh culture and distance the country from Russian influence The designs of the coins were approved by Interim President Qasym Zhomart Toqaev on March 20 2019 Previously issued coins bearing the Kazakh Cyrillic script will remain legal tender alongside the new Kazakh Latin inscribed coins In 2019 the National Bank of Kazakhstan announced the issuance of new 200 coins which were issued into circulation in 2020 This new denomination features inscriptions in Latin based Kazakh and like the 100 coin is bi metallic 14 Third series coins of the Kazakh tenge 2019 present 15 Image Value Technical parameters Description Date ofDiameter Mass Thickness Composition Edge Obverse Reverse minting issue withdrawal lapse 1 15 mm 1 63 g 1 3 mm Carbon steel galvanic coating yellow metal Plain Value Year Emblem of Kazakhstan 2019 present 26 April 2019 Current 2 16 mm 1 84 g 1 3 mm 5 17 27 mm 2 18 g 1 3 mm 10 19 56 mm 2 81 g 1 3 mm 20 18 27 mm 2 9 g 1 6 mm Carbon steel and galvanic nickel Grooved Value Year Emblem of Kazakhstan 2019 present 26 April 2019 Current 50 23 mm 4 7 g 1 6 mm 100 24 5 mm 6 65 g 1 95 mm Inner disk alloy of nickel silver white colorOuter disk alloy of nibrass yellow color Grooved with the note JUZ TENGE one hundred tenge 200 26 mm 7 5 g 1 9 mm Aluminium brass center in copper nickel ring Sixteen indentations Spanish flower with alterned plain and reeded sections 2020 present 28 January 2020These images are to scale at 2 5 pixels per millimetre For table standards see the coin specification table Commemorative coins Edit Commemorative coins are issued in denominations of 20 50 100 500 1 000 2 500 5 000 and 10 000 Silver and gold bullion coins exist in denominations of 1 2 5 10 20 50 and 100 Many of the 20 and 50 commemoratives are also struck in cupro nickel and occasionally make it out into general circulation as a side coinage with face value New symbol of tenge used on info board of a currency exchange office in AlmatyBanknotes Edit 200 tenge old design 1993 series Edit On 15 November 1993 the National Bank of Kazakhstan issued notes in denominations of 1 2 5 10 20 and 50 tiyn T 1 T 3 T 5 T 10 T 20 and T 50 T 100 notes followed shortly thereafter These were followed in 1994 by T 200 T 500 and T 1 000 notes T 2 000 notes were introduced in 1996 with T 5 000 in 1999 and T 10 000 on 28 July 2003 16 Notes currently in circulation are 200 portrait of Al Farabi 500 portrait of Al Farabi fragment of Khodzha Akhmet Yassaui mausoleum 1 000 portrait of Al Farabi 2 000 portrait of Al Farabi 5 000 portrait of Al Farabi 10 000 portrait of Al Farabi image of snow leopard The text on the reverse side of the 200 tenge banknote is written in Kazakh although text on the reverse sides of the other banknotes is written in Russian 1993 SeriesImage Value Main Colour Description DateObverse Reverse Obverse Reverse Obverse Reverse issue annul 1 tiyn green green value in numeral and Kazakh unique geometric design background value in numeral and Kazakh Kazakhstan coat of arms unique geometric design background 1993 2001 2 tiyn light blue light blue 5 tiyn pink pink 10 tiyn red red 20 tiyn blue grey blue 50 tiyn brown yellow brown T 1 blue light blue Portrait of Al Farabi Geometrical constructions and formulations of Al Farabi 2012 2018 T 3 green bluish green Portrait of Suinbai Aronuly Alatau landscape T 5 brown yellow orange Portrait of Kurmangazy Kurmangazy mausoleum T 10 green light green Portrait of Chokan Ualihanov Ok Zhetpes mountain T 20 brown light brown Portrait of Abay Kunanbaev Illustration of golden eagle with the man drawn from works of Abay Kunanbaev T 50 reddish light red Portrait of Abulhair Khan Rock paintings of Mangistau T 100 violet pink Portrait of Ablay Khan Hodja Ahmed Yassavi mausoleum T 200 brown red yellow blue Portrait of Al Farabi Hodja Ahmed Yassavi mausoleum 1994 T 500 dark blue blue blue violet Portrait of Al Farabi Hodja