The Australian dollar banknote was first issued by the Reserve Bank of Australia on 14 February 1966, when Australia adopted the decimal currency. The $ 5 notes were not issued until May 1967.
Video Banknotes of the Australian dollar
Serial asli (catatan kertas)
$ 1 ($ 1), $ 10 (Ã, à £ 5), and $ 20 (Ã, à £ 10) have the right exchange rate with pounds and have the same color with notes that they replace, but $ 5 (Ã, à £ 2/10) is not, and once introduced after the public becomes familiar with the decimal currency. Notes were published between 1966 and 1973 under the title "Commonwealth of Australia". Starting from 1974, the title on the new record reads only "Australia" and the legal tender phrase also changed from "Legal Auctions throughout the Commonwealth of Australia and Commonwealth" to "This Australian record is a valid means of payment throughout Australia and its territory". A $ 50 note was introduced in 1973 and $ 100 bills in 1984, in response to inflation requiring larger denominations for transactions. A dollar bill was replaced with coins in 1984, while a two-dollar note was replaced with a smaller coin in 1988. The original bank note was drafted by Gordon Andrews, who rejected the traditional Australian clichés in favor of an interesting and intimate subject. such as Aboriginal culture, women, environment, architecture and aeronautics. Though it is out of print, all Australian dollar banknotes were previously considered legitimate payments.
Maps Banknotes of the Australian dollar
Seri kedua (polimer)
In 1988, the Reserve Bank of Australia issued a $ 10 bill in plastic. Polypropylene polymer notes are produced by Note Printing Australia, to commemorate the two centuries anniversary of the European settlement in Australia. These notes contain a transparent "window" with Dover images of Captain James Cook as a security feature. Australian banknotes are the first in the world to use such features. All Australian banknotes today also contain Microprinting for further security.
Third series (polymers)
There were initial difficulties with the first published banknote; $ 10 bills (picture above) have a problem with holographic security features that are detached from notes. However, the Reserve Bank saw the potential in the issue of plastic banknotes and began preparations for a completely new series made of polymers, starting with a $ 5 bill in 1992. Today all Australian records are made of polymers.
In April 1995, the $ 5 bills design was updated to match the rest of the New Note Series, with little additional change in 1996. In 2001, a special warning '$ $' note was made, but in 2002, the previous version of production resumed. From 2002, the design of all records (except for the $ 5 bills depicting Queen) slightly changed to include the names of the people pictured under the portrait, and swapped the order of the official signatures on the record.
Fourth_Series_ (polymer) "> Fourth Series (polymer)
On February 13, 2015, the Reserve Bank of Australia announced that the next Australian record series will have a tactile feature to help the visually impaired community to notify record values ââafter a successful 15-year-old blind Connor McLeod campaign to introduce new features. The $ 5 bill includes a tactile feature and was issued on Sept 1, 2016, coinciding with Australia's National Palliative Day. Philip Lowe, governor of the Reserve Bank, has said that the other fourth series of banknotes will be released separately, anticipating that $ 10 notes were released on September 20, 2017, followed by a $ 50 bill in 2018, with the remaining denominations released in the year -next year.. The Reserve Bank has no plans to release the fourth series of banknotes in denominations higher than $ 100, although the amount of inflation that has taken place since the $ 100 bills was introduced in 1984.
See also
- Australian coins
- List of people appearing in Australian currency
- New Zealand dollar bill
References
External links
Source of the article : Wikipedia