The old ones were made of paper, and the new ones are maid of plastic...
in rough translation: peso in spanish is the term for their currency nuevo in spanish means new so, his face is on the new 100 peso bill. (such as a new 20 dollar bill being adorned with a different figurehead)
Well, 100 (Mexican) peso bill would be worth... 100 Mexican pesos (which is the currency they use in Mexico!) assuming it was after 1993, if the bill was before 1993 it would be worth 1/10th of a Mexican peso (since the New Peso was introduced in 1993 which 1 new peso is equal to 1000 old pesos)
Post a new question and include the date and condition of the bill.
Post a new question and include the date and condition of the bill.
Your 5000 peso bill is worth only .50 cents. Mexico re-valued their currency in 1994. All bills prior to then are no longer in circulation. the 5000 old peso bill is now comparable to the 50 new peso note.-Joshh
whose face was on the Philippine one peso bill? what national monument or event was on the back of the Philippine one peso bill? when was the Philippine one peso bill in circulation or in use? The Blue One Peso Bill with Jose Rizal's face on it was released in 1969 (The series was released in 1969 so I assume that it was released alongside the others). The first Jose Rizal 1-peso coin was released in 1972. BTW, there was also a one-peso bill and coin released during the American occupation with the peso having equivalent value as the US dollar. I'm not sure of this, i just put together some bits and pieces of things that I came across the web. Cheers!
No it is not valid anymore. They have new denominations: 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50 and 100 peso notes.
The Mexican currency is the Peso.
Not enough information. What country? What date? Is it a bill or a coin? Please post a new question with enough information to ID what you have.
whats the difference between midAtlantic and new England
Due to inflation the Mexican peso became almost worthless. Small purchases were costing hundreds of peso. Instead of making 1000 peso coins and printing million peso bills, the new peso was introduced with a value of 1000 old peso.
Mexico revalued its currency in 1992-93 due to hyperinflation. "Nuevo pesos" (new pesos) were introduced at the rate of 1 nuevo peso = 1000 old pesos. That means a coin dated before 1992 is worth only 1/1000 as many current pesos; i.e. an old 1000-peso coin is only 1 new peso. At current (2009) exchange rates 1 new peso is worth less than a U.S. dime.