Ahmed Yassavi mausoleum T 1 000 green red green blue red Portrait of Al Farabi Hodja Ahmed Yassavi mausoleum T 2 000 green blue green brown Portrait of Al Farabi Hodja Ahmed Yassavi mausoleum 1996 T 5 000 brown violet brown Portrait of Al Farabi Hodja Ahmed Yassavi mausoleum 1998 T 10 000 blue blue brown Portrait of Al Farabi Snow leopard against a background of mountains 20032006 series Edit Some 2 000 notes spelled the word banki bank incorrectly as banki The National Bank of Kazakhstan issued a new series of tenge banknotes in 2006 This was not a currency reform as they replaced existing notes at face value The 2006 series is far more exotic than its predecessors The obverse is vertical and the denomination is written in Kazakh All denominations depict the Astana Nur Sultan Bayterek monument the flag of Kazakhstan the Coat of arms the handprint with a signature of president Nursultan Nazarbayev and fragments of the national anthem The main differences across each denomination are only the colours denominations and underprint patterns On the contrast the reverse side of the notes are more different The denomination is written in Russian and each denomination shows a unique building and geography of Kazakhstan in the outline of its borders The first printing of the 2 000 and 5 000 notes issued in 2006 had misspellings of the word for bank the correct spelling banki banki was misspelled banki banqi The misspelling was a politically sensitive issue due to the cultural and political importance of the Kazakh language 17 On 3 October 2016 the 2 000 5 000 and 10 000 banknotes of the 2006 series lost their legal tender status and are no longer valid From 4 October 2016 to 3 October 2017 these notes can be exchanged without commission at any second tier bank and branches of the National Bank of Kazakhstan 18 2006 SeriesImage Value Main Colour Description Date of issueObverse Reverse Obverse Reverse 200 orange Nur Sultan Bayterek monument Kazakhstan flag Kazakhstan coat of arms handprint with a signature of Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev fragments of the national anthem value in numerals and Kazakh words issuing bank in Kazakh inscription in Kazakh stating that counterfeiting banknotes is against the law Transport and Communication Ministry and a winged snow leopard on the bridge over River Ishim outline map of Kazakhstan with Ministry of Defense and the steppes in the background value in Russian name of issuing in Kazakh logo of issuing bank inscription in Russian stating that counterfeiting banknotes is against the law 2006 2016 18 500 blue Ministry of Finance and Akimat City Hall of Astana Nur Sultan outline map of Kazakhstan with gulls over the sea in background value in Russian name of issuing in Kazakh logo of issuing bank inscription in Russian stating that counterfeiting banknotes is against the law 1 000 brown President Culture Center outline map of Kazakhstan with mountains in background value in Russian name of issuing in Kazakh logo of issuing bank inscription in Russian stating that counterfeiting banknotes is against the law 2 000 green Abai Opera House outline map of Kazakhstan with mountain lake in background value in Russian name of issuing in Kazakh logo of issuing bank inscription in Russian stating that counterfeiting banknotes is against the law 5 000 red Independence Monument and the Kazakhstan Hotel outline map of Kazakhstan with mountains in background value in Russian name of issuing in Kazakh logo of issuing bank inscription in Russian stating that counterfeiting banknotes is against the law 10 000 purple Residence Akorda presidential palace outline map of Kazakhstan with canyons in the background value in Russian name of issuing in Kazakh logo of issuing bank inscription in Russian stating that counterfeiting banknotes is against the law2011 2017 series Edit The National Bank of Kazakhstan