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Bangladeshi taka

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Currency of Bangladesh
"Taka" redirects here. For the Japanese given name, seeTaka (given name). For the Filipino paper mache, seeTaka (paper mache). For other uses, seeTaka (disambiguation).

Bangladeshi taka
টাকা (Bengali)
Bangladeshi Taka sign
ISO 4217
CodeBDT (numeric: 050)
Subunit0.01
Unit
Symbol
Denominations
Subunit
1100Poisha
(defunct)
Symbol
Poishap
Banknotes
 Freq. used2,5,10,20,50,100,200,500 and1000
 Rarely used1
Coins৳1, ৳2, ৳5
Demographics
Date of introduction4 March 1972; 53 years ago (1972-03-04)
ReplacedPakistani rupee
User(s)Bangladesh
Issuance
Central bankBangladesh Bank
PrinterThe Security Printing Corporation Bangladesh Ltd.
 Websitewww.spcbl.org.bd
MintThe Security Printing Corporation Bangladesh Ltd.
Valuation
InflationNegative increase 8.49%
 SourceBBS, August 2021[1]
Bengali
This article containsBengali text. Without properrendering support, you may seequestion marks, boxes, or other symbols.

Thetaka (Bengali:টাকা,IPA:[ˈʈa.kaˑ],sign:,code:BDT,short form:Tk) is the currency ofBangladesh.

Issuance ofbanknotes10 and larger is controlled byBangladesh Bank, while the2 and5 govt. notes are the responsibility of theministry of finance. The govt. notes of Tk. 2 and Tk.5 have mostly been replaced by coins while lower denomination coins (including all poysha coins) up to Tk. 1 have almost gone out of circulation due to inflation. The most commonly used symbol for the taka is "" and "Tk", used on receipts while purchasing goods and services. It is divided into 100poysha, but poysha coins are no longer in circulation. The poysha is still used for accounting purposes (e.g., Tk 123,456.78 for 123,456 taka and 78 poysha).

On 8 May 2024, the central bank placed the taka in acrawling peg to the US dollar, with a rate of 117 takas per US dollar.[2]

Etymology

[edit]
Main article:History of the taka § Etymology
Jalaluddin's tanka (taka),Bengal Sultanate, 15th century

According toThe American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language andBanglapedia, the wordṭaka came from theSanskrit wordṭaṅka, meaning silver coin,[3][4] aKulturwort of unclear origin, related to Turkictəñkə "coin, money", compare Tatartanka, Uzbektanga, Kazakhtenge, Russiandenʹga.[5] In Bangla, the wordtaka is also used generically to refer to any form of money, currency, or banknotes. Thus, colloquially, a person speaking in Bangla may use "taka" to refer to money regardless of what currency it is denominated in. This is also common in the Indian states ofWest Bengal andTripura, where the official name of theIndian rupee is "taka" as well. In other eastern Indian languages with the influence ofPrakrit inBihar it is "taka" inMaithili andMagadhi languages, inAssam it is টকাtôka and it is ଟଙ୍କାtaṅkā inOdisha.

History

[edit]
Further information:History of the taka

1947–1971

[edit]

After thePartition of Bengal in 1947,East Bengal became the eastern wing ofPakistan and was renamed toEast Pakistan under theOne Unit Scheme in 1956. ThePakistani rupee also bore the word taka on official notes and coins.Bangla was one of the two national languages of the Pakistan union between 1956 and 1971 (the other being Urdu). The Bangladeshi taka came into existence since 1972, a year after the independence of the eastern wing of the union, as the independent nation ofBangladesh.

Prior to theLiberation war in 1971, banknotes of theState Bank of Pakistan circulated throughout Bangladesh, and continued to be used in Bangladesh even after independence for about three months until the official introduction of the taka on 4 March 1972. During the war, it was an unofficial practice of someBengali nationalists to protest Pakistani rule by stamping banknotes with "বাংলা দেশ" and "BANGLA DESH" as two words in either Bangla or English. These locally produced stamps are known to exist in several varieties, as are forgeries. On 8 June 1971, the Pakistani government declared that all banknotes bearing such stamps ceased to be legal tender. Furthermore, to prevent looted high-denomination notes from disrupting the Pakistani economy, the government also withdrew thelegal tender status of all 100- and 500-rupee notes.[6]

Since 1972

[edit]

On 4 March 1972, the taka replaced the Pakistani rupee at par.

