Manx pound | |
---|---|
ISO 4217 code | none |
User(s) | Isle of Man (alongside pound sterling) |
Inflation | 3.6% |
Source | The World Factbook, 2004 |
Pegged with | variant of pound sterling |
Subunit | |
1/100 | penny |
Symbol | £ or M£ to distinguish it from other currencies with the £ symbol |
penny | p |
Plural | |
penny | pence |
Coins | 1p, 2p, 5p, 10p, 20p, 50p, £1, £2, £5 |
Banknotes | £1, £5, £10, £20, £50 |
Treasury | Isle of Man Treasury |
Website | www.gov.im/treasury |
The Manx pound or Isle of Man pound is a local issue of the pound sterling, issued by the Isle of Man Government. It is subdivided into 100 pence.
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The Isle of Man is in currency union with the United Kingdom, and the Manx pound is a local issue of coins and banknotes denominated in pounds sterling,[1] in a similar way to the banknotes issued in Scotland and Northern Ireland (see Sterling banknotes). It can be exchanged at par with other sterling coinage and notes (see also Sterling zone). The Isle of Man Treasury states that the locally issued currency, United Kingdom coinage and Bank of England notes are all legal tender within the island.
For this reason, ISO 4217 does not include a separate currency code for the Manx pound, but where a distinct code is desired IMP is generally used.[2]
UK notes and coins are generally accepted in the Isle of Man, but Manx notes and coins are not generally accepted in the UK. To assist those travelling, the ATMs at the Sea Terminal, Douglas, and at Isle of Man Airport both issue English notes only.
The first Manx coinage was issued privately in 1668[3] by John Murrey, a Douglas merchant, consisting of pennies equal to their English counterparts. These 'Murrey Pennies' were made legal tender by order in 1679, when the Court of Tynwald outlawed the unofficial private coinage that had been circulating prior to and alongside John Murrey's pennies (English coinage was also allowed by this Act).
Due to the difficulty of maintaining the supply of coins on the island, in 1692, the value of the Manx coinage was decreased, with English crowns circulating at 5 shillings 4 pence, half crowns at 2 shillings 8 pence and guineas at 22 shillings. At this time, Tynwald also forbade the removal of money from the island, in an attempt to maintain supply.
In 1696, a further devaluation occurred, with all English silver and gold coins valued at 14 pence for every shilling. Between 1696 and 1840, Manx copper coins circulated alongside first English, and later British silver and gold coins at the rate of 14 pence to 1 shilling. As in England, there were 20 shillings to the pound. Thus, after 1696, £100 sterling was worth £116 13s 4d Manx.
In 1708, the Isle of Man Government approached the Royal Mint, and requested that coinage be issued for the island. The then Master of the Mint, Sir Isaac Newton, refused. As a result, the first Government issue of coins on Mann took place in 1709. This coinage was made legal tender on 24 June 1710. In 1733 Tynwald took the opportunity to prohibit the circulation of any 'base' (not silver or gold) coinage other than that issued by the Government.
Because of the similarity between Manx and British coins, it was profitable to change shillings to Manx coinage and export them to Great Britain, making a profit of £2 for every £12 in Manx coinage so transferred. This happened on such a scale that by 1830 the island was almost totally deprived of copper coinage.
In an attempt to resolve this problem, a proposal was introduced to abandon the separate Manx coinage in favour of British coins. This was rejected by the House of Keys in 1834 but they were overruled by the British Government in 1839. An Act was passed declaring that "...the currency of Great Britain shall be and become, and is hereby declared to be, the currency of the Isle of Man", and this remains Manx law to this day. There was resentment on Mann to this change, with some islanders feeling defrauded, and serious rioting took place in Douglas and Peel. These were known as the 'Copper Row' riots, and were put down by the Manx militia.
The Royal Mint issued a total of £1,000 in copper coins. Following an Act in 1840, these were valued at 12 pence to the shilling. All coins issued before 1839 were declared by this law to no longer be 'current' and were recalled by the Board of Customs and exchanged by the Royal Mint at their original nominal value for the new coinage. After 1839, no further Manx coins were issued, and they gradually became scarce and were replaced in general circulation on the island by the coinage of the United Kingdom. They did not cease to be legal coinage on Man until decimalisation in 1971. Banknotes had been privately issued for the island since 1865.
In 1971 the United Kingdom moved to a decimal currency with the pound subdivided into 100 pence. The Isle of Man Government, having issued its own banknotes for ten years, took the opportunity to approach the Royal Mint and request its own versions of the decimal coins, which were introduced in 1971.
The 'Murrey Pennies' of 1668 were the first to depict the 'triskeles' symbol and the Island motto "Quocunque Gesseris Stabit" (sic), both of which would continue to feature on Manx coinage until the present day (the motto was corrected to "Quocunque Jeceris Stabit" in the early 18th Century).
In 1709, pennies (£300 in total) and halfpennies (£200 in total) were introduced. An additional issue of these coins occurred in 1733 (£250 in pennies, £150 in halfpennies). These issues of coins have the crest of the Stanley family, Lords of Mann, on the obverse (an eagle and child on a cap), together with the Stanley family motto, "Sans Changer". The 1709 issue was a poor quality casting produced in England; the 1733 issue was a higher-quality struck coin produced in Castletown.
An updated issue of Manx coinage was produced in 1758, totalling £400. It replaced the crest of the Stanley family with a depiction of the Ducal coronet of the Duke of Atholl above the monogram letters A.D. (for the Latin, Atholl Dux).