issued a new series of tenge banknotes dated 2011 2012 2013 and 2014 in denominations of 1 000 2 000 5 000 and 10 000 19 20 21 22 The designs for this series feature the Kazakh Eli monument on the front of the notes On 1 December 2015 a new 20 000 banknote was introduced It contains the issue date of 2013 and is a commemorative note to celebrate the 20th anniversary of the introduction of its national currency but was not issued until 2015 23 In 2017 the National Bank of Kazakhstan issued a 500 banknote as part of this series but has caused controversy over an image of a gull on the reverse side of the note and the image of the Moscow business center in Kazakhstan s capital of Nur Sultan 24 2011 2017 SeriesImage Value Main Color Description Date of issueObverse Reverse Obverse Reverse 2 3 500 Blue Flag skyscrapers Kazakh Eli monument in Astana Nur Sultan representing the Independence of Kazakhstan and the Continuation of Generations Emblem of Kazakhstan and Flag of Kazakhstan Outline of Kazakhstan seagulls 2017 4 5 1 000 Yellow brown orange and blue Kazakh Eli monument in Astana Nur Sultan representing the independence of Kazakhstan and the Continuation of Generations pigeons Emblem of Kazakhstan and Flag of Kazakhstan Outline of Kazakhstan mountains and landscape of the Ustyurt Plateau 2014 6 7 2 000 Green Kazakh Eli monument in Astana Nur Sultan representing the independence of Kazakhstan and the Continuation of Generations Khan Shatyr tent pigeons Emblem of Kazakhstan and Flag of Kazakhstan Outline of Kazakhstan Ertis Irtysh river 2012 8 9 5 000 Red blue yellow and green Kazakh Eli monument in Astana Nur Sultan representing the independence of Kazakhstan and the Continuation of Generations Palace of Independence pigeons Emblem of Kazakhstan and Flag of Kazakhstan Outline of Kazakhstan Monument of Independence Hotel Kazakhstan Almaty Alma Ata Zailijsky Alatau ridge of Tjan Shan mountain range 2011 10 11 10 000 Violet and blue Kazakh Eli monument in Astana Nur Sultan representing the independence of Kazakhstan and the Continuation of Generations Palace of Independence pigeons Emblem of Kazakhstan and Flag of Kazakhstan Outline of Kazakhstan Residence Ak Orda Palace of the President Astana Nur Sultan 2012 12 13 20 000 Blue gray and violet Kazakh Eli monument in Astana Nur Sultan representing the independence of Kazakhstan and the Continuation of Generations pigeons Emblem of Kazakhstan Flag of Kazakhstan and the Mangilik El triumphal arch Outline of Kazakhstan Residence Ak Orda Palace of the President and Government buildings in Astana Nur Sultan arranged in order by the principle of separation of powers as written in the Constitution of the Republic of Kazakhstan 2015 25 New series with security features 2008 Edit Since 2008 a number of commemorative designs have been issued including notes celebrating the 2011 Asian Winter Games hosted in Nur Sultan Commemoratives can typically be found in these denominations 1 000 2 000 5 000 and 10 000 Digital tenge EditThe National Bank of Kazakhstan publicly released plans to develop a national digital currency 26 Commemorative banknotes EditT 5 000 2001 5 000 tenge banknote issued in 2001 with overprint to commemorate the tenth anniversary of independence from the Soviet Union front 5 000 tenge banknote issued in 2001 with overprint to commemorate the tenth anniversary of independence from the Soviet Union back 5 000 2008 5 000 tenge banknote issued in 2008 to commemorate 15 years of the Kazakhstani tenge front 5 000 tenge banknote issued in 2008 to commemorate 15 years of the Kazakhstani tenge back 1 000 2010 1 000 tenge banknote issued in 2010 to commemorate the Chairmanship of Kazakhstan in the OSCE front 1 000 tenge banknote issued in 2010 to commemorate the Chairmanship of Kazakhstan in the OSCE back 1 000 2011 1 000 tenge banknote issued in 2011 to commemorate Kazakhstan s Presidency