Pakistani rupee
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The Pakistani Rupee (PKR) is the official currency of Pakistan. It consists of 100 paise (singular paisa). Pakistan began printing its own currency in 1948, using Indian currency with "Pakistan" stamped over for the first few months of independence.
Like the Indian Rupee, it was originally divided into 16 Annas. This lasted until 1961 when the currency was finally decimalized into 100 paise. As of 2005 1 US Dollar is worth around 59 Rupees.
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Banknotes
The State Bank of Pakistan is responsible for printing Rupee banknotes, and these are printed in 1, 2 (1 and 2 rupee notes are no longer in print, they have been replaced by coins), 5, 10, 50, 100, 500, and 1,000 denominations(and soon to start 20 and 5000). All banknotes other than the one and two rupee ones feature a portrait of Muhammad Ali Jinnah on the front along with writing in Urdu. The backsides of banknotes vary in what image they display, and contain information in English. The only Urdu text found on the backsides of banknotes contain the legend "Earning legal livelihood is akin to prayer". Banknotes vary in width and color, with larger denominations being longer than smaller ones, and all containing multiple colors. However, each rupee does have one color that is predominant on it. All banknotes feature a watermark for security purposes. On the larger denomination notes, the watermark is a picture of Jinnah, while on smaller notes, it is a crescent and star. Different types of security threads are also present in each banknote.
Banknote pictures
Denomination | Dimensions | Dominant Color(s) | Back Illustration |
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1 Rupee | 95 x 66 mm |
Brown |
Tomb of Allama Iqbal in Lahore |
2 Rupees | 109 x 60 mm |
Purple |
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5 Rupees | 127 x 73 mm |
Burgundy |
Tomb of Shah Rukn-e-Alam near Multan |
10 Rupees | 141 x 74 mm |
Green |
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50 Rupees | 154 x 73 mm |
Purple and Red |
Alamgiri Gate of the Lahore Fort |
100 Rupees | 165 x 73 mm |
Red and Orange |
The Islamic College of Peshawar |
500 Rupees | 175 x 73 mm |
Green, tan, red, and orange |
The State Bank of Pakistan in Islamabad |
1000 Rupees | 175 x 73 mm |
Blue |
Front |
Value (Rupees) |
Back |
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Missing image Pakistan_1_Rupee_f.jpg 1 Rupee |
1 |
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Missing image Pakistan_2_Rupees_f.jpg 2Rupees |
2 |
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5 |
Missing image Pakistan_5_Rupees_b.jpg 5 Rupees |
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10 |
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50 |
Missing image Pakistan_50_Rupees_b.jpg 50 Rupees |
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Missing image Pakistan_100_Rupees_f.jpg 100 Rupees |
100 |
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500 |
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Missing image Pakistan_1000_Rupees_f.jpg 1000 Rupees |
1000 |
Exchange Rate
USDollar-PakRupee-2002-2003.png
The Pakistani rupee depreciated against the US dollar until the turn of the century, when Pakistan's large current-account surplus pushed the value of the rupee up versus the dollar. Pakistan's central bank then stabilized by lowering interest rates and buying dollars, in order to preserve the country's export competitiveness.
External link
- State Bank of Pakistan (http://www.sbp.org.pk)