Treasury banknotes

[edit]
  • The first treasury notes in 1972 for1 and notes of theBangladesh Bank for5,10 and100.
  • In 1977, banknotes for50 were introduced, followed by500 in 1979 and20 in 1982.
  • 1 treasury notes were issued until 1992, with2 treasury notes introduced in 1989.
  • 1000 banknotes were introduced in 2008.
  • 5 banknotes, previously issued byBangladesh Bank, are instead issued by theGovernment of Bangladesh. These have mostly been replaced by coins since the early 2000s.

Banknotes and issues

[edit]

In 2000, the government issued polymer10 notes as an experiment (similar to the Australian dollar). They proved unpopular, however, and were withdrawn later. The1 and5 notes have mostly been replaced with coins, and in 2008, the government issued1,000 notes.

In 2011, Bangladesh Bank began issuing a new series of banknotes denominated in2,5,100,500, and1000. All are dated 2011 and feature a portrait and watermark of the Father of the Nation,Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, along the National Martyr's Monument in Savar at center front.[7]

From 2011, the Bangladesh Bank introduced new notes denominated in10,20, and50 on 7 March 2012. The notes bear the portrait of Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and the National Martyr's Monument in Savar on the front. On the back of the notes, the10 will picture theBaitul Mukarram mosque, the20 pictures theShat Gombuj mosque in Bagherat, and the50 notes featureShilpacharjo Zainul Abedin's famous paintingPloughing.[8]

On 7 March 2019, Bangladesh Bank released new ৳100 notes, which had the same design as 2011 Version, but had better security, a stronger Blue and were made of a different material.

On 15 December 2019, Bangladesh Bank issued new ৳50 banknotes, with the same design as the 2011 version, but had a different colour (orange, brown and fluorescent yellow-green), and a slightly different design in some parts.

On 17 March 2020, Bangladesh Bank introduced new ৳200 notes. They bear a portrait ofBangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman on both sides and a landscape picture of a village, river and boats.

Commemorative banknotes

[edit]

In 2011, Bangladesh Bank also introduced a40 note to commemorate the "40th Victory Anniversary of Bangladesh". The commemorative note features a portrait of the Father of the Nation, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman and the National Martyr's Monument in Savar on front, and six armed men on back. This note has anelectrotype 10 in the watermark, indicating it was likely printed on extra10 banknote paper.[9]

On 15 February 2012, Bangladesh Bank has introduced a60 note to commemorate "60 years of National Movement". The commemorative note measures 130 by 60 millimetres (5.1 in × 2.4 in) and features the Shaeed Minar (Martyrs' monument) in Dhaka and five men on the back. Like the40 commemorative note, this note has an electrotype 50 in the watermark. It was likely printed on extra50 banknote paper.[10]

On 26 January 2013, Bangladesh Bank issued a25 note to commemorate the 25th anniversary (silver jubilee) of the Security Printing Corporation (Bangladesh) Ltd. On the front is the National Martyr's Monument in Savar, the designs of the previous series of the Bangladeshi taka notes and its postage stamps, three spotted deer and the magpie-robin (doyel). On the reverse is the headquarters of the Security Printing Corporation. Curiously, this note has an electrotype 10 in the watermark, indicating it was likely printed on extra10 banknote paper.[11]

On 8 July 2013, Bangladesh Bank issued a100 note to commemorate the 100th anniversary of theBangladesh National Museum. The commemorative note features an 18th-centuryterracotta plaque of a horseman on the front and the Bangladesh National Museum on the back.[12]

Coins

[edit]
50 poysha from 1984 (left) and 25 poysha from 1980 (right).

In 1973, coins were introduced in denominations of 5, 10, 25 and50 poysha. 1 poysha coins followed in 1974, with1 coins introduced in 1975. The 1, 5 and 10 poysha were struck in aluminium, with the 25 and 50 poysha struck in steel and the1 in copper-nickel. The 5 poysha were square with rounded corners, and the 10 poysha were scalloped. Steel5 were introduced in 1994, and a steel2 coin followed in 2004.

1 and 5 poysha coins are rarely found in circulation. The same is the case with the 10, 25, and 50 poysha coins, as they have lost value due to inflation over the years. Only the1,2 and5 are occasionally found in circulation. Unlike most other countries, coins are not issued every year. The most recent coins,2 and5, were issued in 2013 and1 being issued in 2014.

