Swiss franc

Swiss franc
Schweizer Franken (German)
franc suisse (French)
franco svizzero (Italian)
franc svizzer (Romansh)
10 francs
10 francs
ISO 4217 Code CHF
Official user(s) Flag of Switzerland.svg Switzerland
Flag of Liechtenstein.svg Liechtenstein
Flag of Italy.svg Italy (Campione d'Italia exclave)
Unofficial user(s) Flag of Germany.svg Germany (Büsingen exclave)
Inflation 0.6% (Switzerland only)
Source The World Factbook, 2007 est.
Subunit
1/100 Rappen (German)
centime (French)
centesimo (Italian)
rap (Romansh)
Symbol CHF, Fr., SFr. (old)
Nickname Stutz, Stei, Eier (Swiss), balle(s) (≥1 CHF) (French)
Plural Franken (German)
francs (French)
franchi (Italian)
francs (Romansh)
Rappen (German)
centime (French)
centesimo (Italian)
rap (Romansh)
Rappen (German)
centimes (French)
centesimi (Italian)
raps (Romansh)
Coins
Freq. used 5, 10, 20 centimes, 1/2, 1, 2, 5 francs
Rarely used 1 centime (no longer legal tender as of 01.01.2007)
Banknotes 10, 20, 50, 100, 200, 1000 francs
Central bank Swiss National Bank
Website www.snb.ch
Printer Orell Füssli Arts Graphiques SA (Zürich)
Mint Swissmint
Website www.swissmint.ch

The franc (German: Franken, French and Romansh: franc, Italian: franco; code: CHF) is the currency and legal tender of Switzerland and Liechtenstein; it is also legal tender in the Italian exclave Campione d'Italia. Although not formally legal tender in the German exclave Büsingen (the sole legal currency is the euro), it is widely used on a day-to-day basis. The central bank of Switzerland and the Swiss National Bank issue bank notes and the federal Swissmint issues coins.

The Swiss franc is the only version of the franc still issued in Europe. The smaller denomination, a hundredth of a franc, is a Rappen (Rp.) in German, centime (c.) in French, centesimo (ct.) in Italian, and rap (rp.) in Romansh. The ISO code of the currency used by banks and financial institutions is CHF, although "Fr." is used by most businesses and advertisers; some use SFr.; the Latinate "CHF" denotes Confoederatio Helvetica franc, because Latin is used as the neutral language representing country given its tetralingual populace. The Swiss franc is the fifth-most-traded currency in the foreign exchange market after the US dollar, the euro, the Japanese yen and the pound sterling.

Contents

History

First franc, 1798–1803

Before 1798, about 75 entities were making coins in Switzerland, including the 25 cantons and half-cantons, 16 cities, and abbeys, resulting in about 860 different coins in circulation, with different values and denominations. See Basel thaler, Berne thaler, Fribourg gulden, Geneva thaler, Geneva genevoise, Luzern gulden, Neuchâtel gulden, St. Gallen thaler, Schwyz gulden, Solothurn thaler, Valais thaler, Zug schilling and Zürich thaler.

In 1798, the Helvetic Republic introduced a currency based on the French franc, subdivided into 10 batzen or 100 rappen. The Swiss franc was equal to 6¾ grams pure silver or 1½ French francs. This Franc was issued until the end of the Helvetic Republic but served as the model for the currencies of several cantons in the re-formed Swiss Confederacy. For these cantonal currencies, see Aargau frank, Appenzell frank, Basel frank, Berne frank, Fribourg frank, Geneva franc, Glarus frank, Graubünden frank, Luzern frank, St. Gallen frank, Schaffhausen frank, Schwyz frank, Solothurn frank, Thurgau frank, Ticino franco, Unterwalden frank, Uri frank, Vaud franc and Zürich frank.

