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On December 18, 1946, the gold content of the guilder was set at grams, and the official exchange rate was 1 US dollar equal to the guilder. On September 21, 1949, the guilder was depreciated and the gold content was reduced to grams, and the official exchange rate was 1 US dollar to guilder. On November 1, 1960, the Treaty of Economic Union signed by the Netherlands, Belgium and Luxembourg came into force, and the fluctuation range of the currency exchange rates of the three countries was.
On March 7, 1961, the guilder was raised to grams, and the official exchange rate was 1 US dollar to guilder, with the upper and lower limits of fluctuations being 1 US dollar to the guilder. From 10 May 1971, together with the West German mark, the guilder broke through the upper limit and floated, resulting in a substantial depreciation of the guilder; After the real depreciation of the US dollar on August 15, the guilder is still pegged to the exchange rate level before May 10 with the Belgian franc and the Luxembourg franc from August 23; Controlled floats for other currencies, with the banks of the Netherlands and Belgium** limiting their floats above and below the exchange rate level on 10 May; On September 6, the Netherlands imposed restrictions on the purchase of Dutch bonds by non-residents, which led to the creation of "0" guilders; The dollar depreciated on December 18; On 21 December, the gold content of the guilder was increased, the official exchange rate was adjusted to 1 US dollar to the guilder, and the actual exchange rate with a fluctuation range of fluctuations was established, that is, the upper and lower limits of fluctuations were set to the guilder. On 24 April 1972, the Netherlands announced the implementation of the rule that the exchange rates of currencies within the member States of the European Economic Community should not fluctuate exceedingly.
The Beneluxe currencies of Belgium, Benelux and Ryan recovered to (100 Belgian francs to the guilder). On February 12, 1973, the dollar depreciated, and on February 14, the official exchange rate of the guilder against the dollar was 1 dollar to the guilder, with fluctuations between guilders; Since March 19, the guilder has been floating freely against the US dollar, while floating jointly with the currencies of Belgium, Denmark, France, West Germany, Luxembourg, Norway and Sweden, and on September 15, the guilder appreciated by 5 and the official exchange rate was 1 US dollar against the US dollar. On 1 February 1974, the use of "0" guilders for non-residents to purchase bonds was abolished.
Since 15 March 1976, volatility in the member states of the European Community has replaced the volatility limit of the Belgian and Dutch monetary unions; On 18 October, the gold content of the guilder was reduced and the official exchange rate was adjusted to the guilder to the US dollar. On 16 October 1978, the guilder depreciated by 2 and the official exchange rate was 1 US dollar to the guilder. On 13 March 1979, the European Monetary System (EMS) was established, with fluctuations between the currencies of the member countries rising and falling, as well as fixed exchange rates and limits for intervention that were adjusted periodically.
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EUR 1 = Dutch guilder.
The exchange rate is fixed.
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The Netherlands uses the euro.
The euro is the currency of 19 countries in the European Union. The 19 member states of the euro are Germany, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Ireland, Spain, Portugal, Austria, Finland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Greece, Malta and Cyprus.
On January 1, 1999, the European Union introduced a single monetary policy (singlemonetaryact) among the EU countries that introduced the euro, and in July 2002 the euro became the only legal tender in the euro area.
The euro is managed by the European System of Central Banks (ESCB), which consists of the European Banking Bank (ECB) and the banks of the euro surplus countries.
Information on the expansion of the exhibition
In accordance with EU regulations, euro banknotes were officially put into circulation on 1 January 2002, and the original currencies of the member states of the euro area were suspended from 1 March 2002. Today, more than half of the EU's 27 member states have joined the eurozone, and countries such as Poland, the Czech Republic, and Denmark have not yet entered the eurozone due to their own interests.
Sweden held a referendum in 2003 in which it refused to make the euro the Swedish currency. It was officially adopted on 1 January 1999 in 11 countries (Eurozone countries) of Germany, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Ireland, Austria, Finland, Spain and Portugal, and replaced the currencies of these 11 countries on 1 July 2002.
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The currency in circulation in the Netherlands is the euro, which was used until 2002 in the guilder. The guilder is the name of the currency of the Kingdom of the Netherlands, issued by the Bank of the Netherlands, and before it was out of circulation in 2002, the guilder banknotes had guilders in denominations, and coins had guilders and cents.
Euro (EURO) is the currency of 19 countries in the European Union, euro banknotes are divided into 7 denominations of euro, coins have 1 cent, 2 cents, 5 cents, 10 cents, 20 cents, 50 cents, 1 yuan, 2 yuan 8 denominations. The 19 member states of the euro are Germany, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Ireland, Spain, Portugal, Austria, Finland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Greece, Malta and Cyprus.
On 1 January 1999, a single monetary policy was introduced among the EU countries that introduced the euro, and in July 2002 the euro became the only legal tender in the eurozone. The euro is managed by the European Banking System, which consists of European banks and banks in the eurozone countries. In addition, the euro is also the currency of six non-EU countries.
The six countries are: Monaco, San Marino, Vatican, Andorra, Montenegro and Kosovo. Among them, the first four pocket countries use the euro according to the agreement with the EU, while the last two countries (regions) use the euro unilaterally.
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Since 2002, the euro has been the common currency. In 2002, the guilder was replaced by the euro. The guilder is the name of the currency of the Netherlands and is issued by an ABN AMRO bank.
The guilder began to circulate in the 15th century, and on January 28, 2002, the guilder was completely discontinued.
Until January 1, 2007, guilder coins could still be cashed at Dutch ** banks; Banknotes may be validly converted into euros until January 1, 2032. The Netherlands was one of the first countries to join the eurozone, and on 1 January 2002, the Netherlands officially launched the euro.
Among them, Dutch banknotes were out of circulation in 1999 and replaced by euros, and coins were replaced by euro coins in 2002, which is the first currency of eurozone countries to officially withdraw from the stage of history since the euro was circulated on January 1, 2002. However, the guilder is still in circulation in the Netherlands Antilles.
The use of the euro makes it easy for business groups and tourists. 1 euro is equal to 100 euro cents. Banknotes are denominated in Euros; The coins come in denominations of cents and euros.
The euro is the currency of 19 countries in the European Union. The 19 member states of the euro are Germany, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Ireland, Spain, Portugal, Austria, Finland, Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Greece, Malta and Cyprus.
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The currencies used in the Netherlands are the Euro and the Guilder. At the beginning of the 21st century, the guilder was replaced by the euro, and until 2007, the guilder could still be exchanged at Dutch ** banks, and the guilder was officially defined as the "domestic currency" of the euro in the Netherlands, but the guilder was used for payment, because the euro banknotes and coins were not yet printed. The Netherlands Antilles still circulate the Antillean guilder, another country that uses the guilder as its currency, Suriname, which replaced it with the Surinamese dollar in 2004.
The guilder is the name of the currency of the Netherlands, issued by the Dutch bank, the guilder is a kind of currency, is a substance used in the exchange of goods, is separated from the commodity world in the process of commodity exchange and is used as a general equivalent in a fixed area. The guilder has long since been withdrawn from history because the Dutch Talks have joined the eurozone, but there are still some parts of the Netherlands that use it. This article mainly writes about the knowledge points about what currency is used in the Netherlands, and the content is for reference only.
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Since 2002, the currency of the Netherlands has been the euro.
The euro is the currency of 19 countries in the European Union. The 19 member states of the euro are Ireland, Austria, Belgium, Germany, France, Finland, Netherlands, Luxembourg, Portugal, Spain, Greece, Italy, Slovenia, Cyprus, Malta, Slovakia, Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia.
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Euro. The previous currency was the guilder.
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