Renminbi facts for kids
Quick facts for kids Renminbi |
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人民币 (Chinese) | |
ISO 4217 Code | CNY |
Official user(s) | People's Republic of China |
Unofficial user(s) | North Korea (until Nov 2009) Myanmar (in Kokang and Wa) Hong Kong Macau |
Inflation | 1.7%, October 2012 |
Source | BBC News |
Method | CPI |
Pegged with | Partially, to a basket of trade-weighted international currencies |
Subunit | |
1 | yuán (元,圆) |
1/10 | jiǎo (角) |
1/100 | fēn (分) |
Symbol | ¥ |
Nickname | none |
yuán (元,圆) | kuài (块) |
jiǎo (角) | máo (毛) |
Plural | The language(s) of this currency does not have a morphological plural distinction. |
Coins | |
Freq. used | ¥0.1, ¥0.5, ¥1 |
Rarely used | ¥0.01, ¥0.02, ¥0.05 |
Banknotes | |
Freq. used | ¥0.1, ¥0.5, ¥1, ¥5, ¥10, ¥20, ¥50, ¥100 |
Rarely used | ¥0.2, ¥2 |
The renminbi (RMB, ¥; code: CNY; also CN¥, 元 and CN元) is the currency of the People's Republic of China. It is the main currency used in mainland China. It is also sometimes accepted in Hong Kong and Macau, and can be easily exchanged in those territories. The currency is issued by the People's Bank of China, the monetary authority of China. Its name means "people's currency" (simplified Chinese: 人民币; traditional Chinese: 人民幣; pinyin: rénmínbì).
The main unit of renminbi is the yuán (元/圆). One yuan is divided into 10 jiǎo (角). One jiǎo is subdivided into 10 fēn (份). Renminbi banknotes are available in denominations from 1 jiao to 100 yuan (¥0.1–100). Coins have denominations from 1 fen to 1 yuan (¥0.01–1). Therefore, some denominations exist in both coin and banknote form. Coins under ¥0.1 are rarely used.
Currently, only ¥20,000 can be taken in or out of China without declaring it, or telling customs that you have it.
Images for kids
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China M2 money supply (red) vis-à-vis USA M2 money supply (blue)
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"People's Bank of China Ten Yuan" written in five different languages on the fifth series of the renminbi. From top to bottom and left to right: Mandarin pinyin, Mongolian, Tibetan, Uyghur, and Zhuang languages.
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A special edition designed for Inner Mongolia in the first series of the renminbi.
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On 24 November 2010, Vladimir Putin announced that Russia's bilateral trade with China will be settled in roubles and yuan, instead of US dollars.
See also
In Spanish: Renminbi para niños