International Trade Law News /title <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en"> <meta name="verify-v1" content="6kFGcaEvnPNJ6heBYemQKQasNtyHRZrl1qGh38P0b6M=" /> <head> <title>International Trade Law News

« Home | U.S. Trade and Development Agency Announces U.S.-M... » | OFAC Adds serCUBA.com to SDN List » | This Week at U.S. International International Trad... » | Major Steel Industry Shake-Up Announced Today » | U.S. Takes Step Towards Imposing Quotas on Socks f... » | OFAC Issues Second Biennnial Report on TSRA » | DOC Announces Preliminary Determinations in Antidu... » | Article Highlights Nethercutt's Work on Sanctions ... » | CIT Clarifies Duration of Injunctions on Liquidati... » | CBP Publishes October Modernization Newsletter » 

October 26, 2004 

Turkey Unveils Design of New Turkish Lira Notes and Coins

The Government of Turkey has unveiled the design of the country's new currency two months before it goes into circulation. Starting on January 1, 2005, Turkey will remove six zeros from the current Turkish Lira (TL). As a result, one New Turkish Lira (Yeni Turk Lirasi or YTL) will be equal to one million TL. In addition, one YTL will be equal to 100 kurus (pronounced koo-roosh). The kurus disappeared from circulation in Turkey more than two decades ago. The YTL and the current TL will be in joint circulation during 2005 with the TL being phased out of circulation by the end of 2005.

The elimination of six zeros from the Turkish Lira comes as Turkey is beginning to rein in decades of chronic inflation that pushed the TL from 1.5 TL per U.S. dollar in the 1940s to 1,500,000 TL per U.S. dollar today. The annual inflation rate in Turkey, which exceeded 100% in the mid-1990s, now stands at 10%.

The YTL banknotes that will enter circulation will be in denominations of 1, 5, 10 and 2O YTL, which correspond to the current 1 million, 5 million, 10 million and 20 million notes, and will be almost identical in design to the current notes. There will also be two new banknotes: 50 YTL and 100 YTL, which, as is the case with the other notes, will carry portraits of Turkey's founding father Mustafa Kemal Ataturk on the front and pictures of Turkey's cultural and natural heritage on the reverse.

The largest coin denomination will be 1 YTL, while the smallest coin will be 1 kurus. The new coins will all have a crescent and a star -- the symbol on the Turkish flag -- on the front with a portrait of Ataturk on the back. Photos of the YTL notes and coins can be viewed at the Central Bank of Turkey's web site at the following link: www.tcmb.gov.tr/ytlkampanya/ytlbanknotlar.php (click the images to enlarge them).



Editor

Subscribe

Subscribe to our confidential mailing list

Mobile Version

Search Trade Law News

International Trade and Compliance Jobs

Jobs from Indeed

Archives

Categories

Disclaimer

  • This Site is presented for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. No attorney-client relationship is formed when you use this Site. Do not consider the Site to be a substitute for obtaining legal advice from a qualified attorney. The information on this Site may be changed without notice and is not guaranteed to be complete, correct or up-to-date. While we try to revise this Site on a regular basis, it may not reflect the most current legal developments. The opinions expressed on this Site are the opinions of the individual author.
  • The content on this Site may be reproduced and/or distributed in whole or in part, provided that its source is indicated as "International Trade Law News, www.tradelawnews.com".
  • ©2003-2015. All rights reserved.

Translate This Site


Powered by Blogger