Thepeso(established as thepeso convertible) is the currency ofArgentinasince 1992, identified within Argentina by the symbol$preceding the amount in the same way as many countries using peso ordollarcurrencies. It is subdivided into 100centavosand then Central Bank introduced new issues with peso subdivisions like 1, 2, 5 and 10.Due to rapid inflation, coins are not used. Same situation occurs with 10, 20, 50, 100, 200, 500, 1,000 and 2,000 peso banknotes, these banknotes are no longer printed, but they're still valid. ItsISO 4217code isARS.[3]It replaced theaustralat a rate of 10,000 australes to one peso.

Argentine peso
Peso argentino(Spanish)
ISO 4217
CodeARS (numeric:032)
Subunit0.01
Unit
Unitpeso
SymbolARS[1]
Denominations
Banknotes
 Freq. used10, 20, 50, 100, 200, 500, 1,000, 2,000 and 10,000 pesos[2]
Coins
 Freq. used1, 2, 5, 10 pesos[2]
 Rarely used1, 5, 10, 25, 50 centavos, bimetallic 1 and 2 pesos[2](no longerminted,still valid)
Demographics
ReplacedArgentine austral
User(s)Argentina
Issuance
Central bankCentral Bank of the Argentine Republic
 Websitewww.bcra.gov.ar
Valuation
Inflation271.5% in June 2024
 SourceCentral Bank of the Argentine Republic

Argentine currency has experienced severeinflation,with periods ofhyperinflation,since the mid-20th century, with periodic change of the currency to a new version at a rate ranging from 100:1 to 10,000:1. A new peso introduced in 1992, officially thepeso convertible de curso legal,was worth 10,000,000,000,000 (ten trillion)pesos moneda nacional,the currency in use until 1970. Since the early 21st century, the peso has experienced further substantial inflation, reaching 289.4% year-on-year in April 2024, the highest since the current peso was introduced in theConvertibility planof 1991.[4]

The official exchange rate for theUnited States dollarvalued thepeso convertible de curso legalat one US dollar at its introduction in 1992, which was maintained until early 2002. Afterwards, it went from a 3:1 exchange rate with the US dollar in 2003 to 178:1 in early 2023. On 14 August 2023, the official exchange rate was fixed at ARS$350 to oneUS dollar;theunregulated ratevalued the peso at ARS$665 to one US dollar.[5]On 15 November 2023, thecrawling pegwas restored.[6]

USD/Argentine Pesoexchange rate

In 12 December 2023, following the election of presidentJavier Milei,economy ministerLuis Caputochanged the official exchange rate to 800 pesos to the U.S. dollar from the previous 366.5, a devaluation of 54%, to be followed by amonthly devaluationtarget of 2%.[7]At the time, the unofficial exchange rate was around 1000 pesos per dollar.[8]

History

Amounts in earlier pesos were sometimes preceded by a "$" sign and sometimes, particularly in formal use, by symbols identifying that it was the specific currency in use at the time, for example "$+mn100 "or"m$n100"forpesos moneda nacional.The peso introduced in 1992 is just calledpeso(until 2002,peso convertible), and is written preceded by a "$" sign only. Earlier pesos replaced currencies also called peso, and sometimes two varieties of peso coexisted, making it necessary to have a distinguishing term to use, at least in the transitional period; the 1992 peso replaced a currency with a different name,austral.

Peso before 1826

Thepesowas a name often used for the silver Spanish eight-realcoin. Followingindependence,Argentina began issuing its own coins, denominated inreales, solesandescudos,including silver eight-real (or sol) coins still known as pesos.

These coins, together with those from neighbouring countries, circulated until 1881.

Peso fuerte, 1826–1881

200pesos fuertesbanknote issued in 1869

In 1826, two paper money issues began, denominated in pesos. One, thepeso fuerte($F) was a convertible currency, with 17 pesos fuertes equal to one Spanish ounce (27.0643 g) of 0.916 fine gold. It was replaced by the peso moneda nacional at par in 1881.

Peso moneda corriente, 1826–1881

"Cinco pesos"moneda corrientebanknote, issued 1869

The non-convertiblepeso moneda corriente(everyday currency) ($m/c) was also introduced in 1826. It started at par with the peso fuerte, but depreciated with time.

