1. RMB
The legal currency of the People's Republic of China is RMB. The People's Bank of China is the national competent authority for the management of RMB and is responsible for the design, printing and issuance of RMB. . ?
The unit of RMB is Yuan, and the units of RMB’s subsidiary currencies are dimes and cents. 1 yuan is equal to 10 jiao, and 1 jiao is equal to 10 cents. The RMB symbol is the first letter of Yuan's pinyin, capital Y plus two horizontal lines, which is "?".
2. Franc
The franc was the legal currency unit of France before 2002.
The French franc is issued by the Banque de France, the French central bank. The bank began issuing banknotes in 1848. After World War I, the Bank of France issued banknotes in various formats, but most of them have ceased circulation. Most of the banknotes currently in circulation were issued after the 1970s. The year number on the banknotes is not the year of issue but the printing time. .
3. U.S. dollar
The U.S. dollar (United States dollar currency abbreviation: USD; ISO 4217 currency code: USD; symbol: USA$) is the legal currency of the United States of America. The U.S. dollar banknotes currently in circulation are those issued since 1929.
The authority responsible for issuing U.S. dollars is Congress, and the specific issuance business is handled by the Federal Reserve Bank. After World War II, continental European countries reached an agreement with the United States and agreed to use U.S. dollars for international payments. Since then, the U.S. dollar has been widely used as a reserve currency in countries other than the United States and eventually became an international currency.
4. Czech Krona
The unit of Czech currency is the Krona, which is issued by the Czech National Bank. Its face value ranges from 1 Hales to 5,000 Krona. Its issuing country, the Czech Republic, is a landlocked country in Central Europe, formerly Czechoslovakia.
5. Japanese Yen
The Japanese Yen (Japanese: 円, Japanese Roman pronunciation: en, English: Yen), its banknotes are called Japanese Bank Notes, which are the legal tender of Japan. The Japanese yen is also often used as a reserve currency after the U.S. dollar and the euro.
The Japanese yen is the name of Japan’s monetary unit and was created on May 1, 1871. Japan established the gold standard in 1897, with the gold content set at 0.75 grams. In May 1953, the gold content was announced to be 0.00246853 grams. The gold standard system was completely abolished on March 31, 1988.
There are four types of banknotes in circulation: 1,000, 2,000, 5,000, and 10,000 yen, and coins in six denominations: 1, 5, 10, 50, 100, and 500 yen.
Baidu Encyclopedia - RMB
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Baidu Encyclopedia - Czech Koruna
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