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Gibraltar pound

Gibraltar pound
ISO 4217
Code GIP
Denominations
Subunit
 1/100 Penny
Plural Pounds
Penny Pence
Symbol £
Penny p
Banknotes £5, £10, £20, £50, £100
Coins 1p, 2p, 5p, 10p, 20p, 50p,
£1, £2, £5
Demographics
User(s)  Gibraltar (alongside pound sterling)
Issuance
Government Government of Gibraltar
 Website www.gibraltar.gov.gi
Valuation
Inflation 0.0%, February 2015.
 Source The World Factbook, 2005
Pegged with pound sterling at par

The Gibraltar pound (currency sign: £; banking code: GIP) is the currency of Gibraltar. It is pegged to – and exchangeable with – the British pound sterling at par value. The central bank controlling the GIP, with responsibility of minting coins and printing notes, is the Government of Gibraltar.

Until 1872, the currency situation in Gibraltar was complicated, with a system based on the real being employed which encompassed British, Spanish and Gibraltarian coins. From 1825, the real (actually the Spanish real de plata) was tied to the pound at the rate of 1 Spanish dollar to 4 shillings 4 pence (equivalent to 21.67 pence today). In 1872, however, the Spanish currency became the sole legal tender in Gibraltar. In 1898, the Spanish–American War made the Spanish peseta drop alarmingly and the pound was introduced as the sole currency of Gibraltar, initially in the form of British coins and banknotes.

In 1898, the British pound was made sole legal tender, although the Spanish peseta continued in circulation until the Spanish Civil War. Since 1927, Gibraltar has issued its own banknotes and, since 1988, its own coins. Gibraltar decimalised in 1971 at the same time as the UK, replacing the system of 1 pound = 20 shillings = 240 pence with one of 1 pound = 100 (new) pence.

The Currency Notes Act of 1934 confers on the Government of Gibraltar the right to print its own notes, and the obligation to back and exchange each printed note with sterling reserves at a rate of one pound to one pound sterling. Although Gibraltar notes are denominated in "pounds sterling", they are not legal tender in the United Kingdom, but they are in theory exchangeable at par for British notes at banks; in practice, UK high street banks differ in their approach to exchanging Gibraltar banknotes for UK notes. Barclays and HSBC are more likely to accept these notes for account holders; Santander does not. Gibraltar's coins are the same weight, size and metal as UK coins, although the designs are different, and they are occasionally found in circulation across Britain.


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