Although the Argentine Confederation issued 1-, 2- and 4-centavocoins in 1854, with 100centavosequal to 1 peso = 8reales,Argentina did not decimalize until 1881. Thepeso moneda nacional(m$nor$m/n) replaced the earlier currencies at the rate of 1 peso moneda nacional = 8reales= 1 peso fuerte = 25peso moneda corriente.Initially, one peso moneda nacional coin was made of silver and known as patacón. However, the 1890 economic crisis ensured that no further silver coins were issued.

Gold and silver pesos, 1881–1970

The Argentine gold coin from 1875 was the gold peso fuerte, one and two-thirds of a gram of gold of fineness 900, equivalent to one and a half grams of fine gold, defined by Law no. 733 of 1875. This unit was based on that recommended by the European Congress of Economists in Paris in 1867 and adopted by Japan in 1873 (the Argentine 5 peso fuerte coin was equivalent to the Japanese 5yen). However, these provisions were not implemented.[9]

The system before 1881 has been described as "monetary anarchism" (anarquía monetaria).[9]Law no. 1130 of 1881 put an end to this; it established the monetary unit as thepeso oro sellado( "stamped gold peso" ), a coin of1.612gof gold offineness900 (90%), and the silver peso,25gof silver of fineness 900.[9]Gold coins of 5 and 2.5 pesos were to be used, silver coins of one peso and 50, 20, 10 and 5 centavos, and copper coins of 2 and 1 centavos.

Peso moneda nacional, 1881–1970

5 centsmoneda nacionalbanknote featuring Nicolás Avellaneda, 1891

The depreciatedpeso moneda corrientewas replaced in 1881 by the paper pesomoneda nacional(national currency, (m$nor$m/n)) at a rate of 25 to 1. This currency was used from 1881 until January 1, 1970.[10]The design was changed in 1899 and, again, in 1942.

Initially the peso m$n was convertible, with a value of onepeso oro sellado.Convertibility was maintained off and on, with decreasing value in gold, until it was finally abandoned in 1929, when m$n 2.2727 was equivalent to one peso oro.

Peso ley, 1970–1983

Thepeso ley 18.188(ISO 4217:ARL) (informally called thepeso ley) replaced the previous currency at a rate of 1 peso ley to 100 pesos moneda nacional.

Peso argentino, 1983–1985

Thepeso argentino($a) (ISO 4217:ARP) replaced the previous currency at a rate of 1 peso argentino to 10,000 pesos ley (1 million pesos m$n). The currency was born just before the return of democracy, on June 1, 1983. However, it rapidly lost its purchasing power and was devalued several times, and was replaced by a new currency called theaustralin June 1985.

Austral, 1985–1991

Theaustral( "₳" ) (ISO 4217:ARA) replaced thepeso argentinoat a rate of 1 austral to 1,000 pesos (one billion pesos m$n). During the period of circulation of the austral, Argentina suffered fromhyperinflation.The last months of PresidentRaul Alfonsín's period in office in 1989 saw prices increase constantly (200% in July alone), reflected in a worsening exchange rate. Emergency notes of 10,000, 50,000 and 500,000 australes were issued, and provincial administrations issued their own currency for the first time in decades. The value of the currency stabilized two years after PresidentCarlos Menemwas elected.

Peso convertible, since 1992

In 1992 a new peso (ISO 4217:ARS) was introduced, referred to aspeso convertiblesince the internationalexchange ratewasfixedby theCentral Bankat 1 peso to 1U.S. dollar,and for everypeso convertiblecirculating,there was a US dollar in the Central Bank'sforeign currency reserves.It replaced the austral at a rate of 1 peso = 10,000 australes. After the various changes of currency and dropping of zeros, one peso convertible of 1992 was equivalent to 10 trillion pesos moneda nacional of 1970.

After thefinancial crisis of 2001,the fixed exchange rate system was abandoned in January 2002, and the exchange rate fluctuated, up to a peak of four pesos to one dollar (a 75%devaluation) at the time. The resultingexportboom produced a massive inflow of dollars into the Argentine economy, which helped lower their price. For a time the administration stated and maintained a strategy of keeping the exchange rate at between 2.90 and 3.10 pesos per US dollar, in order to maintain the competitiveness of exports and encourageimport substitutionby local industries. When necessary, the Central Bank issues pesos and buys dollars in the free market (sometimes large amounts, of theorderof 10 toUS$100 millionper day) to keep the dollar price from dropping, and had amassed overUS$27 billionin reserves before theUS$9.81 billionpayment to theInternational Monetary Fundin January 2006.

