miércoles, 19 de septiembre de 2007

punt currency

If you're holding back that trip to Asia's gambling Mecca, Macau, situated 60 km southwest of Hong Kong, for fear of getting a blot on your image, it's time to cast those fears aside. For one thing, unlike neighbouring Hong Kong, gambling is cent-percent legal in Macau. The country's infamous image of being a vice den has been fast eroding after Portugal handed over the reins of the country ― which it ruled for 442 years ― to China in 1999 as one of the two special administrative regions (SARs) of the People's Republic of China.

The government's 2002 decision to allow foreign casino owners to set up shop in Macau has also given a fillip to the country's infrastructural development. There are two hurdles one is likely to encounter in Macau, however. As in any other alien land, be prepared for the communication challenge: though English is taught in schools, not many are fluent in the language, and it is often a struggle to get the message across to locals or cabbies, most of whom speak Cantonese. So it is advisable to carry a written copy of the details of the places you want to visit.

And if you've already got all your money converted to the local currency at the Macau ferry terminal, you are in for an unpleasant surprise. Except for the local buses and a handful of shops, the Macanese don't accept their own currency! So it is better to convert the bulk of your currency to Hong Kong dollars and not Macanese Pataca (MOP). While the official reason for this is not clear, it is likely that the currency is being phased out. Also, beware of the tendency of shopkeepers and cabbie drivers to pay back in MOP.

Of course, these are just minor hiccups for those wanting to experience the joys of unadulterated gambling. Several players from Las Vegas have set up shop in Macau ― Venetian Resorts started Sands Macau in 2004 and The Venetian Macau in 2007, while Wynn Resorts opened Wynn Macau in 2006.

Over-eager punters, though, would be advised to keep their purse strings tied till 2010, when the Cotai Strip is due for completion, and another half-a-dozen hotels and casinos like Grand Hyatt, Four Seasons, Galaxy Cotai Megaresort and MGM Grand Macau will have begun operations. Gambling provides about 60% of revenues through taxes, and gambling revenues from Macau's casinos are already reckoned to be higher than those of Las Vegas Strip.
Sept. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Irish Prime Minister Bertie Ahern will be questioned today about foreign-exchange transactions related to his bank accounts, as a corruption tribunal seeks to determine the source of money he received in the early 1990s.

Ahern, facing a second day of questioning at Dublin Castle, said yesterday that he didn't tell the tribunal until April 2007 about foreign cash he had been given. The tribunal had requested all his records in 2004. Earlier, Ahern told the tribunal he never took a bribe and had done ``nothing improper.''

The state tribunal is probing allegations that Ahern accepted payments from businessman Owen O'Callaghan to assist with the construction of a shopping mall in Dublin in the early 1990s. Both men deny the allegations. Though the controversy has dogged Ahern for more than two years, it hasn't derailed his political career: he won a third straight election victory in May.

Some of the financial records under scrutiny include bank lodgments of around 180,000 Irish punts ($317,049) in the mid- 1990s that were preceded by foreign-exchange transactions. Ahern has said the money was a mixture of gifts and loans from friends to help pay legal costs related to his separation from his then- wife, Miriam, and to refurbish a house he was then renting.

Tribunal lawyer Des O'Neill said in an opening statement in May that Ahern's evidence doesn't tally with bank records.

The allegations against Ahern were made by businessman Tom Gilmartin, who told the tribunal O'Callaghan said he paid Ahern, who was minister for finance at the time, 80,000 Irish pounds to help with tax issues related to the mall in west Dublin. Both men have denied payments were made.

``I have been in politics for 30 years and I have never been offered money for political favors,'' Ahern, 56, said at the tribunal yesterday. ``I never got a glass of water from Mr. O'Callaghan, let alone money,''

See also: Coins of Ireland
See also: Banknotes of Ireland
The first Irish coinage was introduced in 997 and was initially equivalent to that of England, with the pound divided into 20 shillings, each of 12 pence. After a period of debasement, equivalence to sterling was reestablished in the 1180s.[2] However, from 1460, issues were made with different metal contents to those of England and the values of the two currencies diverged. During the Civil War, 1689-1691, James II issued an emergency, base-metal coinage known as Gun money.

In 1701, the relationship between the Irish pound and sterling was fixed at 13 Irish pounds = 12 pounds sterling. This led to a situation where Irish copper coins circulated with British silver coins, since 13 pence Irish = 1 British shilling. The only 19th century exceptions were silver tokens denominated in pence Irish [3] issued by the Bank of Ireland between 1804 and 1813. The last Irish copper pennies and halfpennies were minted in 1823. The distinct Irish pound existed until January 1826 when it was replaced by British currency. Irish banks continued to issue paper money denominated in sterling after 1826 but no further distinct coins were issued.


[edit] Second pound
See also: Economic history of the Republic of Ireland
See also: Coins of the Republic of Ireland
See also: Banknotes of the Republic of Ireland

[edit] Saorstát pound
Following the establishment of the Irish Free State, a new currency was introduced in 1928. This new Irish pound was initially known as the Saorstát pound ("Free State pound") and was pegged to the pound sterling. As with sterling, the £sd system was used, with the Irish names punt (plural forms include phunt, puint, bpuint or the same), scilling (plural: scillinge) and pingin (plural: pinginí or phingine). The currency became a reality with the introduction of coins and notes. However, the pound sterling continued to be accepted on a one-for-one basis.


