Canadian dollar
From Free net encyclopedia
The dollar (currency code CAD) has been the currency of Canada since 1858. It is normally abbreviated with the dollar sign $, or alternatively C$ to distinguish it from other dollar-denominated currencies. It is divided into 100 cents.
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History
Spanish Dollars
The first dollars used in Canada were Spanish dollars, eight reales coins issued by Spain and her colonies. Because the colonies used the £sd system for accounting (see Canadian pound), it was necessary to set a valuation or rating for the Spanish dollar in £sd. Different ratings were used in the different colonies. The Halifax rating was introduced c.1750 and was the most commonly used in the northern colonies. It valued the Spanish dollar at 5 shillings (the value of the silver in the coin was equal to 4 shillings 6 pence, the "London rating").
After the American War of Independence, Empire loyalists, settling in Upper Canada (Ontario), brought the York rating (named after New York) of 1 Spanish dollar = 8 shillings. This was officially outlawed (in favour of the Halifax rating) in 1796 but continued to be used well into the 19th century.
During this period, many local banknotes were issued denominated in £sd, dollars, or both. The Bank of Montreal issued notes denominated in dollars in 1817 whereas the Atlantic colonies, with stronger ties to Britain and weaker ones to the United States, preferred the £sd system. Some dollar denominated banknotes bore a depiction of the Spanish dollar coin(s) they were equal to. However, few coins were issued, as the British authorities were unwilling to allow the colonies to mint their own coins. Various different bank tokens were issued in denominations of ½ and 1 penny.
In the French speaking parts of Canada (Lower Canada, formerly New France, later Quebec), the £sd and dollar system swiftly replaced the livre following the conquest by Britain. The dollar was called the piastre on some French language banknotes, whilst some bank tokens were issued in 1 and 2 sous denominations, equal to ½ and 1 penny.
Gold Dollars
In 1841, the new Province of Canada declared that its dollar was equal to the gold U.S. dollar and was worth 5 shillings. The silver Spanish dollars were rated at 5 shillings 1 penny, whilst the British sovereign was rated at 1 pound 4 shillings 4 pence, the proper value due to its gold content compared to that of the gold U.S. dollar.
Independent Canadian Dollar
The Province of Canada declared that all accounts would be kept in dollars and cents as of January 1, 1858, and ordered the issue of the first official Canadian coins in the same year. The colonies that came together in the Canadian Confederation progressively adopted a decimal system over the next few years. Whilst New Brunswick adopted a dollar equivalent to the Canadian dollar (see New Brunswick dollar), Nova Scotia and Newfoundland did not adopt the same dollar (see Nova Scotian dollar and Newfoundland dollar). Nova Scotia retained its own currency until 1871, whilst Newfoundland issued its own currency until joining the Confederation in 1949.
Finally, the Federal Parliament passed the Uniform Currency Act in April 1871, tying up loose ends as to the currencies of the various provinces and replacing them with a common Canadian dollar. The gold standard was temporarily abandoned during World War I, and definitively abolished on April 10, 1933.
Canadian currency
Canadians use coins and bills (called "bank notes" officially, but not in ordinary usage) of similar denominations to money in the United States. The historical sizes of the coins less than 50¢ are identical to those of U.S. coins due to both nations using the Spanish dollar as the basis of their money. Modest quantities of U.S. coinage circulate in Canada at par, and some Canadian coins (generally less than one-dollar) circulate in some places in the United States as well, though recent changes to the appearance and composition of Canadian coinage have made it more difficult for these coins to be used in the United States. In Canada, it is common to find U.S. 1¢, 5¢, 10¢, and 25¢ coins in circulation (just as there are Australian 5c, 10c and 20c coins in New Zealand and vice versa). This interchangeability led to some concern when the United States Mint decided that the new Sacagawea Dollar coin would have the same colouring as the Canadian $1 coin, the "loonie", although this proved to be a non-issue.
Canadian English, like American English, uses the slang term "buck" for a dollar; the word "loonie", owing to the loon on the back of the dollar coin, is also used to distinguish the Canadian dollar from other currencies, as in "The loonie performed well today on currency markets."
