Unidade Real de Valor
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The Unidade Real de Valor, or URV (Portuguese, Real Unit of Value), was a non-monetary currency (ie, non-fiat) created in March 1994, as part of the Plano Real in Brazil. It was the most theoretically sophisticated piece of the Plano Real and was based on a previous academic work by Pérsio Arida and André Lara Resende, the "Plano Larida", published in 1984.
Its main purpose was to establish a parallel currency to the cruzeiro real, free from the effects of inertial inflation on the latter, which exceeded 1,200% per year prior to the implementation of the new currency, the real. The idea was to let the old currency (the cruzeiro real) fully absorb the effects of hyperinflation while having a new currency to be stable (in nominal terms) by adjusting its exchange rate against the old one.
URVs were quoted in cruzeiros reais and its intrinsic value was pegged to three price indices and had a fixed parity of 1-to-1 to the U.S. dollar. The exchange rate of URVs to cruzeiros reais was recalculated and published daily by the government.
Prices were quoted both in URVs and cruzeiros reais but payments had to be made exclusively in cruzeiros reais, since the URV would not become legal tender until July 1. For instance, banks were required to report balances on accounts in both currencies and contracts had to be rewritten to express prices in URVs.
The URV was extinguished on July 1, 1994, when it was converted to a new currency, the real at a parity (ie., 1 URV = 1 real = CR$ 2,750), effectively breaking the hyperinflationary cycle, bringing stability to the Brazilian currency.