The effect of this may be compared to the neighboringBrazilian real,which was roughly on par with the Argentine peso until the beginning of 2003, when both currencies were about three per U.S. dollar. Therealstarted gaining in value more than the peso due to Brazil's slower build-up of dollar reserves; by 29 December 2009, arealwas worth almost 2.2 pesos.[11]

In December 2015,US dollar exchange restrictionswere removed in Argentina following the election of PresidentMauricio Macri.As a result, the difference between the official rate and theunofficial "blue" ratealmost disappeared for a time.

The official exchange rate was on 1 April 2016 of 14.4 toUS$1.[12]The rate gradually worsened; on 29 July 2022 one U.S. dollar was quoted at 131.22 pesos at the official rate and 298 pesos, 2.27 times higher (+127%), in unregulated markets.[13] By September 2023, the official exchange rate had reached 350 pesos to the dollar, and over 720 pesos on unregulated markets.[14]

In 12 December 2023, following the election of presidentJavier Milei,economy ministerLuis Caputochanged the official exchange rate to 800 pesos to the dollar from the previous 366.5, a devaluation of 54%, to be followed by a monthly devaluation target of 2%.[15]At the time, the unofficial exchange rate was around 1000 pesos per dollar.[16]

Coins

In 1992, 1, 5, 10, 25 and 50 centavo coins were introduced, followed by 1 peso in 1994. Two-peso coins were introduced in 2010. One-centavo coins were lastmintedin 2001. In 2017 a new series of coins was issued in denominations of$1and$5,followed by$2and$10in 2018.[17]

Currently the Central Bank has told they still legal tender, but they’re not accepted on stores and banks branches due to the negligible value and inconvenience in storage.

Circulating coins of the Argentine peso (1st series)
Value Obverse / reverse Ref
1 centavo Laurel wreath and
legend"in union and liberty"
[18]
5 centavos Sun of May [19]
10 centavos Argentine coat [20]
25 centavos Cabildo of Buenos Aires [21]
50 centavos Casa de Tucumán [22]
1 peso Argentine coat /
Sun of May
[23]
2 pesos Sun of May [24]
Circulating coins of the Argentine peso (2nd series)
Value Obverse Reverse Ref.
1 peso Jacaranda Ceibo [25]
2 pesos Palo Borracho Ceibo [26]
5 pesos Arrayán Ceibo [27]
10 pesos Caldén Ceibo [28]

Commemorative coins

Commemorating theNational Constitutional Convention,2 and 5-peso nickel coins were issued in 1994.

Commemorative coins
Value Issued Obverse Reverse Conmemorates Ref
50 cent. 1996 UNICEFlogo A girl holding a doll 50th. anniversary of Unicef [29]
50 cent. 1997 Eva Duarte 50th anniversary of the death of Eva Perón and the attainment of voting rights by women [30]
50 cent. 1998 Mercosurlogo Establishment of Mercosur [31]
50 cent. 2000 Martín Miguel de Güemes Death of Güemes [32]
50 cent. 2001 José de San Martín Death of San Martín [33]
1 peso 1996 Unicef logo A girl holding a doll 50th. anniversary of Unicef [34]
1 peso 1997 Eva Duarte 50th anniversary of the death of Eva Perón and the attainment of voting rights by women [35]
1 peso 1998 Mercosur logo Establishment of Mercosur [36]
1 peso 2001 San José palace Justo José de Urquiza Death of Gral. Urquiza [37]
2 pesos 1994 National Constitution Argentine coats of arms National Constitution Convention [38]
5 pesos 1994 National Constitution Argentine coats of arms National Constitution Convention [39]
2 pesos 2007 Islas Malvinas Argentine soldier 25th. anniversary of theMalvinas War [40]

2 peso coins were issued in 1999 to commemorate the centenary of the birth of writerJorge Luis Borges,with Borges portrayed on the obverse and alabyrinthand theHebrewletteralephon the reverse. On September 18, 2002, a 2-peso coin withEva Perón's face was introduced to commemorate the 50th anniversary of her death; this coin was to replace the AR$2 banknote ifinflationcontinued to be high. None of the 2-peso coins are widely circulated.