In French, the currency is also called le dollar; Canadian French slang terms include piastre or piasse (equivalent to "buck," but the original word used in eighteenth-century French to translate "dollar") and huard (equivalent to "loonie"), since huard is French for "loon", the animal appearing on the coin.
Coins
Canadian coins are issued by the Royal Canadian Mint and struck at their facilities in Winnipeg. Notes are issued by the Bank of Canada with the production of the bills being outsourced to the British American Bank Note Company Ltd and the Canadian Bank Note Company Ltd in accordance with the specifications and requirements of the Bank of Canada. All wording on bills appears in both Canada's official languages, English and French. The same applies to special wording on commemorative coins. All of the standard wording on the reverse sides of coins is identical in both languages. On the obverse sides, however, the name and title of Canada's monarch appear in an abbreviated-Latin circumscription. Currently, this reads "ELIZABETH II D. G. REGINA". The initials stand for "Dei Gratia"; the entire phrase means, "Elizabeth II, by the Grace of God, Queen".
Canadian coins were originally issued in bronze (1¢) and silver (5¢ up). Gold coins for circulation were issued from 1912 to 1914 only. In 1922, copying an earlier change in the United States, the 5¢ coin was enlarged and changed to nickel; unlike the United States, pure nickel was used except during World War II and the Korean War. A silver dollar coin similar to that issued in the United States was first proposed in 1911 and a few trial pieces exist (one of which is in a museum in Ottawa and the other sold to a private collector a few years ago for C$1.1 million), but a proper dollar coin did not arrive until 1935. The percentage of silver in silver coins was reduced in 1919 and 1967, and in 1968 they were all replaced by pure nickel coins of the same size or nearly so. The rising price of nickel eventually forced the 5¢ coin (commonly called the "nickel") to be changed to cupro-nickel in 1982. At about the same time the 1¢ coin was twice made smaller, and in 1997 it was changed to copper-plated zinc. Finally, in 2000 all coins below $1 were changed to steel with copper or nickel plating. Unfortunately, there have been some problems with compatibility between the new coins and coin-operated devices like vending machines and public telephones. The 50¢ piece is regularly minted, but not in large quantities; it is very rare to come across this coin in circulation, although an unsuccessful attempt was made by the Mint to promote the use of the coin when a special edition was released in 2002 marking the 50th anniversary of Queen Elizabeth II ascending the throne.
Special edition coins
Image:Carlb-penny1967centennial-01.jpg | Image:FoxLoonie.jpg | Image:Vnickle.jpg |
Although the Mint has produced many special edition coins in recent years, Canada does have a history of such coins. From 1943 to 1945, the Mint issued the "Victory nickel" to promote the Canadian war effort. In 1967, all Canadian coins were issued with special reverses to celebrate the Canadian centennial. Six years later, a "Mountie quarter" was issued in 1973 to commemorate the centennial of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
In recent years, the Mint has issued several series of coins with special reverses. Most of them have been 25¢ coins, particularly in the years 1999–2001. There were also versions of the $2 coin commemorating the founding of Nunavut, and another with a family of polar bears; there have been several variants of the $1 coin, one of which featured the Canadian peacekeepers' monument in Ottawa to commemorate the award of the Nobel Peace Prize. A commemorative Terry Fox $1 coin began circulating on April 4, 2005.
On October 21, 2004, the Royal Canadian Mint unveiled a "25¢ poppy coin". This coin features a red-coloured poppy embedded in the centre of a maple leaf above a banner reading "Remember - Souvenir". While some countries' mints have produced colourized coins for market to collectors, this is the first colourized coin in general circulation in the world.
Image:Alberta.jpg | Image:Sask.jpg | Image:Year of the vetran.gif |
The Mint states that, with normal wear and tear, the colour should remain for a number of years, although this claim was quickly disproved. The colouration compounds are attached to the metal on a specially prepared 'dimpled' section of the coin, and seem to come off easily if deliberately rubbed. The coin will retain its full value even if the red poppy has worn off or been removed; however it is now expected that fully coloured specimens will become collectible in the future.
