BAGHDAD, Feb 11 (Reuters) - Iraq expects to redenominate its dinar currency
by knocking three zeros off the nominal value of bank notes to facilitate
currency transactions, a central bank official said on Thursday.
Emerging from years of war and sanctions, Iraq is trying to revamp its
economy and boost oil production with a raft of crude deals that may vault it to
one of the world's top oil producers.
"The goal is to improve the
payment and receiving system in the country and consequently to reform cash
management," said Mudher Kasim, a senior advisor at the central
bank.
Iraqi payment systems rely almost exclusively on
cash.
Kasim said that the central bank expected to start rolling out
new notes by the end of the year or the beginning of 2011. Iraq has 25 trillion
dinars in circulation, officials say.
An Iraqi cabinet committee
ordered the change in 2007, but the central bank did not think it appropriate
until recently, Kasim said. The dinar's value will remain unchanged, he
said.
The local unit is managed through foreign exchange auctions,
and traded hands at 1,170 per dollar at the last sale.
(Reporting by Aseel Kami; Editing by Jack Kimball and Toby Chopra) Keywords:
IRAQ CURRENCY/ (jack.kimball@thomsonreuters.com; +964 7901 917 033; Reuters
Messaging: jack.kimball.reuters.com@reuters.com)
Iraq plans to slice three zeros off currency notes - Source