Second franc, 1850-

Although 22 cantons and half-cantons issued coins between 1803 and 1850, less than 15% of the money in circulation in Switzerland in 1850 was locally produced, with the rest being foreign, mainly brought back by mercenaries. In addition, some private banks also started issuing the first banknotes, so that in total, at least 8000 different coins and notes were in circulation at that time, making the monetary system extremely complicated. [1] [2]

In order to solve this problem, the new Swiss Federal Constitution of 1848 specified that the Federal Government would be the only entity allowed to make money in Switzerland. This was followed two years later by the first Federal Coinage Act, passed by the Federal Assembly on 7 May 1850, which introduced the franc as the monetary unit of Switzerland. The franc was introduced at par with the French franc. It replaced the different currencies of the Swiss cantons, some of which had been using a franc (divided into 10 batzen and 100 rappen) which was worth 1½ French francs.

In 1865, France, Belgium, Italy, and Switzerland formed the Latin Monetary Union, where they agreed to change their national currencies to a standard of 4.5 grams of silver or 0.290322 grams of gold. Even after the monetary union faded away in the 1920s and officially ended in 1927, the Swiss franc remained on that standard until 1936, when it suffered its sole devaluation, on 27 September during the Great Depression. The currency was devalued by 30% following the devaluations of the British pound, U.S. dollar and French franc. [3] In 1945, Switzerland joined the Bretton Woods system and pegged the franc to the U.S. dollar at a rate of $1 = 4.30521 francs (equivalent to 1 franc = 0.206418 grams of gold). This was changed to $1 = 4.375 francs (1 franc = 0.203125 grams of gold) in 1949.

CHF vs Euro (top) and U.S. Dollar (bottom) from June 2003 to 2006. CHF/EUR relatively stable compared to CHF/USD

Between mid-2003 and mid-2006, its exchange rate with the euro had been stable at a value of about 1.55 CHF per euro, so that the Swiss Franc has risen and fallen in tandem with the euro against the U.S. dollar and other currencies. In March 2008 the Swiss Franc traded above one U.S. dollar for the first time.

The Swiss franc has historically been considered a safe haven currency with virtually zero inflation and a legal requirement that a minimum 40% be backed by gold reserves. [4] However, this link to gold, which dates from the 1920s, was terminated on 1 May 2000 following a referendum regarding the Nazi gold affair with Swiss banks and an amendment to the Swiss Constitution.[5] By March 2005, following a gold selling program, the SNB held 1,290 tonnes of gold in reserves which equated to 20% of their assets. [6]

Coins

First franc

Between 1798 and 1803, billon coins were issued in denominations of 1 rappen, ½ and 1 batzen. Silver coins were issued for 5, 10, 20 and 40 batzen, with the 40 batzen also issued with the denomination given as 4 francs. Gold 16 and 32 franc coins were issued in 1800.

Second franc

In 1850, coins were introduced in denominations of 1, 2, 5, 10, and 20 centimes and ½, 1, 2, and 5 francs, with the 1 and 2 centimes struck in bronze, the 5, 10, and 20 centimes in billon, and the franc denominations in .900 fineness silver. Between 1860 and 1863, .800 fineness silver was used, before the standard used in France of .835 fineness was adopted for all silver coins except the 5 francs (remained .900 fineness) in 1875. In 1879, billon was replaced by cupro-nickel in the 5 and 10 centimes and by nickel in the 20 centimes. In 1883, gold 20 francs coins were introduced, followed by 10 francs in 1911. Gold was struck for circulation until 1935.

Both world wars only had a small effect on the Swiss coinage, with brass and zinc coins temporarily being issued. In 1931, the size of the 5 francs coin was reduced from 25 grams to 15, with the silver content reduced to .835 fineness. The next year, nickel replaced cupro-nickel in the 5 and 10 centimes. Cupro-nickel was restored to these denominations in 1940, following the switch to cupro-nickel 20 centimes in 1939.

In the late 1960s, due to linkage to the devaluing U.S. dollar, the prices of internationally traded commodities rose significantly. A silver coin's material value exceeded its monetary value, and many were being sent abroad for melting, which prompted the federal government to make this practice illegal.[7] The statute was of little effect, and the melting of francs only subsided when the collectible value of the remaining francs again exceeded their material value. In 1968, cupro-nickel replaced silver in all four denominations. The 2 centimes coin was discontinued in 1974, with aluminium-brass replacing cupro-nickel in the 5 centimes.