On May 4, 2005 the Mint unveiled a new "Victory nickel", reminiscent of the original issued during the Second World War. The new coin commemorated the 60th anniversary of the Allied victory in World War II. Up to 60 million Victory nickels were produced and treated as regular circulation coins.
In 2005, $5 and 25-cent coins commemorating the centennial of two of Canada's provinces were released: the coin for Alberta represents oil exploration in that province; the coin for Saskatchewan depicts wheat fields. Later the same year, the Mint later issued a Year Of The Veteran coin to honour military veterans, again in the 25-cent denomination.
As of fall/autumn 2004, the highest-denomination coin minted in Canada is a $350 gold coin produced for the collector market, though the bullion values make its market value much higher than its face value.
Specifications
Canadian coins | |||||||
Value | Common name | Composition | Obverse | Reverse | Mass | Diameter | Thickness |
1¢ | penny (Fr. cent noir) | 94% steel, 1.5% nickel, 4.5% copper plating | Queen Elizabeth II | Maple leaf | 2.35 g | 19.05 mm | 1.45 mm |
5¢ | nickel | 94.5% steel, 3.5% copper, 2% nickel plating | Queen Elizabeth II | Beaver | 3.95 g | 21.2 mm | 1.76 mm |
10¢ | dime | 92% steel, 5.5% copper, 2.5% nickel plating | Queen Elizabeth II | The Bluenose (a famous schooner) | 1.75 g | 18.03 mm | 1.22 mm |
25¢ | quarter | 94% steel, 3.8% copper, 2.2% nickel plating | Queen Elizabeth II | Caribou | 4.4 g | 23.88 mm | 1.58 mm |
50¢ | 50¢ piece | 93.15% steel, 4.75% copper, 2.1% nickel plating | Queen Elizabeth II | Canadian coat of arms | 6.9 g | 27.13 mm | 1.95 mm |
$1 | loonie (Fr. dollar huard) | 91.5% nickel 8.5% bronze plating | Queen Elizabeth II | Common loon | 7 g | 26.5 mm | 1.75 mm |
$2 | toonie | Rim — 99% nickel; core — 92% copper, 6% aluminum, 2% nickel | Queen Elizabeth II | Polar bear | 7.3 g | 28 mm | 1.8 mm |
Canadians coins have medallic orientation, like British or Euro coins, and unlike U.S. coins which have coin orientation.
Bank notes
The most significant recent developments in Canadian currency were the withdrawal of the $1 and $2 bills in 1987 and 1996, respectively, and their replacement with coins of new design. The new $1 coin, first issued in 1987, is colloquially called the "loonie," for the common loon on its reverse, and the name is frequently applied to the currency unit as well. It is made of nickel plated with "aureate bronze". The $2 coin, carrying a polar bear, introduced in 1996, is called by analogy the "toonie" and has two sections differing in colour. Unlike several U.S. attempts to introduce a dollar coin, the new coins were quickly accepted by the public, owing largely to the fact that the mint and government made it a "cold turkey" switch by removing the $1 and $2 bills from circulation.
Beginning in 2001, the Bank of Canada introduced a new series of bills: the new $10 was first issued on January 17, 2001; the new $5 on March 27, 2002; the new $100 bill on March 17, 2004, the new $20 on September 29, 2004, and the new $50 on November 17, 2004. Called "Canadian Journey", this series features elements of Canadian heritage and excerpts from Canadian literature. The $20, $50, and $100 notes introduce watermark security features for the first time on Canadian currency; they also boast significantly expanded holographic security features. Also among the new features are a windowed colour-shifting thread woven into the paper, a see-through number, and enhanced fluorescence under ultraviolet lighting. These features are reliable and quick and easy to use, and are designed to help Canadians protect themselves from accepting counterfeit notes. All 2001 through 2005 series notes also include the EURion constellation, on both sides of the bill. The new bills have a "tactile feature", which is a series of raised dots (but not in Braille) in the upper right corner on the obverse of each bill to aid the visually impaired in identifying currency denominations.
