New Taiwan dollar | |
Iso Code: | TWD |
Subunit Name 1: | Jiǎo (Chinese: 角) |
Subunit Name 2: | Fēn (Chinese: 分) |
Subunit Inline Note 2: | Subunits used only in stocks and currency transactions, and are rarely referred to |
Unit: | yuan (Chinese: 圓) |
Symbol: | NT$, Chinese: 元, $ |
Nickname: | Mandarin Chinese: 元 (yuán), Chinese: 塊 (kuài) |
Nickname Subunit 1: | Mandarin Chinese: 毛 (máo) |
Nickname Subunit 2: | Hokkien Chinese: 仙 (sian) |
No Plural: | y |
Frequently Used Coins: | NT$1, NT$5, NT$10, NT$50 |
Rarely Used Coins: | ¢, 1¢, 2¢, 5¢, 10¢, 20¢, 50¢, NT$20 |
Frequently Used Banknotes: | NT$100, NT$500, NT$1000 |
Rarely Used Banknotes: | NT$200, NT$2000 |
Date Of Introduction: | 15 June 1949 |
Replaced Currency: | Old Taiwan dollar |
Issuing Authority: | Central Bank of the Republic of China (Taiwan) |
Printer: | Central Engraving and Printing Plant |
Mint: | Central Mint |
Inflation Rate: | 0.85% |
Inflation Source Date: | http://eng.stat.gov.tw/ct.asp?xItem=12092&ctNode=1558&mp=5 2008–2018 |
Inflation Method: | CPI 10-year average |
New Taiwan dollar | |
T: | 新臺幣 |
S: | 新台币 |
First: | t |
P: | Xīntáibì |
W: | Hsin1-t'ai2-pi4 |
J: | san1 toi4 bai6 |
Y: | Sāntòihbaih |
Poj: | Sin-tâi-pè |
Phfs: | Sîn-thòi-pi |
C2: | 新臺票 |
Poj2: | Sin-tâi-phiò |
Phfs2: | Sîn-thòi-phêu |
Y2: | Sāntòihpiu |
The New Taiwan dollar (code: TWD; symbol: NT$, also abbreviated as NT) is the official currency of the Republic of China. The New Taiwan dollar has been the currency of the island of Taiwan since 1949, when it replaced the old Taiwan dollar, at a rate of 40,000 old dollars per one new dollar.[1] The base unit of the New Taiwan dollar is called a yuan (Chinese: 圓), subdivided into ten chiao (Chinese: 角) or 100 fen (Chinese: 分), although in practice neither chiao nor fen are ever actually used.
There are a variety of alternative names for the units in Taiwan. The unit of the dollar is typically informally written with the simpler equivalent character as Chinese: {{linktext|元, except when writing it for legal transactions such as at the bank, when it has to be written as Chinese: 圓. Colloquially, the currency unit is called both Chinese: {{linktext|元 (yuán, literally "circle") and Chinese: {{linktext|塊 (kuài, literally "piece") in Mandarin, {{linktext|箍 (kho͘, literally "hoop") in Hokkien, and {{linktext|銀 (ngiùn, literally "silver") in Hakka.
The Central Bank of the Republic of China (Taiwan) has issued the New Taiwan Dollar since 2000. Prior to 2000, the Bank of Taiwan issued banknotes as the de facto central bank between 1949 and 1961, and after 1961 continued to issue banknotes as a delegate of the central bank. The central bank began issuing New Taiwan dollar banknotes in July 2000, and the notes issued by the Bank of Taiwan were taken out of circulation.[2]
Mandarin | Taiwanese Hokkien | Hakka | English | Symbol | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Currency name | Formal | Chinese: 新臺幣 (Xīntáibì) | Chinese: 新臺票 (Sin-tâi-phiò) | Chinese: 新臺幣 (Sîn-thòi-pi) | New Taiwan Dollar | NTD, TWD | |
Other | Chinese: 臺幣 (Táibì) | Chinese: 臺票 (Tâi-phiò) | Chinese: 臺幣 (Thòi-pi) | ||||
Unit name | Formal | Chinese: 圓 (yuán) | Chinese: 箍 (kho͘) | Chinese: 銀 (ngiùn), Chinese: 箍 (khiêu) | dollar | $ | |
Other | Chinese: 元 (yuán), Chinese: 塊 (kuài) | ||||||
Unit name | Formal | Chinese: 角 (jiǎo) | Chinese: 角 (kak) | Chinese: 角 (kok) | dime | 角 | |
Other | Chinese: 毛 (máo) | ||||||
Unit name | Chinese: 分 (fēn) | Chinese: 仙 (sian) | Chinese: 仙 (siên) | cent | ¢ |
The adjective "new" (Chinese: 新) is only added in formal contexts where it is necessary to avoid any ambiguity, even though ambiguity is virtually non-existent today. These contexts include banking, contracts, or foreign exchange. The currency unit name can be written as Chinese: 圓 or Chinese: 元, which are interchangeable. They are both pronounced yuán in Mandarin but have different pronunciations in Taiwanese Hokkien (îⁿ, goân) and Hakka (yèn, ngièn). The name Chinese: 仙 in Taiwanese Hokkien and Hakka for cent is likely from the hundredth unit Japanese: 錢 (sen) of Japanese era Taiwanese yen or from English.