The 1 centime coin was still produced until 2006, albeit in ever decreasing quantities, but it did not play any great role in the monetary economy in the fourth quarter of the twentieth century (circa 1975 to 2000). People and groups who could justify the use of 1 centime coins for monetary purposes could obtain them at face value; any other user (such as collectors) had to pay an additional 4 centimes per coin to cover the production costs, which had exceeded the actual face value of the coin for many years. The coin fell into disuse in the late 1970s and early 1980s but only officially was fully withdrawn from circulation and declared to be not legal tender as of 1 January 2007. The long-forgotten 2 centime coin, not minted since 1974, was demonitized in the early 1980s.

The 5 centime coin remains in use, in circulation and still legal tender for the time being notwithstanding the production cost of 11 centimes per coin. One of the main reasons why the Confederation can not allow the elimination of this coin, is pricing of goods and services as well as and possibly more due to the fact that a second class stamp costs 85 centimes at present. Swiss Post are looking, into the possibility of a price rise or the elimination of the second class service which could ultimately pave the way for the elimination of the 5 centime coin therewith.

1 Swiss franc 1983
[[|90px]][[|90px]]
Obverse Reverse

The designs of the coins have changed very little since 1879. Among the notable changes were new designs for the 5 francs in 1888, 1922, 1924 (minor) and 1931 (mostly just a size reduction). A new design for the bronze coins was used from 1948. Coins depicting a ring of stars (such as the 1 franc coin seen beside this paragraph) were modified from 22 stars to 23 stars in 1983; since the stars represent the Swiss cantons, it was updated to represent the 1979 expansion of the Swiss federation, when Jura seceded from the Canton of Bern and became the 23rd canton.

All Swiss coins are language-neutral (at least with respect to Switzerland's four national languages), featuring only numerals, the abbreviation "Fr." for franc, and the Latin phrases "Helvetia" or "Confœderatio Helvetica" (depending on the denomination).

In addition to these general circulation coins, numerous series of commemorative coins have been issued, as well as gold coins including the well-known Vreneli. These coins generally remain legal tender, but are not used as such because their material or collector's value usually exceeds their face value.

Overview of current Swiss coins[8]
Value Diameter
(mm)
Thickness
(mm)
Weight
(g)
Composition Remarks
1 centime 16 1.10 1.5 Bronze No longer legal tender as of 01.01.2007.
5 centimes 17.15 1.25 1.8 Aluminium bronze Made in Cupronickel or pure Nickel until 1980
10 centimes 19.15 1.45 3 Cupronickel Made in current minting since 1879
20 centimes 21.05 1.65 4 Cupronickel
1/2 franc
(50 centimes)
18.20 1.25 2.2 Cupronickel In silver until 1967
1 franc 23.20 1.55 4.4 Cupronickel In silver until 1967
2 francs 27.40 2.15 8.8 Cupronickel In silver until 1967
5 francs 31.45 2.35 13.2 Cupronickel In silver until 1967 and in 1969.

Banknotes

Main article: Banknotes of the Swiss franc

In 1907, the Swiss National Bank took over the issuance of banknotes from the cantons and various banks. It introduced denominations of 50, 100, 500 and 1000 francs. 20 francs notes were introduced in 1911, followed by 5 francs in 1913. In 1914, the Federal Treasury issued paper money in denominations of 5, 10 and 20 francs. These notes were issued in three different version: French, German and Italian. The State Loan Bank also issued 25 francs notes that year. In 1952, the National Bank ceased issuing 5 francs but introduced 10 francs notes in 1955. In 1996, 200 francs notes were introduced whilst the 500 francs was discontinued.

Eight series of banknotes have been printed by the National Bank, six of which have been released for use by the general public. The sixth series from 1976, designed by Ernst and Ursula Hiestand, depicted personalities of the world of science. It has been recalled and replaced and will lose any value on 1 May 2020. As of 2006, a large number of notes from this series has not yet been exchanged, even though it has not been legal tender for more than 5 years; for example, the value of 500 francs banknotes still in circulation represents 167.4 millions Swiss Francs.[9]

The seventh series was printed in 1984, but kept as a "reserve series", ready to be used if, for example, wide counterfeiting of the current series suddenly happened. When the Swiss National Bank decided to develop new security features and to abandon the concept of a reserve series, the details of the seventh series were released and the printed notes were destroyed [10]