In 1786, a new design of coinage was issued, with the head of King George III (now the Lord of Mann) and the English state motto on the obverse and the triskeles and Manx motto on the reverse. The standard Lewis Pingo portrait of the King was used, the same as on the British coinage, which showed the King with a laurel wreath instead of a crown.
Further issues occurred in 1798 and 1813. As with the previous coins, they were the same size and material (copper) as the English coins and would easily pass for them, however as Manx pennies were 14 to the shilling they were worth less than their English counterparts.
In 1839, following the revaluation to 12 pence per shilling, the Royal Mint issued copper farthings, halfpennies and pennies which were similar to the previous designs but updated with the head of Queen Victoria. These were the last coins issued for the Isle of Man until 1971.
In 1971, ½, 1, 2, 5, 10 and 50 new pence coins were introduced. All had the same composition and size as the corresponding British coins. From 1972 onwards, production of the coinage and commemorative crowns was transferred from the Royal Mint to Pobjoy Mint. The word "new" was removed from the coins in 1976. A 1 pound coin was introduced in 1978, five years before a similar coin was issued in the UK. A 20 pence coin was introduced alongside its UK counterpart in 1982. Similarly, a bimetallic 2 pound coin was introduced alongside the UK version in 1998.
The obverse of Manx coins bears the same portrait of Elizabeth II as UK coins, with the words ISLE OF MAN to the left. Unlike the UK equivalent, the Manx one pound coin does not bear an edge inscription; instead, the edges are partly milled and partly plain in alternating bands.
In 1865, the Isle of Man Banking Company was founded and began issuing one pound notes, with five pound notes introduced in 1894. The bank changed its name to the Isle of Man Bank in 1926. Other banks which issued notes (one pound only) on the Isle of Man were:
Bank | Dates |
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Barclays Bank | 1924–1960 |
Lloyds Bank | 1919–1961 |
Manx Bank | 1882–1900 |
Mercantile Bank of Lancashire | 1901–1902 |
Lancashire & Yorkshire Bank | 1904–1927 |
Martins Bank | 1928–1957 |
Parr’s Bank | 1900–1916 |
London County Westminster and Parr's Bank | 1918–1921 |
Westminster Bank | 1923–1961 |
In 1961, Tynwald revoked the banks' licences to issue banknotes, and the Isle of Man Government started to issue its own notes, in denominations of ten shillings, one and five pounds. In 1969, the ten shilling note was replaced by a fifty pence note in the build-up to decimalization. Twenty pound notes were introduced in 1979. In 1983, a polymer one pound note was introduced but discontinued from 1988. A fifty pound note was also introduced in 1983. The fifty pence banknote was withdrawn in 1989.
The Isle of Man continues to issue a one pound note in addition to the one pound coin (in the UK, with the exception of those issued by The Royal Bank of Scotland plc, the one pound note has now been discontinued).
The front of all Manx banknotes have a pledge to honour the banknotes (the "promise to pay the bearer on demand") in the name of the Isle of Man Government, and feature images of Queen Elizabeth II (not wearing a crown) and the triskelion (three legs emblem) and motto.[4] The triskelion symbol is also used as a watermark. Each denomination features a different scene of the Island on its reverse side:[5]
The Manx five pound note is the only known banknote to picture a pub on it. In the bottom left-hand corner of the reverse, the Castle Arms (known as the Glue Pot) is shown opposite Castle Rushen, Castletown.
It is the Manx Government's position that, if the United Kingdom decides to participate in the euro, then it would be likely that the Island would also choose to participate in some form. Primarily this is because most of the Island's trade is with the United Kingdom and other countries of Europe and the break-up of the currency union with the UK would cause economic harm to the Island, although there is also concern that the island's economy is not large enough to withstand attack by currency speculators if the Manx pound became free-floating.[6][7]
"The idea that the Isle of Man could manage its own currency, for example, with all the difficulties and pitfalls this would involve, is not a viable option."— Jeremy Peat, Royal Bank of Scotland
Tynwald passed the Currency Act 1992 in preparation for the euro. The Isle of Man wishes to retain its right to issue its own currency, believing it to be an important public statement of independence, and the Act allows the issue of a new Manx currency at parity with the euro – referred to as a 'substitute euro'. Retaining the island's own coinage also enables the Isle of Man Treasury to continue to benefit from the accrual of the interest on the income of the issued money supply. However, on the other hand, European Union is not obliged to recognize Manx decisions: Monaco, San Marino and Vatican City had to be allowed to mint their coins, even if they are free and independent states and, as a dependency, Mann has lower powers than those three nations. More, design changes of European banknotes are totally forbidden by the European Central Bank. Printing their own banknotes would bring Manx Government to violate the copyright legally detained by the ECB, committing a crime that would involve the British Government by virtue of its sovereignty on the island in international law.
Manx versions of the euro coins have already been designed, as have equivalents to the euro banknotes for all except the €500 note (the Treasury assume there is no demand for such a high value note).[8]
If, after converting to the euro, the exchange rates set by the European Central Bank were to cause economic harm to the Isle of Man then there would be no eligibility for 'compulsory funding' under Protocol 3 of the Maastricht Treaty.
The Isle of Man Treasury has some concern that use of the island as a tax haven would increase if it were in monetary union with the entire euro zone, and that this could be another cause of considerable conflict between the Isle of Man and the European Union.
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