The security features new on the $20, $50, and $100 notes were added to an updated version of the $10 note released on 18 May, 2005, and the Bank of Canada will issue a $5 note with upgraded security features beginning 15 November 2006 as part of its ongoing effort to improve the security of Canadian bank notes. The illustrations on the front and back of the upgraded notes are the same as those on the $5 and $10 notes issued in 2001 and 2002.
The Canadian government has occasionally considered the possibility of eliminating the 1¢ coin from circulation, though as of early 2005 no serious discussion has been undertaken about dropping the coin. Likewise reports, in the wake of the $2 coin's success, that Ottawa was considering a $5 coin to replace the bill have yet to be realized.
List of bank notes
Canadian Bills (Bank Notes) - An Exhaustive List | |||
2001 ("Canadian Journey") series (pictured top right) | |||
Value | Colour | Obverse | Reverse |
$5 | Blue | Sir Wilfrid Laurier | Children playing hockey and other winter sports; excerpt from "The Hockey Sweater" by Roch Carrier |
$10 | Purple | John A. Macdonald | Peacekeeping forces and war memorial; excerpt from "In Flanders Fields" by John McCrae |
$20 | Green | Queen Elizabeth II | Artwork of Bill Reid; excerpt from Gabrielle Roy's novel, The Hidden Mountain. |
$50 | Red | William Lyon Mackenzie King | The Famous Five and Thérèse Casgrain; quotation from the Universal Declaration of Human Rights |
$100 | Brown | Robert Borden | Maps of Canada, historic and modern; excerpt from Miriam Waddington's poem, "Jacques Cartier in Toronto" |
Full excerpts | |||
1986 ("Birds of Canada") series | |||
$2 | Terra cotta | Queen Elizabeth II | American robins |
$5 | Blue | Sir Wilfrid Laurier | Belted kingfisher |
$10 | Purple | John A. Macdonald | Osprey |
$20 | Green | Queen Elizabeth II | Common loon |
$50 | Red | William Lyon Mackenzie King | Snowy owl |
$100 | Brown | Robert Borden | Canada goose |
$1000 | Reddish purple | Queen Elizabeth II | Pine grosbeak |
1969-1979 ("Scenes of Canada") series | |||
$1‡ | Dark green | Queen Elizabeth II | The parliament buildings from the Ottawa River, Ontario |
$2‡ | Terra cotta | Queen Elizabeth II | Inuit hunting on Baffin Island, Northwest Territories |
$5‡ | Blue | Sir Wilfrid Laurier | Salmon seiner BCP 45 in Johnstone Straits, British Columbia |
$10‡ | Purple | John A. Macdonald | Oil refinery in Sarnia, Ontario |
$20‡ | Green | Queen Elizabeth II | Moraine Lake and the Rocky Mountains, Alberta |
$50‡ | Red | William Lyon Mackenzie King | The RCMP Musical Ride |
$100‡ | Brown | Robert Borden | Lunenburg Harbour, Nova Scotia |
1954 series | |||
$1‡ | Green | Queen Elizabeth II | Saskatchewan prairie |
$2‡ | Terra cotta | Queen Elizabeth II | A country scene, Richmond, Quebec |
$5‡ | Blue | Queen Elizabeth II | Otter Falls, (Aishihik River), Yukon |
$10‡ | Purple | Queen Elizabeth II | Mount Burgess, British Columbia |
$20‡ | Olive Green | Queen Elizabeth II | Winter landscape, Laurentian Mountains, Quebec |
$50‡ | Orange | Queen Elizabeth II | Lockeport Beach, Nova Scotia |
$100‡ | Brown | Queen Elizabeth II | Okanagan Lake, British Columbia |
$1000‡ | Rose Pink | Queen Elizabeth II | Anse-Sainte-Jean, Quebec |
1937 Series | |||
$1‡ | Green | King George VI | Agriculture allegory |
$2‡ | Terra cotta | King George VI | Harvest allegory |
$5‡ | Blue | King George VI | Electric power allegory |
$10‡ | Purple | King George VI | Transportation allegory |
$20‡ | Olive Green | King George VI | Fertility allegory |
$50‡ | Orange | King George VI | Modern Inventions allegory |
$100‡ | Brown | John A. Macdonald | Industry allegory |
$1000‡ | Rose Pink | Sir Wilfrid Laurier | Security allegory |
1935 Series | |||
$1‡ | Green | King George VI | Agriculture allegory |
$2‡ | Blue | Queen Mary | Transportation allegory |
$5‡ | Orange | Edward, Prince of Wales | Electric power allegory |
$10‡ | Purple | Princess Mary | Harvest allegory |
$20‡ | Rose Pink | Princess Elizabeth | Agriculture allegory |
$50‡ | Brown | Prince Albert | Modern Inventions allegory |
$100‡ | Dark Brown | Prince Henry | Industry allegory |
$500‡ | Sepia | Sir John A. Macdonald | Fertility allegory |
$1000‡ | Dark Green | Sir Wilfrid Laurier | Security allegory |
Commemorative Issues | |||
1935 | |||
$25‡ | Purple | King George V and Queen Mary | Windsor Castle |
1967 | |||
$1‡ | Dark Green | Elizabeth II | Old parliament buildings in Ottawa - destroyed by fire in 1916 |
All 1986 and 2001 series bills measure 152.4 mm by 69.85 mm (6 by 2¾ inches).