The current, eighth series of banknotes was designed by Jörg Zintzmeyer around the theme of the arts and released starting in 1995. In addition to a new design, this series was different from the previous one on several counts. Probably the most important difference from a practical point of view was that the seldom-used 500 franc note was replaced by a new 200 francs note; this new note has indeed proved more successful than the old 500 francs note.[11] The base colours of the new notes were kept similar to the old ones, except the 20 francs note which was changed from blue to red to prevent a frequent confusion with the 100 francs note, and the 10 francs note which was changed from red to yellow. The size of the notes was changed as well, with all notes from the 8th series having the same height (74 mm); while the widths were changed as well, still increasing with the value of the note. The new series contains many more security features than the previous one;[12] many (but not all) of them are now visibly displayed and have been widely advertised, in contrast with the previous series where most of the features were kept secret.

8th (current) series of Swiss banknotes[13]
Image Value Dimensions Main Colour Obverse Date of issue Remarks
Obverse Reverse
CHF10 8 front horizontal.jpg CHF10 8 back horizontal.jpg 10 francs 126 × 74 mm Yellow Le Corbusier 8 April 1997
CHF20 8 front horizontal.jpg CHF20 8 back horizontal.jpg 20 francs 137 × 74 mm Red Arthur Honegger 1 October 1996
CHF50 8 front horizontal.jpg CHF50 8 back horizontal.jpg 50 francs 148 × 74 mm Green Sophie Taeuber-Arp 3 October 1995
CHF100 8 front horizontal.jpg CHF100 8 back horizontal.jpg 100 francs 159 × 74 mm Blue Alberto Giacometti 1 October 1998
CHF200 8 front horizontal.jpg CHF200 8 back horizontal.jpg 200 francs 170 × 74 mm Brown Charles Ferdinand Ramuz 1 October 1997 Replaces the 500 francs
banknote in the previous series
CHF1000 8 front horizontal.jpg CHF1000 8 back horizontal.jpg 1000 francs 181 × 74 mm Purple Jacob Burckhardt 1 April 1998
These images are to scale at 0.7 pixels per millimetre, a Wikipedia standard for world banknotes. For table standards, see the banknote specification table.

All banknotes are quadrilingual, displaying all information in the four national languages. The banknotes depicting a Germanophone display German and Romansch on the same side as their picture, whereas banknotes depicting a Francophone or an Italophone display French and Italian on the same side as their picture.

When the 5th series lost its validity, at the end of April 2000, the banknotes that had not been exchanged represented a total value of 244.3 million Swiss francs; in accordance with Swiss law, this amount was transferred to the Swiss Fund for Emergency Losses in the case of non-insurable natural disasters.[14]

In February 2005, a competition was launched for the design of the 9th series planned to be released around 2010 on the theme Switzerland open to the world. The results were announced in November 2005, but the selected design drew widespread criticisms from the population.[15]

Currency in circulation

As of December 2005, the total value of released Swiss coins and banknotes was 43,834.99 million Swiss francs. [9]

Value of Swiss coins and banknotes in circulation as of December 2005 (in millions of CHF) [9]
Coins 10 francs 20 francs 50 francs 100 francs 200 francs 500 francs 1000 francs Total
2468.45 611.29 1293.11 1798.46 7977.21 6280.35 167.39 23,238.84 43,834.99

Combinations of up to 100 usual Swiss coins (not including special or commemorative coins) are legal tender; banknotes are legal tender for any amount. [16]

