Indonesia to replace 1,000-rupiah note with coin in April
Feb 04, 2010 10:02 AM Category:
Asia
According to an article in The Jakarta Post dated 4 February 2010, “Bank Indonesia's (BI) plan to
start minting 800 million new Rp 1,000 (about 10 US cents) coins
has been delayed until April, a central bank official says. Yopie
Alimudin, the central bank's deputy director for currency
circulation said, as quoted by kompas.com, that the original plan
was to start minting the new coin in February, but it was delayed
due to “certain reasons”. He did not elaborate. BI had planned to
issue a Rp 2,000 banknote (about 22 US cents) and a Rp 1,000 coin
this year. Only the new banknote has been circulating. The Rp 2,000
bill will be the country's smallest denomination banknote once the
Rp 1,000 coin takes the place of the existing Rp 1,000 bill. The
new coins, like the new bill, will use Braille making them more
convenient for visually impaired people. BI is preparing new
designs and security systems to discourage counterfeiters. The last
time BI issued new-look banknotes was in 2005, with its release of
new Rp 50,000 and Rp 100,000 bills. The central bank will issue
approximately Rp 5.6 billion worth of banknotes and coins this
year. At present, BI coins come in denominations of Rp 100, Rp 200,
and Rp 500, while banknotes are in denominations of either Rp
1,000, Rp 5,000, Rp 10,000, Rp 20,000, Rp 50,000 or Rp 100,000.”