See also Withdrawn Canadian banknotes.
"Canadian Journey"
- $5: The winters of my childhood were long, long seasons. We lived in three places—the school, the church, and the skating-rink—but our real life was on the skating-rink. (Roch Carrier)
- $10: In Flanders Fields the poppies blow / Between the crosses, row on row, / That mark our place, and in the sky / The larks, still bravely singing, fly / Scarce heard amid the guns below. (John McCrae 1872-1918)
- $20: Could we ever know each other in the slightest without the arts? (Gabrielle Roy 1909-1983)
- $50: All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights (Universal Declaration of Human Rights)
- $100: Do we ever remember that somewhere above the sky in some child's dream perhaps Jacques Cartier is still sailing, always his way always about to discover a new Canada? (Miriam Waddington)
Urban legends
A number of urban legends have circulated regarding Canadian currency.
- An American flag is flying over the Parliament buildings on Canadian paper money. This is not the case. The Birds series bills depict a Union Jack flying over Parliament on the $100; a Canadian Red Ensign (a former Canadian flag) on the $5, $10, and $50; and the modern maple-leaf flag was on the $2 and $1000 bills. (The $20 depicts the Library of Parliament, with no flag visible.) Those "taken" by the rumour were likely fooled by the bills with the Red Ensign, as the flags are very small and not shown in full colour, and the Ensign with its contrasting canton somewhat resembles the American flag.
- When a bill depicts a past prime minister, the Parliament buildings behind him are flying whichever flag Canada was using at the time of his tenure. The obverse of the Birds series featured images of prime ministers (or the Queen) and the houses of Parliament. However, as noted above, the $10 note featured the Red Ensign alongside Sir John A. Macdonald, who became prime minister 25 years before the Red Ensign was approved for use on the Merchant Marine and more than 50 years before it was used on government buildings. Also, the Union Jack is on the $100 with Sir Robert Borden, who came after Laurier who appears with the Red Ensign. This is sometimes explained by the fact that Borden governed during World War I. The views of the Houses of Parliament on the current Canadian Journey series do not feature any flag.
- The new series $10 bill is being recalled because there is a misprint in the poem In Flanders Fields. The first line as printed, "In Flanders fields the poppies blow," startled many people, who believed the last word should be "grow". John McCrae wrote two versions which were both published, but his original manuscript, the one used by the government and widely used for Remembrance Day ceremonies, reads "blow", meaning to bloom. (The last two lines are, "We shall not sleep, though poppies grow/In Flanders fields.")
- You can pop the centre out of a toonie. This is (or was) in fact true. Many toonies in the first shipment of the coins were defective, and could separate if struck hard or frozen, as the centre piece would shrink more than the outside. This problem was quickly corrected, and the initial wave of "toonie popping" blew over a few months after the coin's introduction.
