Dollarization occurs when the inhabitants of a country use foreign currency in parallel to or instead of the domestic currency. The term is not only applied to usage of the United States dollar, but generally to the use of any foreign currency as the national currency.
Dollarization can occur
- unofficially, when private agents prefer the foreign currency over the domestic currency. They hold for example deposits in the foreign currency because of a bad track record of the local currency.
- semiofficially (or officially bimonetary systems), where foreign currency is legal tender, but plays a secondary role to domestic currency
- officially, when a country ceases to issue the domestic currency and uses only foreign currency. It adopts the foreign currency as legal tender.
Official dollarization has gained prominence as several countries have considered and implemented it as official policy. The major advantage of dollarization is promoting fiscal discipline and thus greater financial stability and lower inflation.
The biggest economies to have officially dollarized as of June 2002 are Ecuador (since 2000), El Salvador (since 2001), and Panama (since 1904).
As of August 2005[update], the United States dollar, the euro, the New Zealand dollar, the Swiss franc, the Indian rupee, and the Australian dollar were the only currencies used by other countries for official dollarization. In addition, the Turkish lira, the Israeli shekel, and the Russian ruble are used by internationally unrecognised but de facto independent states.
List of officially dollarized economies
Worldwide use of the
U.S. dollar and the
euro:
United States External adopters of the US dollar Currencies pegged to the US dollar Currencies pegged to the US dollar within narrow band Eurozone External adopters of the euro Currencies pegged to the euro Currencies pegged to the euro within narrow band
U.S. dollar
Euro
New Zealand dollar
Australian dollar
South African Rand
Others
See also
References
External links
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