Some other 50-centavo and 1-peso coins commemorate different events, including the 50th anniversary of the creation ofUNICEF(1996); theattainment of voting rights by women(1997); the establishment ofMercosur(1998); and the death ofJosé de San Martín(2001).

Several 1 peso coins were issued in 2010 to commemorate the bicentennial of theMay Revolution,all featuring the same obverse, different from the main series, and images of different places on the reverse, includingMar del Plata,thePerito Moreno Glacier,Mount Aconcagua,thePucará de Tilcara,andEl Palmar.

Banknotes

In 1992, banknotes were introduced in denominations of 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, and 100 pesos. The 1-peso note was replaced by a coin in 1994. Until 2001 banknotes bore the legend "Convertibles de curso legal", meaning that their value was fixed to the same amount in US dollars. As most older bills have been replaced, it is rare to find ones marked as convertible except in the $100 denominations. All bills are 155 × 65 mm in size.[41]

Value Color Description Issue
Obverse Reverse Watermark
$2 Blue Bartolomé Mitre;replica of a handwritten manuscript ofHistoria de Belgrano y de la Independencia Argentinaandcontrapuertaof his house Museo Mitre Bartolomé Mitre and his initials 26 November 1997 - 30 April 2018
$5 Green José de San Martín;replica of his will and reproduction ofAbrazo de Maipú,painting byPedro Subercaseauxdepicting the hug shared by San Martín andBernardo O'Higginsthat sealed Chile's independence Monument to theArmy of the Andes,Cerro de la Gloria;Order of the Liberator General San Martínmedal José de San Martín and his initials 22 June 1998 - 29 February 2020
$5 Green José de San Martínand theOrder of the Liberator José Artigas,Simón Bolívar,José de San Martín,andBernardo O'Higgins José de San Martín and his initials 1 October 2015 - 29 February 2020
$10 Brown Manuel Belgrano;replica of an 1812 report by him to the government of theUnited Provinces of the Río de la Plataand reproduction ofLa Patria AbanderadabyAlfredo Bigattiat the National Flag Memorial National Flag Memorial;drum—in remembrance ofdrummer boyPedro Ríos who died at theBattle of Tacuarí— and typicaltextilepatternfrom theArgentine Northwest Manuel Belgrano and his initials 14 January 1999
$10 Brown, green, blue and purple Manuel Belgrano Juana Azurduy de Padilla and Manuel Belgrano on horseback with swords raised to the new flag on February 27, 1812, along theParaná River Manuel Belgrano and electrotypeMB 4 April 2016
$20 Red Juan Manuel de Rosas;reproduction ofRetrato de Manuelita RosasbyPrilidiano Pueyrredón,which depicts his daughterManuela Rosas Battle of Vuelta de Obligado;reproduction of the military trophies included in the 8 reales coin of 1840 Juan Manuel de Rosas and his initials 18 January 2000
$50 Black Domingo Faustino Sarmiento;reproduction of a manuscript ofVida de Dominguito,biography of his adopted son, who died at theBattle of Curupayty Casa Rosada;motifs to his various activities:La Porteñalocomotive,European immigrationandFacundo(1845), a cornerstone of Latin American literature Domingo Faustino Sarmiento and his initials 19 July 1999
$50 Blue TheFalkland Islands,South Georgiaand theSouth Sandwich Islands Antonio Rivero,theArgentine Military Cemetery,lightcruiserGeneral Belgrano,the Falkland Islands, and thedolphin gull Falkland Islands and electrotypeIM(forIslas Malvinas) 2 March 2015
$100 Violet Julio Argentino Roca,replica of a letter Roca sent toMiguel Cané(a diplomat), and evocation of Argentine progress under the sun of the future Conquest of the Desert— The paintingLa Conquista del DesiertobyJuan Manuel Blanes;evocation of Roca as a statesman and military man: handwritten sheets of paper, the saber and a laurel branch Julio Argentino Roca and his initials 3 December 1999
$100 Violet Eva Perón;based on the design of a 5-peso banknote planned to be released following her 1952 death, but unreleased due to the coup that deposed PresidentJuan Perón From theAra Pacis:a goddesswith toddlers Eva Perón and her initials 20 September 2012

