Ghanaian cedi
De cedi (/ˈsiːdiː/ SEE-dee, dem pronounce am de same way as CD) (currency sign: GH₵; currency code: GHS) be de unit of currency of Ghana. Ebe de fourth historical den only current legal tender insyd de Republic of Ghana. One cedi dem divide am into one hundred pesewas (Gp).
Subclass of | Bank of Ghana |
---|---|
Year dem found am | 19 July 1965 |
Dem name after | cowrie currency |
Country | Ghana |
Edey de administrative territorial entity insyd | Ghana |
Dey apply to jurisdiction | Ghana |
Currency symbol description | Cedi sign |
Central bank/issuer | Bank of Ghana |
Dey replace | Ghanaian pound |
Tym dem start | 19 July 1965 |
Unit symbol | ₵ |
After independence, Ghana separate ein self from de British West African pound, wey na ebe de currency give de British colonies insyd de region. De new republic ein first independent currency be de Ghanaian pound (1958–1965). Insyd 1965, Ghana decide say ego leave de British colonial monetary system den adopt de widely accepted decimal system. De African name Cedi (1965–1967) dem introduce say efor come replace de old British pound system. Ghana ein first Presido Dr. Kwame Nkrumah come introduce de Cedi notes den Pesewa coins insyd July 1965 say efor replace de Ghanaian pounds, shillings den pence. De cedi dey carry de portrait of de President den ebe equivalent to eight shillings den four pence (8s 4d), i.e. one hundred old pence, so say 1 pesewa be equal to one penny.
After de February 1966 military coup, de new leaders wan remove de face of Nkrumah from de banknotes. De "new cedi" (1967–2007) dey worth 1.2 cedis, wey make am equal to half of pound sterling (or ten shillings sterling) as at de tym of ein introduction. Decades of high inflation devalue de new cedi, so dat in 2007 de largest of de "new cedi" banknotes, de 20,000 note, get value of about US$2. De new cedi gradually phase out insyd 2007 say e favor of de "Ghana cedi" for exchange rate of 1:10,000. By removing four digits, de Ghana cedi cam turn de highest-denominated currency unit dem issue insyd Africa. Ebe since den eloose over 90% of ein value.
Etymology
editDe word cedi be de Akan word give cowry shell. Dem formerly use Cowries (plural of cowry) for wat now be Ghana. De Monetaria moneta anaa money cowry no be native to West African waters but ebe common species for de Indian Ocean insyd. De porcelain-like shells cam West Africa, beginning of de 14th century insyd, thru trade plus Arab merchants. Dem produce de first modern coins dem use exclusively for de Gold Coast for 1796 insyd but dem use cowries alongside coins den gold dust as currency til 1901.[1]
History
editFirst cedi, 1965–1967
editPreceded by:
Ghanaian pound Reason: decimalisation Ratio: 2.4 first cedi = 1 pound, anaa 1 pesewa = 1 penny |
Currency of Ghana
19 July 1965 – 22 February 1967 |
Succeeded by:
Second cedi Reason: convenience of exchange den opportunity make dem remove Kwame Nkrumah from coins den notes Ratio: 1 second cedi = 1.2 first cedis |
Dem introduce de first cedi for 1965 insyd, dem replace de pound for rate of 2.4 cedi = 1 pound, anaa 1 pesewa = 1 penny. Dem peg de first cedi to sterling for rate of 2.4 cedis = £1, anaa 8s 4d per cedi.
Second cedi (GHC), 1967–2007
editPreceded by:
First cedi Reason: convenience of exchange den opportunity make dem remove Kwame Nkrumah from coins den notesRatio: 1 second cedi = 1.2 first cedis = 10 shillings |
Currency of Ghana
23 February 1967 – 2 July 2007 |
Succeeded by:
Third cedi Reason: inflationRatio: 1 third cedi = 10,000 second cedis |
Third cedi (GHS), 2007–present
editPreceded by:
Second cedi Reason: inflationRatio: 1 third cedi = 10,000 second cedis |
Currency of Ghana
2 July 2007 – Present |
Succeeded by:
Current |
Coins
editFirst cedi (1965–67)
edit
Second cedi
editBanknotes
editFirst cedi (1965–67)
editSecond cedi (1967–2007)
edit1967 to 1979
edit1979 to 2007
editThird cedi (2007–present)
editExchange rate history
editDate | Cedi per U.S$. | Date | Cedi per U.S$. |
---|---|---|---|
First cedi (Cedi) | |||
1965 | 0.824 | 1967 | 0.714 |
Second cedi (New cedi) | |||
1970s | ~1.000 (0.833 to 1.111) | 1980 | 2.80 Bank rate
(~20 Black market) |
1983 | 30.00 Bank rate
(~120 Black market) (Oct 83) |
1984 | 35.00 (Mar 84)
38.50 (Aug 84) 50 (Dec 84) |
1985 | 50 – 60 | 1986 | 90 |
1987 | 150 – 175 | 1988 | 175 – 230 |
1989 | 230 – 300 | 1990 | 300 – 345 |
1991 | 345 – 390 | 1992 | 390 – 520 |
1993 | 555 – 825 | 1994 | 825 – 1050 |
1995 | 1050–1450 | 1996 | 1450–1750 |
1997 | 1750 – 2250 | 1998 | 2250 – 2350 |
1999 | 2350 – 3550 | 2000 | 3550 – 6750 |
2001 | 6750 – 7300 | 2002 | 7300 – 8450 |
2003 | 8450 – 8850 | 2004 | 8850 – 8900 |
2005 | 8900 – 9500 | 2006 | 9500 – 9600 |
2007 | 9300 – 9600 |
Year | January 1 | May 1 | September 1 | October 20 |
---|---|---|---|---|
2008 | 0.930 | 1.005 | 1.155 | |
2009 | 1.265 | 1.460 | 1.465 | |
2010 | 1.430 | 1.425 | 1.440 | |
2011 | 1.486 | 1.496 | 1.535 | |
2012 | 1.639 | 1.855 | 1.932 | |
2013 | 1.905 | 1.974 | 2.150 | |
2014 | 2.353 | 2.823 | 3.723 | |
2015 | 3.215 | 3.8479 | 3.8312 | |
2016 | 3.8092 | 3.7895 | 3.9639 | |
2022 | 6.20 | 7.55 | 10.05 | 13.10 |
References
edit- ↑ "Cowrie shells and the slave trade". British Museum. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
- ↑ "United States dollar (USD) and Ghana cedi (GHS) Exchange Rate History". freecurrencyrates.com. Retrieved 11 September 2013.
External links
editWikimedia Commons get media wey relate to Coins and Banknotes from Ghana.
- New Ghanaian currency introduced at Wikinews
- Original source of the above pre-2007 Ghanaian banknotes: