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The New Zealand dollar (NZ$).
If You are exporting goods from NZ the Lower the NZ dollar the more NZ dollars you get for your product, Assuming that you don't alter the price as the value of the NZ dollar goes down.
It ceased to be legal tender in 1967 - along with the rest of the then British currency. In 1967, New Zealand adopted the NZ dollar.
As of 16th June 2009, $1 (NZ) = $0.64 (US) (64 cents) $10 (NZ) = $6.37 (US) $100 (NZ) = $63.67 (US)
NZ dollar
No, two different currencies.
$1 = 1.21 NZ Dollars
No. Samoa and NZ are 2 separate countries.
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If you are talking about the bordering countries of nz, there is nothing but if you are talking about the countries around nz. They are australia, fiji, tonga, samoa.
The NZ dollar is currently about 80c US. And there are 100 cents to the NZ dollar. But coinage is only usable generally in the country of issue. Banks will handle notes, but not generally coins.