1973 Series
ValueCompositionDescriptionFirst Minted
ReverseObverse
5 poyshaAluminiumNational emblemA plough inside of a cogwheel engraved diagonally, "5-Five Poisha" and "Bangladesh" written in Bangla.1973
10 poyshaScalloped with serrated edges, a betel leaf in the middle with "Bangladesh" written on top and "Ten 10 poisha" written on the bottom in Bangla.
25 poyshaSteelCurly pattern on the edges with a Rohu fish in the middle, "Bangladesh" written on top and "Twenty-five 25 poisha" written at the bottom in Bangla.
50 poyshaDotted pattern on the edges with a dove/pigeon in the middle, "Bangladesh" written on the top and "Fifty 50 poisha" written at the bottom in Bangla.
1974 Series (FAO)
1 poyshaAluminiumNational emblemOrnamental design, floral patterns1974
5 poyshaA plough in the middle of a half-cogwheel saying the words "Increase production"
10 poyshaSerrated on scalloped edges, with flowers plants and running tractor with text saying "Green Revolution"
25 poyshaSteelFish, egg, bananas and a gourd with the text "Food for all"
50 poyshaVariousFish, banana, chicken and pineapple in the middle circle1977
1977 Series (FAO)
5 poyshaAluminiumNational emblemPlough and cogwheel1977
10 poyshaA family sitting facing each other
25 poyshaSteelRoyal Bengal tiger
50 poyshaHilsha fish, chicken, pineapple, banana
Other Issues
50 poysha (small)SteelNational emblemHilsha fish, chicken, pineapple, banana2001
৳1 (Line-edged)A family figure, slogan "Planned family – Food for All"2002
৳1 (Silver Jubilee Edition)Brass1996
৳2SteelEducation for All slogan with two children studying2004
৳5Jamuna Multipurpose Bridge1994
Last Issues
1SteelNational EmblemSheikh Mujibur Rahman2010
2
5Bangladesh Bank logo2012
Special Issues (Uncirculated)
৳1 (Martyr's Edition)SilverPicture of theNational Martyrs' Memorial and text which says "20th Victory Day of Bangladesh–1991"A picture of theBir Sreshtho with words "16th December–20th Victory Day"1991
৳1 (Summer Olympics Edition)National EmblemTwo athletes running with a fire torch with text "25th Olympic Games 1992"1992
৳1Two spotted deer with the heading "Endangered Wildlife"1993
৳10 (Silver Jubilee of BB)Picture of Bangladesh Bank with the title "Bangladesh Bank Silver Jubilee 1971–1996"1996
৳10 (Silver Jubilee of BD)National Martyrs' Memorial with the text "Silver Jubilee of Bangladesh's Victory"Sheikh Mujibur Rahman with the same text on the coin's back
৳10 (Bangabandhu Bridge Edition)90% Silver and 10% NickelMartyr Statue with the title "Invincible Bangla" and heading "Inauguration ofBangabandhu Bridge 1998"Picture ofBangabandhu Bridge with the same heading on the coin's reverse1998
৳20 (Bangabandhu Bridge Edition)SilverSheikh Mujibur Rahman with the heading "Inauguration of Bangabandhu Bridge 1998"
৳20 (IMD Edition)GoldShaheed Minar with the date 21 February with headingInternational Mother Language DayLogo ofBangladesh Bank2000
৳10 (World Cup Edition)SilverThe picture of the World cup with "Bangladesh Bank" writtenICC World Cup Logo with being held in Bangladesh in 20112011
৳10 (Rabindranath Edition)A poem ofRabindranath Tagore and his autographPicture ofRabindranath Tagore with the title "150th Birth Anniversary of Rabindranath Tagore"
৳10 (Bidrohi Edition)A quotation from the poemBidrohi and the autograph of the National PoetPicture of youngKazi Nazrul Islam with the heading "90 Years of the poemBidrohi 1921-2011"
৳10 (Victory Edition)Picture of 6Muktijoddha waving guns with the title "40th Victory Anniversary of Bangladesh"Picture ofSheikh Mujibur Rahman with the7th March Speech quote with his name in English at the bottom
৳100 (Museum Edition)Logo ofBangladesh Bank with Bangla writing "Centenary of Bangladesh National Museum 1913–2013"100 taka written on left and right with a terracotta plaque of 18th century horsemen2013
৳100 (Mujib Centennial Edition)Gold and Silver (dual variant)Logo of Bangladesh Bank with text "Father of the Nation Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman"Portrait of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman with the text in Bangla2020
৳50 (Golden Jubilee Edition)Scallop-shaped in GoldBig number "50" which has the logo of Bangladesh Bank inscribed in the number "0" with the heading "Golden Jubilee of Independence"2021
৳50 (Japan-Bangladesh Relations Edition)SilverNational Martyrs' Memorial with the heading "Bangladesh-Japan Diplomatic Relations 50th Year Anniversary"The same heading written in the middle with a logo and pictures of a cherry blossom on top and a water lily at the bottom2022
৳100 (Padma Bridge Edition)Scallop-shaped, silverPicture of thePadma Bridge with the title "Padma Bridge–The symbol of National Pride" written in EnglishPortrait of Sheikh Mujibur Rahman with the title in Bangla2023
**Poisha coins no longer minted since 2013 but all coins above 1 taka still legal tender.