[edit] Irish pound
From 1938, the currency was referred to as the Irish pound, after the Constitution of Ireland changed the state's name. The Currency Act, 1927, Adaptation Order, 1938 was the actual mechanism by which change took place. The value of the pound did not change, and it was still subdivided into 20 shillings or 240 pence.


[edit] Decimalisation
Decimalisation of the currency was actively discussed in the 1960s. Chief among the Irish Government's concerns was the pound sterling. When the British Government decided to decimalise their currency the Irish Government followed suit. The legislative basis for decimalisation in the Republic was the Decimal Currency Act, 1969. The number of pence in an Irish pound was redefined from 240 to 100, with the symbol for penny changing from "d" to "p". The pound itself was not revalued by this act and therefore pound banknotes were unaffected, although the 10 shillings/scillinge note was replaced by the 50p coin. New coins were issued of the same dimensions and materials as the corresponding new British coins. The Decimal Currency Act, 1970 made additional provisions for the changeover not related with the issue of coins.

Decimalisation was overseen by the Irish Decimal Currency Board which was created on June 12, 1968. It provided a variety of changeover information including a pamphlet called Everyone's Guide to Decimal Currency. The changeover occurred on Decimal Day, February 15, 1971.

Right up until complete withdrawal of the Irish pound on February 9, 2002, those UK coins which were the same sizes and compositions as the corresponding Irish coins were accepted virtually everywhere in Ireland.


[edit] Breaking the link with sterling
In the 1970s, the European Monetary System was introduced, which the Republic decided to join. The European Exchange Rate Mechanism finally broke the one-for-one link that existed between the Irish pound and the pound sterling; by March 30, 1979 the parity link between the two currencies that had existed for over 50 years was broken and an exchange rate was introduced. By this time, trade with the United Kingdom represented 50% of Irish exports and 47% of imports; the Irish economy had diverged greatly since the introduction of the currency in 1928 and was less dependent on trade with the UK. Until this exchange rate was necessary, UK currency was accepted in the Republic on a one-for-one basis by many institutions.

This period also saw the creation of the Currency Centre at Sandyford in 1978 so that banknotes and coinage could be manufactured within the state. Prior to this banknotes were printed by specialist commercial printers in England, and coins by the Royal Mint.


Irish 20p (yellow-brass colour) British 20p
Images to scale
Until 1986, all decimal Irish coins were the same shape and size as their UK counterparts. After this, however, all new denominations or redesigned coins were of different sizes to the UK coinage. The new 20p and £1 coins were completely different in size, shape and composition to the previously introduced UK versions. When the UK 5p and 10p coins were reduced in size, the Irish followed suit but with the new Irish 10p smaller than the new UK version and the new Irish 5p slightly bigger than the UK version. The Irish 50p was never reduced in size as it was in the UK and this was presumably due to forthcoming replacement of the Irish pound by the euro.


[edit] Replacement with the euro
On 31 December 1998, the exchange rate between the Irish pound, the European Currency Unit, and 10 other ERM currencies (all but the pound sterling and the Danish krone) became fixed at �1 = IR£ 0.787564. On the next day, a virtual euro was introduced and the exchange rate was GB£ 1 = �1.42210,[2] making GB£ 1 ≈ IR£ 1.12. By the same token, GB£ 1 would be worth about IR£ 1.287 on 1 January 2002, the day when physical euro was introduced.[3]

Although the euro became the currency of the Eurozone countries including the Republic on January 1, 1999, it wasn't until the agreed date of January 1, 2002 that the state began to withdraw Irish pound coins and notes, replacing them with euro specie. All other Eurozone countries withdrew their currencies in a similar fashion, from the agreed date. Irish pound coins and notes ceased to be legal tender on February 9, 2002[4] although they will be exchangeable indefinitely for euro at the Central Bank.

On December 31, 2001, the total value of Irish banknotes in circulation was �,343.8 million, and the total value of Irish coins was �87.9 million. The Irish cash changeover was one of the fastest in the Eurozone, with some shops illegally ceasing to accept pounds after the first week or two. With a conversion factor of 0.787564 Irish pounds to the euro,[5] fifty-six per cent of the value of Irish banknotes was withdrawn from circulation within two weeks of the introduction of euro banknotes and coins, and 83.4 per cent by the time they ceased to have legal tender status.

Withdrawal of coinage was slower, having a lower priority, with only 45 per cent of coins withdrawn by February 9, 2002. This figure is somewhat misleading, as at that point, almost all coinage in circulation had indeed been withdrawn � the remainder being kept as souvenirs, in hoards, or missing in households. One year after the changeover, �56 million of Irish pound banknotes remained unaccounted for, including one-third of all the £5 notes which, being the smallest denomination, were likely retained as souvenirs[citation needed].

All Irish coins and banknotes, from the start of the Irish Free State onwards, both decimal and pre-decimal, may be exchanged for euros at the Central Bank in Dublin.


[edit] Hidden inflation
Both decimal day and the euro changeover led many in Irish society to believe that prices had been improperly raised by traders taking advantage of the confusion,[6] exchange rates notwithstanding. In the case of the euro the government took special measures to prevent any unnecessary price changes, which ultimately proved ineffective. Many retailers took the opportunity that the changeover presented and 'rounded up' the new prices to round numbers, or to prices ending in �.99[citation needed]. The period of changeover also took place during an economic boom in the country, and inflation was high. As the cost of living and prices rose, people were eager to blame it on the merchants taking advantage of changeover confusion

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