Fourth Series

In 2016, theBanco Central de la República Argentinaissued a new series of banknotes, with the 200- and 500-peso banknotes as the newest denominations. New 20- and 1,000-peso notes were issued in 2017, and new banknotes of 50 and 100 pesos were issued in 2018. A new series of coins in denominations of $1, $2, $5, and $10 was issued from 2018.[42][43][44]

Value Color Description Issue
Obverse Reverse Watermark
$20 Red Guanaco Patagonian Desert Guanaco andelectrotype20 3 October 2017
$50 Gray Andean condor Aconcagua Andean condor and electrotype 50 15 August 2018
$100 Violet Taruca Sierra de Famatina Taruca and electrotype 100 18 December 2018
$200 Blue Southern right whale Valdes Peninsula Whale and electrotype 200 26 October 2016
$500 Green Jaguar Yungas Jaguar and electrotype 500 29 June 2016
$1,000 Orange Hornero Pampas Hornero and electrotype 1000 1 December 2017

5,000-peso design concept

The design concept of a banknote of 5,000 pesos was shown on 16 May 2020.[45][46]The note was not issued, but the design was used for the $2,000 note announced in February 2023.

Fifth Series

In May 2022, the Banco Central de la República Argentina announced a new series of 100-, 200-, 500-, and 1,000-peso notes,[47][48][49][50][51]replacing the animal motifs of the 2016 series with pictures of Argentine historical figures and events while maintaining the color scheme, to be released within the following six months; however, no plans to put these designs into circulation have been made as of May 2023. In March 2023 a $2,000 note was issued, portraying the Instituto Malbrán and pioneering doctorsCecilia GriersonandRamón Carrillo.[52][53]It does not have asecurity thread,and uses the design and plates originally intended for the $5,000 note described in May 2020.[54]The new $2,000 note was put into circulation on 22 May 2023.[55]

On 11 January 2024, the Central Bank announced that it would issue 10,000-peso and 20,000-peso notes by June 2024. The design that was for the 500-peso note will be used for the 10,000-peso instead.[56][57]

Current situation is the most used banknotes are 1,000-peso, 2,000-peso, and 10,000 peso.

Due to the high inflation 10-peso, 20-peso and 50-peso banknotes are no longer used anymore and rarely 100-peso, 200-peso and 500-peso banknotes.

Cancelled notes (planned but not issued):

Value Color Description Issue
Obverse & watermark Reverse
$100 Violet Eva Perón The extension of the right to vote to women in Argentina in 1947 Cancelled
$200 Blue Martín Miguel de GüemesandJuana Azurduy Gaucho war; soldiers on horseback Cancelled
$500 Green Manuel BelgranoandMaría Remedios del Valle Soldiers pledging allegiance to theArgentine flagin 1812 Cancelled

Current notes:

Value Color Description Issue
Obverse & watermark Reverse
$1,000 Orange José de San Martín Crossing of the Andes May 2022
$2,000 Red/Gray Ramón CarrilloandCecilia Grierson Carlos Malbrán National Institute of Microbiology May 2023
$10,000 Cyan Manuel BelgranoandMaría Remedios del Valle Soldiers pledging allegiance to theArgentine flagin 1812 May 2024
$20,000 Red Juan Bautista Alberdi TBA Oct 2024

Exchange rates

At the end of 2011, exchange control measures were implemented, which managed to reduce capital flight by 85%. One consequence of these measures was the appearance of multiple exchange rates and a parallel market (colloquially called the "blue dollar" ), which was accessed by individuals and companies.

