Dollarization
From Free net encyclopedia
Dollarization occurs when the inhabitants of a country use foreign currency in parallel to or instead of the domestic currency.
Dollarization can occur
- unofficially, without formal legal approval
- semiofficially (or officially bimonetary systems), where foreign currency is legal tender, but plays a secondary role to domestic currency
- officially, when a country ceases to issue the domestic currency and uses only foreign currency.
Dollarization can refer not only to the use of the US dollar, but to the use of any foreign currency as the national currency.
Until 1999, official dollarization received practically no attention because it was considered politically impossible. Since then it gained prominence after several countries have considered and implemented it as official policy.
The most important officially dollarized economies as of June 2002 were Ecuador (since 2000), El Salvador (since 2001) and Panama (since 1904).
As of August 2005, the United States dollar, the Euro, the New Zealand dollar, the Turkish lira, the Swiss franc, the Australian dollar and the Danish krone were the only currencies officially used by other countries as their dollarization currency.
See also: American currency union
Contents |
List of Officially Dollarized Economies
U.S. dollar
- British Virgin Islands
- East Timor
- Ecuador (uses its own coins)
- El Salvador
- Marshall Islands
- Micronesia
- Palau
- Panama (uses its own coins)
- Pitcairn Islands (also uses the New Zealand dollar)
- Turks and Caicos Islands
Euro
- Kosovo
- Monaco (formerly French franc; issues own coins)
- Andorra (formerly French franc and Spanish peseta)
- San Marino (formerly Italian lira; issues own coins)
- Vatican City (formerly Italian lira; issues its own coins)
- Montenegro
New Zealand dollar
- Cook Islands
- Niue
- Tokelau
- Pitcairn Island (also uses U.S. dollar)
Others
- Cyprus, Northern (Turkish lira)
- Greenland (Danish krone)
- Faroe Islands (Danish krone, prints its own notes)
- Liechtenstein (Swiss franc)
- Tuvalu (Australian dollar, prints its own notes)