In English usage, the New Taiwan dollar is often abbreviated as NT, NT$, or NT dollar, while the abbreviation TWD is typically used in the context of foreign exchange rates. Subdivisions of a New Taiwan dollar are rarely used since practically all products on the consumer market are sold in whole dollars. Nevertheless, banks do record cents (hundredth of dollars).
The various currencies called yuan or dollar issued in China, as well as the Japanese yen, were all derived from the Spanish American silver dollar, which China imported in large quantities from Spanish America through Spanish Philippines in the Manila-Acapulco Galleon Trade from the 16th to 20th centuries. After the use of the Spanish dollar and silver Chinese yuan in Taiwan, it issued the Taiwanese yen in 1895, followed by the Old Taiwan dollar in 1946.
The Bank of Taiwan first issued the New Taiwan dollar on 15 June 1949 to replace the Old Taiwan dollar at a ratio of 40,000 to one. The first goal of the New Taiwan dollar was to end the hyperinflation that had plagued Nationalist China due to the Chinese Civil War.
After the communists captured Beijing in January 1949, the Nationalists began to retreat to Taiwan. The government then declared in the Temporary Provisions Effective During the Period of Communist Rebellion that dollars issued by the Bank of Taiwan would become the new currency in circulation.[3]
Even though the New Taiwan dollar was the de facto currency of Taiwan, statutes after 1949 still define the silver yuan or silver dollar as the legal currency, worth NT$3.[4] Many older statutes have fines and fees given in silver yuan. Its value of NT$3 has not been updated despite decades of inflation, making the silver yuan a purely notional currency a long time ago, inconvertible to actual silver.
When the Temporary Provisions were made ineffective in 1991, the ROC lacked a legal national currency until the year 2000, when the Central Bank of China (CBC) replaced the Bank of Taiwan in issuing NT bills. In July 2000, the New Taiwan dollar became Taiwan's legal currency. It is no longer secondary to the silver yuan. At this time, the central bank began issuing New Taiwan dollar banknotes, and the notes issued earlier by the Bank of Taiwan were taken out of circulation.
The exchange rate compared to the United States dollar has varied from less than ten to one in the mid-1950s, more than forty to one in the 1960s, and about twenty-five to one in 1992. The exchange rate as of July 2021 is NT$27.93 per US$.[5]
The denominations of the New Taiwan dollar in circulation are:
Currently Circulating Coins | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Image | Value | Technical parameters | Description | Date of | |||||
Diameter | Weight | Composition | Obverse | Reverse | first minting | issue | |||
http://museum.cbc.gov.tw/en/P2_3_1.aspx?menu=2&id=11&Eid=512&sub=54 | 50¢ (NT$0.5) | 18 mm | 3 g | 97% copper 2.5% zinc 0.5% tin | Mei Blossom, Chinese: "中華民國XX年"[6] | Value | 1981 (Minguo year 70) | 1981-12-08[7] | |
https://museum.cbc.gov.tw/web/en-us/circulation/currency/513 | NT$1 | 20 mm | 3.8 g | 92% copper 6% nickel 2% aluminium | Chiang Kai-shek, Chinese: "中華民國XX年" | 1981-12-08 | |||
https://museum.cbc.gov.tw/web/en-us/circulation/currency/514 | NT$5 | 22 mm | 4.4 g | Cupronickel 75% copper 25% nickel | Chiang Kai-shek, Chinese: "中華民國XX年" | Value | 1981 (Minguo year 70) | 1981-12-08 | |
https://museum.cbc.gov.tw/web/en-us/circulation/currency/517 | NT$10 | 26 mm | 7.5 g | ||||||
Chiang Kai-shek, Chinese: "中華民國XX年" (1981-2010) Chiang Ching-kuo, Chinese: "中華民國100年" (2011) Sun Yat-sen, Chinese: "中華民國XX年" (2012-present) | Value, continuous hidden words Chinese: "國泰", Chinese: "民安", continuous hidden Taiwan island and Mei Blossom in "0" | 2011 (Minguo year 100) | 2011-01-11 | ||||||
https://museum.cbc.gov.tw/web/en-us/circulation/currency/62 | NT$20 | 26.85 mm | 8.5 g | Bi-metallic: Ring: Aluminium bronze (as $50) Centre: Cupronickel (as $10) | Mona Rudao, Chinese: "莫那魯道",[8] Chinese: "中華民國XX年" | Traditional canoes used by the Tao people | 2001 (Minguo year 90) | 2001-07-09 | |
https://museum.cbc.gov.tw/web/en-us/circulation/currency/283 | NT$50 | 28 mm | 10 g | Aluminium bronze 92% copper 6% aluminium 2% nickel | Sun Yat-sen, Chinese: "中華民國XX年" | Latent images of both Chinese and Arabic numerals for 50 | 2002 (Minguo year 91) | 2002-04-26[9] | |
See main article: Fifth series of the new Taiwan dollar banknote. The current series of banknotes for the New Taiwan dollar began circulation in July 2000. This set was introduced when the New Taiwan dollar succeeded the silver yuan as the official currency within Taiwan.