Banknotes

[edit]
Main article:Banknotes of the Bangladeshi taka
500৳‎ Bank Notes

There had been eleven series of taka banknotes since the issuance of the first series in 1972. Banknotes generally feature the heritage sites (mostly mosques), national monuments and portrayals of the village life, agriculture, industry and animals of the country. Apart from this, the portrait ofBangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman, the foundingpresident of Bangladesh, was featured in the observe in the series issued under theAwami League governments.

Latest series

[edit]

Following the fall of Awami League in theJuly Revolution in 2024, the Bangladesh Bank announced plans to redesign Taka banknotes by 2025. The central bank's Currency and Design Advisory Committee, made up of nine members was selected to submit theme proposals to theMinistry of Finance.[13][14][15] Sheikh Mujib's portrait was removed and graffiti of the July Revolution was added in this series.

Eleventh Series
ImageValueMain ColorDescriptionFirst Issue
ObverseReverseObverseReverse
৳2Light GreenMartyred Intellectuals Memorial, MirpurMartyred Intellectuals Memorial, Rayer BazarReleasing soon
৳5PinkStar MosqueGraffiti of theJuly Revolution
৳10Baitul Mukarram National Mosque3 February 2026[16]
৳20CyanKantajew TempleSomapura Mahavihara1 June 2025[17]
৳50Deep BrownAhsan ManzilThe Struggle byZainul Abedin
৳100Sky BlueSixty Dome MosqueThe Sundarbans12 August 2025[18]
৳200Golden YellowAparajeyo BanglaGraffiti of the July RevolutionReleasing soon
৳500Olive GreenCentral Shaheed MinarSupreme Court of Bangladesh4 December 2025[18]
৳1000VioletNational Martyrs' MemorialJatiya Sangsad Bhaban1 June 2025[17]

Exchange rates

[edit]
This section needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.
Last update: 2015
(December 2023)

Historic exchange rates

[edit]

UponBangladesh's independence, the value of the Bangladeshi taka was set between ৳7.5 and ৳8.0 to US$1. Except for fiscal year 1978, the taka's value relative to the US dollar declined every year from 1971 through the end of 1987. To help offset this phenomenon, Bangladesh first used the compensatory financing facility of theInternational Monetary Fund in fiscal year 1974. Despite the increasing need for assistance, the Mujib government was initially unwilling to meet the IMF's conditions on monetary and fiscal policy. By fiscal year 1975, however, the government revised its stance, declaring adevaluation of the taka by 56 percent and agreeing to establishing the Bangladesh Aid Group by theWorld Bank.[19]

Between 1980 and 1983, the taka sustained a decline of some 50 percent because of a deterioration in Bangladesh'sbalance of payments. Between 1985 and 1987, the taka was adjusted in frequent incremental steps, stabilising again around 12 percent lower in real terms against the US dollar, but at the same time narrowing the difference between the official rate and the preferential secondary rate from 15 percent to 7.5 percent. Accompanying thisstructural adjustment was an expansion in trade conducted at the secondary rate, to 53 percent of total exports and 28 percent of total imports. In mid-1987, the official rate was relatively stable, approaching less than ৳31 to US$1.[19] In January 2011, US$1 was equivalent to approximately ৳72,[20] as of 21 April 2012, US$1 was worth close to ৳82, and as of 9 September 2015 US$1 valued ৳77.[citation needed]

