Gulf rupee explained

Gulf rupee
Local Name:روبية خليجية
Local Name Lang:ar
Image 1:India Gulf Rupee 1957.jpg
Image Title 1:One Gulf rupee, similar to the regular One Indian rupee note issued in India, but printed in red and containing a "Z" letter prefix in the serial number.
Used Banknotes:1, 5, 10, 100 Gulf rupees
Using Countries: Bahrain (Until 1965)
Kuwait (Until 1961)
Muscat and Oman
Qatar
Trucial States
Issuing Authority:Reserve Bank of India
Pegged With:Indian rupee
Replaced Currency:Indian rupee (British Raj)
(Replaced the Indian rupee usage in the Gulf)
Replaced By Currency:Kuwaiti dinar (Kuwait)
Bahraini dinar (Bahrain)
Bahraini dinar (UAE; only Abu Dhabi)
Qatari and Dubai riyal (Qatar)
Qatari and Dubai riyal ( United Arab Emirates; only
Saudi riyal (UAE; except Abu Dhabi)
Omani rial (Oman)
Obsolete:yes

The Gulf rupee (Arabic: روبية خليجية) was the official currency used in the British protectorates of the Arabian Peninsula that are around the Persian Gulf between 1959 and 1966 (1970 Oman). These areas today form the countries of Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, Oman, and the United Arab Emirates. It was issued by the Government of India and the Reserve Bank of India and was equivalent to the Indian rupee.

History

To the middle of the 20th century, the Indian rupee was also used as the official currency in the emirates on the eastern Arabian Peninsula, namely Kuwait, Bahrain, Qatar, the Trucial States, and Oman. That meant, in effect, that the Indian rupee was the common currency in those territories as well as in India. The Indian rupee was pegged to the British pound at a rate of 13 Indian rupees = 1 pound.

The Government of India had complained of gold traffickers in the Gulf region whose base of operations was constantly being broadened, especially in Kuwait, Bahrain and Dubai. Smugglers used to take gold to the Indian sub-continent and return with Indian rupees which were valid for circulation in the region and were exchanged for more valuable foreign currencies to be used by the smugglers to buy more gold. Towards the end of the 1950s, the volume of gold trafficking had become so large that it inevitably precipitated a serious depletion in the foreign cash reserves at the Indian Reserve Bank and was causing economic damage arising directly from the smuggling operations.[1]

As a result of the strain on India's foreign reserves, in 1959 the Indian government created the Gulf rupee, initially at par with the Indian rupee. It was introduced as a replacement for the Indian rupee for circulation exclusively outside the country.[2] Effectively, the common currency area now did not include India.

On 6 June 1966, India devalued the Gulf rupee against the Indian rupee. Following the devaluation, several of the states still using the Gulf rupee adopted their own currencies. Kuwait had adopted the Kuwaiti dinar in 1961, pegged to the Indian rupee, which was still pegged to the pound sterling. Bahrain created the Bahraini dinar in 1965, at the rate of 1 dinar = 10 rupees. Qatar and most of the Trucial States (after 1971, United Arab Emirates) adopted the Qatar and Dubai riyal, which was equal to the Gulf rupee prior to its devaluation, effectively the Indian rupee value. Abu Dhabi used the Bahraini dinar until 1973. Oman continued to use the Gulf rupee until 1970, with the government backing the currency at its old peg to the pound, when it adopted the Omani rial.

Banknotes

Notes were issued in denominations of ₹1 by the Indian government and ₹5, ₹10 and ₹100 by the Reserve Bank of India. The notes were in designs very similar to the standard Indian notes but were printed in different colours. While the ₹1 and ₹10 notes were printed in red, the ₹5 notes were printed in orange and the ₹100 notes were printed in green. The serial numbers of the banknotes issued in all denominations were prefixed by a Z.

See also

External links

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Notes and References

  1. Book: Taryam, Abdulla Omran. 2019. The Establishment of the United Arab Emirates 1950–1985. Routledge. 59–60.
  2. [Reserve Bank of India]