The current set includes banknotes for NT$100, NT$200, NT$500, NT$1000, and NT$2000. Note that the NT$200 and NT$2000 banknotes are not commonly used by consumers. This may be due to the tendency of consumers to simply use multiple NT$100 or NT$500 bills to cover the range of NT$200, as well as using multiple NT$1000 bills or credit/debit cards instead of the NT$2000 bill. Lack of government promotion may also be a contributing factor to the general lack of usage.
It is relatively easy for the government to disseminate these denominations through various government bodies that do official business with the citizens, such as the post office, the tax authority, or state-owned banks. There is also a conspiracy theory against the Democratic Progressive Party, the ruling party at the time the NT$200 and NT$2000 denominations were issued. The conspiracy states that putting Chiang Kai-shek on a rarely used banknote would "practically" remove him from the currency while "nominally" including him on the currency would not upset supporters on the other side of the political spectrum that much (the Pan-Blue Coalition).
1999 Series | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Image | Value | Dimensions | Main Color | Description | Date of | Remark | |||||
Obverse | Reverse | Watermark | printing | issue | withdrawal | ||||||
NT$100 | 145 × 70 mm | Red | Sun Yat-sen, "The Chapter of Great Harmony" by Confucius | Chung-Shan Building | Mei flower and numeral 100 | 2000 (Minguo 89) | 2001-07-02 | ||||
http://museum.cbc.gov.tw/en/P2_1_1.aspx?menu=1&id=10&Eid=50&sub=52 | NT$200 | 150 × 70 mm | Green | Chiang Kai-shek, theme of land reform and public education | Presidential Office Building | Orchid and numeral 200 | 2001 (Minguo year 90) | 2002-01-02 | Limited | ||
NT$500 | 155 × 70 mm | Brown | Youth baseball | Formosan sika deer and Dabajian Mountain | Bamboo and numeral 500 | 2000 (Minguo year 89) | 2000-12-15 | 2007-08-01 | without holographic strip | ||
2004 (Minguo 93) | 2005-07-20 | with holographic strip | |||||||||
NT$1,000 | 160 × 70 mm | Blue | Elementary Education (1999 errors[10] [11]) | Mikado pheasant and Yushan (Jade Mountain) | Chrysanthemum and numeral 1000 | 1999 (Minguo year 88) | 2000-07-03 | 2007-08-01 | without holographic strip | ||
2004 (Minguo year 93) | 2005-07-20 | with holographic strip | |||||||||
http://museum.cbc.gov.tw/en/P2_1_1.aspx?menu=1&id=10&Eid=51&sub=52 | NT$2,000 | 165 × 70 mm | Purple | FORMOSAT-1, technology | Formosan landlocked salmon and Mount Nanhu | Pine and numeral 2000 | 2001 (Minguo year 90) | 2002-07-01 | Limited | with holographic strip |
The year 2000 version $500 and 1999 version $1000 notes without holographic strip were officially taken out of circulation on 1 August 2007. They were redeemable at commercial banks until 30 September 2007. As of 1 October 2007, only Bank of Taiwan accepts such notes.[12]
On 6 January 2011, the Central Bank of the Republic of China issued a new 100-dollar legal tender circulating commemorative in celebration of the 100th anniversary of the founding of the Republic of China. The red paper note measures 145 × 70 mm and features a portrait of Dr. Sun Yat-sen on the front and the Chung-Shan Building on the back. The design is no different from the ordinary NT$100 note, except for the Chinese wording on the reverse of the note, which reads "Celebrating 100 years since the founding of the Republic of China (Chinese: 慶祝中華民國建國一百年)".[13]