one pence in indian rupess
None. A Threepence represented three Pennies in the various British based predecimal currencies. There were 240 predecimal Pennies in a predecimal Pound, so there were 80 Threepences in a predecimal Pound. At the time of Britains changeover to decimal currency in 1971, the old redundant Threepence became the equivalent of 1.25 New Pence. There are 100 New Pence in the British decimal Pound.
The exchange rate fluctuates on a daily, even hourly basis.As of early 2012, the exchange was about 1 US cent to 0.63 New Pence, which means that "putting in your two cents worth" would cost you about 1.3 pence.For the Euro, 2 US cents was about 1.5 Eurocents (0.015 Euro).(US cents convert to "new pence" at the same ratio as Dollar to Pound Sterling. There are 100 cents, or pennies, per US dollar; 100 new pence to the pound.)* You can find the current ratio at the related link below.
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This depends on what dollar 1 US Dollar in Indian Rupee is 63.60 1 Australian Dollar in Indian Rupee is 50.32 1 Barbardian in Indiian Rupee is 31.98 1 Bahamian Dollar in Indian Rupee is 64.01 1 Canadian Dollar in Indian Rupee is 51.04 1 New Zealand Dollar in Indian Rupee is 46.15
one pence in indian rupess
Indian Rupee (INR)
November- December 2009
2009
360 "old" pence was equivalent to £1/10/-, or One Pound, Ten Shillings. At decimalisation, One Pound became 100 "New" Pence and Ten Shillings became 50 "New" Pence. 360 "old" Pence converted to 150 "New" Pence or £1.50 in decimal currency.
At Britains conversion to decimal currency in 1971, the Threepence had no equivalent coin but was equal to 1.25 New Pence.
impact of fluctuation in rupee-dollar exchange rate on Indian industry
There were 12 pennies in a shilling. When decimal currency was introduced in 1971, one shilling became 5 new pence.
New pence are the 100ths of a pound sterling.
Pence is the plural of Penny, so you have One Penny or, Two Pence, Five Pence, Fifty Pence, etc. From the introduction of British decimal coins in 1968, the new currency was designated as "New", ie. 1 New Penny, 2 New Pence, etc. until 1981. From 1982 onwards, the "New" was dropped.
The term "New Pence" ceased to be used on British coins in 1981. The word "Pence" should have a numeral with it to indicate how many Pence. Pence being the plural of Penny. In 1997 there would have been 50 Pence, 20 Pence, 10 Pence, 5 Pence and 2 Pence coins and a 1 Penny coin.