Special official exchange rates are sometimes created and abolished, to support sectors of the economy. There has been a "soybean dollar", a special rate for soybean exports, that was applicable between 5 and 30 September 2022,[58]between 20 November and 30 December 2022,[59]again between 8 April and 31 May 2023,[60]and again from 5 September to 25 October 2023.[61]A "corn dollar" for corn exports existed between 25 July and 31 August 2023.[62]

On 4 November 2022 a "foreign tourist dollar" rate close to the black market rate (355 pesos to the dollar instead of the official 195 at the end of February 2023) was introduced, for purchases made with foreignpayment cards.This was to encourage people to visit the country while discouraging them from using the currency black market. Tourist dollars spent in January 2023 were nearly five times as many as in January 2022.[63]

See also

References

  1. ^"World Bank Editorial Style Guide 2020 - page 134"(PDF).openknowledge.worldbank.org.Retrieved2022-08-22.
  2. ^abc"Billetes y monedas | Emisiones vigentes".Banco Central de la República Argentina.
  3. ^"Argentina - Exchange rates section".The World Factbook.CIA. 6 December 2023.
  4. ^"Banco Central de la República Argentina"(in Spanish). Banco Central de la República Argentina.Updated monthly.
  5. ^Raszewski, Eliana; Rosario, Jorgelina (14 August 2023)."Argentina devalues peso, raises rates after shock primary vote".Reuters.Archived fromthe originalon 10 November 2023.Retrieved12 January2024.
  6. ^Bianchi, Walter; Otaola, Jorge (15 November 2023)."Argentina restarts 'crawling peg' to let currency weaken for first time since August".Reuters.Archived fromthe originalon 30 November 2023.Retrieved12 January2024.
  7. ^Sweney, Mark (13 December 2023)."Argentina's new government devalues peso by more than 50%".The Guardian.Archived fromthe originalon 21 December 2023.Retrieved24 January2024.
  8. ^"Cotización Dólar Blue - El Cronista".El Cronista.
  9. ^abc"HISTORIA DE LA MONEDA METALICA ARGENTINA".www.todo-argentina.net.
  10. ^Billetesargentinos.com.arArchived2012-11-29 at theWayback Machine(in Spanish),Billegesgarentinos.com.ar(in English)Billetes argentinos site. Spanish version is more detailed.
  11. ^"BRL/ARS Currency Exchange Rate & News - Google Finance".www.google.com.
  12. ^"USDARS:CUR USD-ARS X-RATE".www.bloomberg.com.Archivedfrom the original on 2012-02-01.
  13. ^ Reinhold, Melisa (July 29, 2022)."Dólar hoy: el blue y los financieros caen por debajo de los $300"[Dollar today: The 'blue' and financials drop below $300] (in Spanish). La Nación.RetrievedJuly 29,2022.Current rate Web page
  14. ^ "Dólar hoy, dólar blue hoy: a cuánto cotiza este sábado 16 de septiembre".lanacion.com.ar.2023-09-16.Retrieved2023-09-17.
  15. ^Sweney, Mark (13 December 2023)."Argentina's new government devalues peso by more than 50%".The Guardian.Archived fromthe originalon 21 December 2023.Retrieved24 January2024.
  16. ^"Cotización de Dólar Blue - El Cronista".El Cronista.
  17. ^"Se pondrán en circulación billetes de mayor denominación"[Larger-value banknotes to be put into circulation](PDF).bcra.gob.ar(Press release) (in Spanish). January 15, 2016.Archived(PDF)from the original on 2016-02-06.
  18. ^Argentina 1 centavo
  19. ^Argentina 5 centavos
  20. ^Argentina 10 centavos
  21. ^Argentina 25 centavos
  22. ^Argentina 50 centavos
  23. ^Argentina 1 peso
  24. ^Argentina 2 pesos
  25. ^Argentina 1 peso (from 2017)
  26. ^Argentina 2 pesos (from 2018)
  27. ^Argentina 5 pesos (from 2017)
  28. ^Argentina 10 pesos (from 2018)
  29. ^50 centavos (50th anniversary of UNICEF)
  30. ^50 centavos (50th anniversary of the death of Eva Perón and the attainment of voting rights by women)
  31. ^50 centavos (The establishment of Mercosur)
  32. ^50 centavos (Death of General Martín Miguel de Güemes)