- The 50¢ piece is no longer minted and/or has been withdrawn from circulation. The 50¢ coin is indeed so rare that many people have never personally seen or handled one. Shop proprietors have been known to refuse to accept them as payment because they do not recognize them as Canadian currency. However, the mint continues to produce the 50¢ coin annually in small numbers; most of them are purchased by coin collectors. The remainder go to banks, though most do not give them out unless the customer specifically requests so. Given enough notice, any bank should be able to obtain them in a significant quantity for their customers. The 50¢ coin is also commonly handed out as regular change at Canada Post locations.
- The crown is wrong in the Queen's portrait. When the new coin portrait was first issued in 1990 (see above), a legend surfaced that the artist had simply added the image of a crown to a portrait of the Queen, and that she was never meant to be seen wearing that headgear. This is patently false; she posed personally for the portrait wearing one of her usual crowns.
- Canadian coins are minted in Regina, Saskatchewan. The expression D.G. Regina appears on the obverse of Canadian coins, leading to the (wrong) idea that the coins were minted in Regina. As noted, the Royal Canadian Mint branch in Winnipeg, Manitoba is responsible for minting Canadian circulation coinage. The expression D.G. Regina is an abbreviated form of Dei gratia Regina - Latin for by the grace of God, Queen, referring to the effigy of Elizabeth II. The city of Regina takes its name from the same Latin word, creating its nickname, "the Queen City." (Prior to the Winnipeg facility, all coins were minted at the Royal Canadian Mint in Ottawa, Ontario. The Ottawa branch mainly deals with numismatic and collector coins as well as bullion. Foreign circulation coins are handled at the Winnipeg Mint.)
Value
Inflation in the value of the Canadian dollar has been fairly low since the 1990s, but had been severe for some decades before that.
Since about 85 per cent of Canada's external trade is with the United States, Canadians are mainly interested in the value of their currency against the United States dollar (USD).
Unlike other currencies in the Bretton Woods system whose values was fixed, the Canadian dollar was allowed to float from 1950 to 1962. From 1952 to 1960, the Caandian dollar traded at a slight premium over the US dollar, reaching an all-time high of US$1.0614 on 20 August 1957.
The Canadian dollar fell considerably after 1960, and this contributed to Prime Minister John Diefenbaker's defeat in the 1963 election. The Canadian dollar returned to a fixed exchange rate regime in 1962 when its value was set at about US$0.925, where it remained until 1970. As an inflation-fighting measure, the Canadian dollar was allowed to float in 1970. Its value appreciated and it was worth more than the US dollar for part of the 1970s. The high point was on 25 April 1974 when it reached US$1.0443. The Canadian dollar has continued to float since then, but it has not been above the US dollar since 1976.
Since setting an all-time low of US$0.6179 on January 21, 2002, the dollar rallied through 2003, 2004 and 2005 reaching US$0.85 on November 26, 2004, US$0.86 on September 30, 2005, and US$0.87 on December 13 of the same year. The Canadian dollar hit US$0.88 on February 28, 2006 and set a 14-year high of US$0.885 on March 2nd.
On world markets, the Canadian dollar tended historically to move in the same direction as the U.S. dollar, but less dramatically. A consequence is that at times an apparently rising Canadian dollar is often falling against most of the world's currencies, and vice-versa. However, during the relatively sharp rise of the Canadian dollar since 2002, it has "parted way" with the U.S. dollar and has gained value against it, while also rising against other major international currencies.
Although there was a great deal of domestic concern when the Canadian dollar was trading much lower than the U.S. dollar, there is also concern among exporters when the dollar appreciates quickly. The rapid rise in the value of the Canadian dollar increases the price of Canadian exports to the United States, which make up a large part of the economy. On the other hand, Canadian industry enjoys advantages from a rising dollar, primarily in that it is cheaper to purchase foreign material and businesses.
Image:CAD USD Exchange Rates.png
Current CAD exchange rates
AUD | EUR | GBP | INR | NZD | USD
See also
External links
- A site about Canadian currency
- A site about Canadian currency in French
- A graph of the Canadian dollar's value in U.S. dollars over the past two years
- History of the earliest forms currency in Canada
- Exchange Rate Lookup
- A History of the Canadian dollar
- Bank of Canada — bank notes
- Royal Canadian Mint
- The Where's Willy? Currency Tracking Project
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