of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference front 1 000 tenge banknote issued in 2011 to commemorate Kazakhstan s Presidency of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference back 2 000 2011 2 000 tenge banknote issued in 2011 to commemorate the seventh Asian Winter Games in Nur Sultan front 2 000 tenge banknote issued in 2011 to commemorate the seventh Asian Winter Games in Nur Sultan back 10 000 2011 10 000 tenge banknote issued in 2011 to commemorate the 20th anniversary of independence from the Soviet Union front 10 000 tenge banknote issued in 2011 to commemorate the 20th anniversary of independence from the Soviet Union back 1 000 2013 1 000 tenge banknote issued in 2013 to commemorate the Kul Tigin the monument of the Turkic runic writing 10 000 2016 The National Bank of Kazakhstan issued a 10 000 tenge commemorative banknote to commemorate the 25th anniversary of independence from the Soviet Union The commemorative note contains an image of Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev 27 and was launched into circulation on the Day of the First President December 1 2016 20 000 2021 The National Bank of Kazakhstan issued a 20 000 tenge commemorative banknote to commemorate the 30th anniversary of independence from the Soviet Union The commemorative note features images of the first president of Kazakhstan Elbasy Nursultan Nazarbayev the Akorda Presidential Palace a view of the capital city of Nur Sultan and the official logo for the celebrations The commemorative note is also the first to feature inscriptions in Kazakh based Latin instead of Kazakh based Cyrillic The commemorative note was issued on December 16 2021 28 Exchange rates and inflation EditOn September 2 2013 the National Bank of Kazakhstan moved the tenge from a managed float and pegged it to the US dollar and the rouble 29 On February 11 2014 the Kazakh National Bank chose to devalue the tenge by 19 against the U S dollar in response to a weakening of the Russian ruble 30 On August 20 2015 The Kazakhstan National Bank has done away with the currency band with respect to conversion rate of tenge Now the tenge is a free floating currency and its exchange rate against the major currencies are determined by demand and supply in the market Due to this change the tenge lost 30 of its value in a single day 31 Current KZT exchange ratesFrom Google Finance AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD RUB EUR JPYFrom Yahoo Finance AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD RUB EUR JPYFrom XE com AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD RUB EUR JPYFrom OANDA AUD CAD CHF CNY EUR GBP HKD JPY USD RUB EUR JPYHistorical average exchange rates 32 USD EUR RUB1999 119 52 130 00 4 822000 142 13 134 40 5 052001 146 74 132 40 5 042002 153 28 144 68 4 892003 n a 168 79 4 872004 136 04 169 04 4 722005 132 88 165 42 4 702006 126 09 158 27 4 642007 122 55 167 75 4 792008 120 30 177 04 4 862009 147 50 205 67 4 662010 147 35 195 67 4 852011 146 62 204 11 5 002012 Jan 148 38 191 27 4 732014 4 14 182 02 252 72 5 112016 9 30 335 64 377 42 5 33Annual inflation rate 33 1994 1160 2621995 60 3881996 28 7631997 11 3211998 1 8801999 18 0952000 10 0012001 6 5822002 6 6862003 7 0012004 7 0112005 7 8682006 8 4002007 18 7722008 9 4842009 6 3772010 7 9692011 7 4292012 6 02013 5 832014 6 722015 6 652016 14 562017 7 432018 6 03See also EditEconomy of KazakhstanReferences Edit Internet Resheniya IR KZ Қazakstan Ұlttyk Banki nationalbank kz Retrieved 2021 02 05 tenge in Lexico Lexico Archived from the original on February 28 2021 Retrieved 8 August 2022 tenge in Collins Dictionary Collins Dictionary Retrieved 8 August 2022 a b Odling Smee J ao 2001 The IMF and the rouble area 1991 93 PDF Retrieved 2014 12 16 a b Dabrowski M 1995 The reasons for the collapse of the Ruble zone PDF Retrieved 2014 12 16 S kazahstanskih tenge ischeznut