Bangladeshi taka per currency unit averaged over the year (January of every year)
CurrencyISO code19711981199119962000200120052007200820092010201120122013201420152024(Aug)
U.S. dollarUSD7.8618.3136.7540.850.8253.8458.1167.2967.3467.4068.1169.8481.6478.3176.4578.85117.52
Japanese yenJPY0.020.090.270.380.480.460.560.550.620.740.740.841.060.880.730.640.80
Soviet ruble (until 1993)
Russian ruble (1993 – present)
SUR
RUB
14.9329.0055.128.161.851.912.172.622.792.142.312.352.662.632.291.201.30
EuroEUR51.4850.5776.3787.4598.9990.0197.2893.26105.26103.98104.2289.26128.41
Pound sterlingGBP18.9244.0271.0162.4883.2379.59109.35131.74132.697.66110.01110.04126.57125.19125.90116.13150.08
Swiss francCHF1.810.0828.8934.6331.9733.0749.3853.7360.9960.2365.8773.186.9184.784.6681.26135.28
Hong Kong dollarHKD1.313.534.685.286.536.97.458.628.628.698.778.9710.5110.19.859.8615.08
Malaysian ringgitMYR2.558.2313.5415.9713.3714.1615.2519.1220.5418.8620.0622.7126.1425.6823.1421.4126.37
Kuwaiti dinarKWD22.0964.51128.73136.25167.01176.05197.82231.69245.83235.31236.52247.62292.46277.6270.16259.66383.78
Saudi riyalSAR1.755.59.7910.8813.5514.3515.4917.9317.9217.9518.1418.621.7620.8720.3820.3631.31
Emirate dirhamAED1.654.899.9611.1113.8414.6515.8218.3118.3318.3418.5419.0122.2221.3120.8120.8232

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Inflation".Bangladesh Bank. Archived fromthe original on 8 February 2022.
  2. ^Devnath, Arun (8 May 2024)."Bangladesh Introduces Crawling Peg for Taka as Rates Raised".Bloomberg. Archived fromthe original on 9 May 2024. Retrieved9 May 2024 – via Financial Post.
  3. ^"taka".The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (5th ed.). HarperCollins Publishers. 2022.Archived from the original on 31 March 2022. Retrieved25 February 2022.
  4. ^"Taka".Banglapedia.Archived from the original on 16 January 2020. Retrieved5 January 2020.
  5. ^"Etymologisches Wörterbuch des Altindoarischen Bd 3".
  6. ^Linzmayer, Owen (2012). "Bangladesh".The Banknote Book.Archived from the original on 29 August 2012. Retrieved27 April 2012.
  7. ^"Bangladesh new note family confirmed".banknotenews.com. Archived fromthe original on 17 September 2011. Retrieved6 September 2011.
  8. ^"Bangladesh new 10-, 20-, and 50-taka notes confirmed".banknotenews.com. Archived fromthe original on 6 October 2012. Retrieved28 February 2012.
  9. ^"Bangladesh new 40-taka commemorative confirmed".banknotenews.com. Archived fromthe original on 7 April 2012. Retrieved25 January 2012.
  10. ^"Bangladesh new 60-taka commemorative note confirmed".banknotenews.com. Archived fromthe original on 21 February 2012. Retrieved16 February 2012.
  11. ^"Bangladesh new 25-taka commemorative note confirmed".banknotenews.com. Archived fromthe original on 10 August 2013. Retrieved1 March 2013.
  12. ^"Bangladesh new 100-taka commemorative note confirmed".banknotenews.com. Archived fromthe original on 9 August 2013. Retrieved24 March 2013.
  13. ^"Govt to redesign taka, remove Sheikh Mujib's image".
  14. ^"Banknotes redesign likely without image of Sheikh Mujib". 5 October 2024.
  15. ^"Government plans to remove Mujib image from notes".
  16. ^"BB unveils redesigned banknotes".The Business Standard. 3 February 2026.
  17. ^ab"New notes featuring historic, archaeological structures of Bangladesh to be circulated from 1 June".The Business Standard. 29 May 2025.
  18. ^ab"BB unveils six redesigned banknotes".Dhaka Tribune. Retrieved2 June 2025.
  19. ^abLesser, Lawrence B. (1989)."Money and Banking". In Heitzman, James; Worden, Robert (eds.).Bangladesh: A Country Study. Washington, D.C.: Federal Research Division, Library of Congress. pp. 108–109.Archived from the original on 22 June 2011. Retrieved26 August 2016.
  20. ^"Historical Exchange Rates".OANDA.Archived from the original on 2 February 2011. Retrieved3 January 2011.

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