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Ngultrum

Bhutanese ngultrum
Bhutanese ngultrum-dz.svg
ISO 4217
Code BTN
Denominations
Subunit
 1/100 chhertum
Symbol Nu.
 chhertum Ch.
Banknotes Nu.1, Nu.5, Nu.10, Nu.20, Nu.50, Nu.100, Nu.500, Nu.1000
Coins
 Freq. used Ch.20, Ch.25, Ch.50, Nu.1.
 Rarely used Ch.5, Ch.10
Demographics
User(s)  Bhutan (alongside Indian Rupee)
Issuance
Monetary authority Royal Monetary Authority of Bhutan
 Website www.rma.org.bt
Valuation
Inflation 5.2%
 Source Royal Monetary Authority of Bhutan, 2015 est.
Pegged with Indian rupee at par

The ngultrum (Dzongkha: དངུལ་ཀྲམ [ŋul'tram], symbol: Nu., code: BTN) is the currency of the Kingdom of Bhutan. It is subdivided into 100 chhertum (Dzongkha: ཕྱེད་ཏམ [tʃet'tam], spelled as chetrums on coins until 1979). The Royal Monetary Authority of Bhutan is the minting authority of the Ngultrum banknotes and coins. The Ngultrum is currently pegged to the Indian rupee at par.

Until 1789, the coins of the Cooch Behar mint circulated in Bhutan. Following this, Bhutan began issuing its own coins known as chetrum, mostly silver ½ rupees. Hammered silver and copper coins were the only types issued until 1929, when modern style silver ½ rupee coins were introduced, followed by bronze 1 paisa in 1931 (dated 1928). Nickel ½ rupee coins were introduced in 1950. While the Cooch Behar mint coins circulated alongside Bhutan's own coins, decimalization was introduced in 1957, when Bhutan's first issue of coins denominated in naya paisa. The 1966 issues were 25 naya paisa, 50 naya paisa and 1 rupee coins, struck in cupro-nickel.

While the Bhutanese government developed its economy in the early 1960s, monetization in 1968 led to the establishment of the Bank of Bhutan. As monetary reforms took place in 1974, the Ngultrum was officially introduced as 100 Chhetrum equal to 1 Ngultrum. The Ngultrum retained the peg to the Indian rupee at par, which the Bhutanese coins had maintained.


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