nadpisi na russkom yazyke Interfax ru in Russian 2019 02 22 Retrieved 2019 02 22 dengi Vikislovar ru wiktionary org Retrieved 2021 02 05 World Bank Editorial Style Guide 2020 page 136 PDF openknowledge worldbank org Retrieved 2022 08 01 Uznavajte tenge v lico www izvestia kz Archived from the original on 2013 02 18 Retrieved 2012 05 03 Unicode 5 2 0 August 2009 FileFormat info August 2009 Archived from the original on 2015 09 10 Retrieved 2015 09 21 Ukaz Prezidenta Respubliki Kazahstan ot 7 fevralya 2001 goda 549 O nekotoryh voprosah funkcionirovaniya nacionalnoj valyuty Respubliki Kazahstan Ukaz Prezidenta Respubliki Kazahstan ot 9 noyabrya 2011 goda 170 base spinform ru Retrieved 2021 02 05 The national Bank of Kazakhstan Currency Available at http www nationalbank kz docid 29 amp cat id 7 Archived 2014 07 28 at the Wayback Machine 1 Archived 2022 08 09 at the Wayback Machine Қazakstan Ұlttyk Banki Retrieved on 2021 08 28 The national Bank of Kazakhstan Katalog monet Available at https nationalbank kz ru catalog coins page 1 Archived 2022 01 09 at the Wayback Machine Linzmayer Owen 2012 Kazakhstan The Banknote Book San Francisco CA www BanknoteNews com Kazakh central bank misspells bank on money NBC News a b Tenge Banknotes Of 2006 Withdrawn In Kazakhstan kazworld info Kazakhstan new date 2012 non commemorative 10 000 tenge note confirmed Archived 2015 02 06 at the Wayback Machine BanknoteNews com June 23 2012 Retrieved on 2015 02 05 Kazakhstan new 5 000 tenge note confirmed Archived 2015 02 06 at the Wayback Machine BanknoteNews com February 12 2012 Retrieved on 2015 02 05 Kazakhstan new 2 000 tenge note confirmed Archived 2015 02 06 at the Wayback Machine BanknoteNews com April 8 2013 Retrieved on 2015 02 05 Kazakhstan new 1 000 tenge note confirmed Archived 2015 02 04 at the Wayback Machine BanknoteNews com January 5 2015 Retrieved on 2015 02 05 Kazakhstan new 20 000 tenge note B144 confirmed Archived 2015 12 08 at the Wayback Machine BanknoteNews com December 3 2015 Retrieved on 2015 12 03 What Future for the Wikipedia Seagull on Kazakhstan s Brand New Banknotes Archived 2020 01 29 at the Wayback Machine Global Voices https globalvoices org Archived 2017 12 12 at the Wayback Machine December 8 2017 Retrieved on 2017 12 12 Internet Resheniya IR KZ 24 November 2019 20 000 tenge Banknotes National Bank of Kazakhstan nationalbank kz Retrieved 2021 02 05 Digital tenge the advantages of launching E Currency unicaselaw com Kazakhstan Presented Tenge Note With President Nazarbayev kazworld info Kazakstan New commemorative banknote Archived 2021 12 02 at the Wayback Machine MRI Bankers Guide to Foreign Currency https mriguide com Archived 2021 12 02 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2021 12 01 Kazakhstan to peg tenge to U S dollar euro rouble on Sept 2 https www reuters com article kazakhstan currency idUSL6N0GT1Y020130828 Archived 2022 05 01 at the Wayback Machine Kazakhstan devalues tenge by almost 20 Archived 2022 12 27 at the Wayback Machine The Financial Times 11 February 2014 Blog Travel to Central Asia Kazakhstan and Astana astana almaty blogspot com 2015 08 20 Retrieved 2021 02 05 The National Bank of Kazakhstan Official Foreign Exchange Rates on average for the period Retrieved 2012 02 20 The National Bank of Kazakhstan Price Indices Data Retrieved 2012 02 20 External links EditCurrency exchange rates in Kazakhstan News from the National Bank of Kazakhstan The banknotes of Kazakhstan in English and German Coins of Kazakhstan Banknotes of Kazakhstan Catalog of the coins of Kazakhstan Numista Kazakhstan Tenge detailed catalog of banknotes Coins of Kazakhstan at CISCoins net Portals Asia Europe Money Numismatics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kazakhstani tenge amp oldid 1129861016, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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