The franc as an international reserve currency

Main article: Reserve currency
Currency composition of official foreign exchange reserves
'95 '96 '97 '98 '99 '00 '01 '02 '03 '04 '05 '06 '07
US dollar 59.0% 62.1% 65.2% 69.3% 70.9% 70.5% 70.7% 66.5% 65.8% 65.9% 66.4% 65.7% 63.9%
Euro 17.9% 18.8% 19.8% 24.2% 25.3% 24.9% 24.3% 25.2% 26.5%
German mark 15.8% 14.7% 14.5% 13.8%
Pound sterling 2.1% 2.7% 2.6% 2.7% 2.9% 2.8% 2.7% 2.9% 2.6% 3.3% 3.6% 4.2% 4.7%
Japanese yen 6.8% 6.7% 5.8% 6.2% 6.4% 6.3% 5.2% 4.5% 4.1% 3.9% 3.7% 3.2% 2.9%
French franc 2.4% 1.8% 1.4% 1.6%
Swiss franc 0.3% 0.2% 0.4% 0.3% 0.2% 0.3% 0.3% 0.4% 0.2% 0.2% 0.1% 0.2% 0.2%
Other 13.6% 11.7% 10.2% 6.1% 1.6% 1.4% 1.2% 1.4% 1.9% 1.8% 1.9% 1.5% 1.8%
Sources: 1995-1999, 2006-2007 IMF: Currency Composition of Official Foreign Exchange ReservesPDF (80 KB)
Sources: 1999-2005, ECB: The Accumulation of Foreign ReservesPDF (816 KB)                
Current CHF exchange rates
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See also

Notes

  1. Otto Paul Wenger, p. 49–50.
  2. 150 Years of Swiss coinage
  3. Table of currency devaluations in the United States and Europe following the devaluation the pound in 1931, in Monetary History of Gold: volume 3 — After the Gold Standard
  4. Declaration of the Swiss Government, through the Federal Finance and Customs Department, and the National Bank of Switzerland regarding the purchase and sale of gold, in Monetary History of Gold: volume 3 — After the Gold Standard
  5. Federal Law on Currency and Legal Tender to enter into force on 1 May 2000, Press Release, 12 April 2000. Last accessed 2006-03-02.
  6. http://www.iie.com/publications/papers/hildebrand0505.pdf Speech by Philipp M. Hildebrand, Member of the Governing Board, Swiss National Bank, 5 May 2005
  7. 150 Years of Swiss coinage: From silver to cupronickel, on the web site of Swissmint. Last accessed 2006-03-02.
  8. Circulation coins: Technical data, on the website of Swissmint. Last accessed 2006-10-30.
  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 Swiss National Bank, Monthly Statistical Bulletin January 2006, A2: Banknotes and coins in circulation. Berne, January 2006
  10. Seventh banknote series. Last accessed 27 September 2007.
  11. The global value of 200 francs notes in circulation in 2000 (5120.0 million francs) is larger than the value of 500 notes in 1996 (3912.30), even when these figures are corrected for the global increase in total value of Swiss banknotes in circulation (+9%). Figures from the Monthly Statistical Bulletin of the Swiss National Bank, January 2006, Op cit
  12. An overview of the security features, Swiss National Bank. Last accessed 26 February 2006.
  13. Eighth banknote series 1995, on the website of the Swiss National Bank. Last accessed 1 June 2007.
  14. National Bank remits Sfr 244,3 million to the Fund for Emergency Losses, press release of the Swiss National Bank, 4 May 2000. Last accessed 26 February 2006.
  15. New banknotes project, on the website of the Swiss National Bank. Last accessed 27 September 2007.
  16. Art. 3 of the Swiss law on Monetary Unit and means of payment. German, French and Italian versions.

References

  • Bernard Lescaze, Une monnaie pour la Suisse. Hurter, 1999. ISBN 2-940031-83-5
  • Michel de Rivaz, The Swiss banknote: 1907–1997. Genoud, 1997. ISBN 2-88100-080-0
  • H.U. Wartenwiler, Swiss Coin Catalog 1798–2005, 2006. ISBN 3-905712-00-8
  • Otto Paul Wenger, Introduction à la numismatique, Cahier du Crédit Suisse, August 1978 (in French).
  • Swissmint, 150 Years of Swiss coinage: A brief historical discourse. Last accessed 2 March 2006.
  • Swissmint, Prägungen von Schweizer Münzen ab 1850 — Frappes des pièces de monnaie suisses à partir de 1850, 2000.
  • Krause, Chester L. and Clifford Mishler (1991). Standard Catalog of World Coins: 1801-1991 (18th ed. ed.). Krause Publications. ISBN 0873411501. 
  • Pick, Albert (1994). Standard Catalog of World Paper Money: General Issues. Colin R. Bruce II and Neil Shafer (editors) (7th ed. ed.). Krause Publications. ISBN 0-87341-207-9. 

External links