  33. ^50 centavos (Death of José de San Martín)
  34. ^1 peso (50th anniversary of UNICEF)
  35. ^1 peso (50th anniversary of the death of Eva Perón and the attainment of voting rights by women)
  36. ^1 peso (The establishment of Mercosur)
  37. ^1 peso (Death of General José de Urquiza)
  38. ^2 peso (National Constitution Convention)
  39. ^5 peso (National Constitution Convention)
  40. ^2 pesos commemorating the Malvinas War
  41. ^Banco Central de la República Argentina."Notes".Banco Central de la República Argentina.Retrieved25 June2013.
  42. ^"BanknoteNews – Breaking news about world paper money. Powered by The Banknote Book".
  43. ^"Noticias de Córdoba hoy | Noticias Córdoba".Vía País.
  44. ^"$1000 BILL Rufous hornero".Banco Central de la República Argentina. 1 December 2017.
  45. ^"Nuevo billete de $ 5000: cómo sería, cuándo saldría y por qué es polémico".El Cronista(in European Spanish). 2020-05-18.
  46. ^"¿Cuándo es la fecha de entrega del billete de 5000?".BAE Negocios(in Spanish). 2020-05-16.
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  48. ^"Argentina new 200-peso note (B424a) reported for introduction in Q4 2022 – BanknoteNews".24 May 2022.
  49. ^"Argentina new 500-peso note (B425a) reported for introduction in Q4 2022 – BanknoteNews".24 May 2022.
  50. ^"Argentina new 1,000-peso note (B426a) reported for introduction in Q4 2022 – BanknoteNews".24 May 2022.
  51. ^"Heroínas y héroes de nuestra historia vuelven a ilustrar los billetes de pesos argentinos".24 May 2022.
  52. ^Mackintosh, Thomas (2 February 2023)."Argentina unveils new 2,000-peso banknote as inflation bites".BBC News.
  53. ^Costa, Lucy (2023-02-05)."Argentina lança cédula de 2 mil pesos devido inflação".Investidores Brasil - Juntos Podemos Mais(in Brazilian Portuguese).Retrieved2023-03-10.
  54. ^Efron, Arnoldo (17 February 2023)."Argentina - Additional details about the planned 2,000 pesos banknote".MRI Guide.
  55. ^"Empieza a circular el nuevo billete de 2.000 pesos".Infobae(in Spanish). 22 May 2023.Retrieved22 May2023.
  56. ^Simauchi, Kevin (12 January 2024)."Argentina to Issue 20,000 Peso Bills as Inflation Eclipses 211%".Bloomberg.Archived fromthe originalon 12 January 2024.Retrieved12 January2024.
  57. ^"Argentina to issue larger-denomination banknotes".13 January 2024. Archived fromthe originalon 24 January 2024.Retrieved13 February2024.
  58. ^"Argentina creates" soybean dollar "to boost Central Bank reserves".MercoPress.5 September 2022. Archived fromthe originalon 12 January 2024.Retrieved12 January2024.
  59. ^"Argentina to create yet another dollar exchange rate".MercoPress.8 November 2022.
  60. ^Pandey, Samyak; Gomes, Jose (5 April 2023)."Argentina unveils third 'soybean dollar' program to boost farmer sales".S&P Global.Archived fromthe originalon 12 January 2024.Retrieved12 January2024.
  61. ^"Argentinian Soybean Market Update: crush capacity and soy dollar".Mintec.6 October 2023. Archived fromthe originalon 12 January 2024.Retrieved12 January2024.
  62. ^Pandey, Samyak; Carvalho, Victor; Prakash, Shivam (25 July 2023)."Argentina introduces corn dollar exchange campaign to ramp up foreign reserve".S&P Global.Archived fromthe originalon 12 January 2024.Retrieved12 January2024.
  63. ^Iglesia, Facundo (28 February 2023)."Tourist dollar quintuples foreign spending in January".Buenos Aires Herald.

Further reading

  • Cunietti-Ferrando, Arnaldo J.: Monedas de la Republica Argentina desde 1813 a nuestros Dias. Cooke & Compañia. Editores Numismaticos, Buenos Aires, 1978.
  • Cunietti-Ferrando, Arnaldo J.: Monedas y Medallas. Cuatro siglos de historia y Arte. Coins and Medals. Four centuries of history and art. Manrique Zago ediciones, Buenos Aires, 1989.
  • Janson, Hector Carlos: La Moneda Circulante En El Territorio Argentino 1767–1998. Buenos Aires, 1998.