Lithuanian litas

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Lithuanian litas
Lietuvos litas (Lithuanian)

The 5, 2, and 1 litas coins, standard versions
ISO 4217 code LTL
Central bank Bank of Lithuania
Website www.lb.lt
User(s) Lithuania Lithuania
Inflation 1.4%
Source European Central Bank, April 2013
Method HICP
ERM
Since 28 June 2004
Fixed rate since 2 February 2002
Replaced by €, cash 1 January 2015
= 3.45280 litai
Band pegged in practice, 15% de jure
Subunit
1/100 centas
Symbol Lt (Litas), ct (Centas)
Plural litai (nom. pl.) or litų (gen. pl.)
centas centai (nom. pl.) or centų (gen. pl.)
Coins 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50 centų, 1, 2, 5 litai
Banknotes 10, 20, 50, 100, 200, 500 litų

The Lithuanian litas (ISO currency code LTL, symbolized as Lt; plural litai (nominative) or litų (genitive)) is the currency of Lithuania. It is divided into 100 centų (genitive case; singular centas, nominative plural centai). The litas was first introduced on 2 October 1922 after World War I, when Lithuania declared independence and was reintroduced on 25 June 1993, following a period of currency exchange from the ruble to the litas with the temporary talonas then in place.[1] The name was modeled after the name of the country (similarly to Latvia and its lats). From 1994 to 2002, the litas was pegged to the U.S. dollar at the rate of 4 to 1. The litas has been pegged to the euro at the rate of 3.4528 to 1 since 2002. The euro was expected to replace the litas by January 1, 2010, but persistent high inflation and the economic crisis have delayed Lithuania's euro adoption. 1 January 2015 is the government's current anticipated switch over date.[2]

First litas, 1922-1941

History

The first litas was introduced on 2 October 1922, replacing the ostmark and ostruble, both of which had been issued by the occupying German forces during World War I. The ostmark was known as the auksinas in Lithuania.

The litas was established at a value of 10 litas = 1 US dollar and was subdivided into 100 centų. In the face of world wide economic depression, the litas appeared to be quite a strong and stable currency, reflecting the negligible influence of the depression on the Lithuanian economy. One litas was covered by 0.150462 grams of gold stored by the Bank of Lithuania in foreign countries. In March 1923, the circulation amounted to 39,412,984 litai, backed by 15,738,964 in actual gold and by 24,000,000 in high exchange securities.[3] It was required that at least one third of the total circulation would be covered by gold and the rest by other assets. By 1938, 1 U.S. dollar was worth about 5.9 litai,[4] falling to about 20 U.S. cents before its disappearance in 1941.[5]

Memelgebiet

In March 1939 Nazi Germany demanded that Lithuania give up the Klaipėda Region (also known as the Memel Territory), which had been detached from Germany after World War I. The Lithuanian government complied, and on 23 March 1939 the area was annexed by Germany. On the same day the reichsmark replaced the litas as the official currency of the region, with 1 litas being exchanged for 40 pfennig. Until 20 May 1939 inhabitants of the Memelgebiet could exchange litas for reichsmarks.[6]

Soviet Occupation

The litas was replaced by the Soviet ruble in April 1941 after Lithuania was annexed by the Soviet Union, with 1 litas equal to 0.9 ruble, although the actual value of the litas was about 3-5 rubles. Such an exchange rate provided great profits for the military and party officials. Trying to protect the value of the currency, people started to massively buy which, together with a downfall in production (following nationalization), caused material shortages. Withdrawals were then limited to 250 litų[7] before the litas was completely abolished.

Coins

Interwar 10 litas coin, depicting Vytautas the Great

Coins were introduced in 1925 in denominations of 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 and 50 centų, 1, 2 and 5 litai, with the litas coins in silver. 10 litų coins were introduced in 1936. All these coins were designed by the sculptor Juozas Zikaras (1881–1944). The litas coins displayed Jonas Basanavičius and Vytautas the Great, which was replaced by a portrait of President Antanas Smetona.

Banknotes

10 litas banknote (1922)

In 1922, the Bank of Lithuania issued notes in denominations of 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 and 50 centai, 1, 2, 5, 10, 50 and 100 litų. In 1924, 500 and 1000 litų notes were added. Denominations below 5 litai were replaced by coins in 1925.

Second litas, 1993-present

The litas became Lithuania's currency once more on June 25, 1993, when it replaced the temporary talonas currency at a rate of 1 litas to 100 talonas.

History

Preparatory work

Officials started to prepare for the introduction of the litas even before independence was declared, it was thought to introduce the litas alongside the ruble even if Lithuania remained a part of the Soviet Union.[8] In December 1989, artists were asked to submit sketches of possible coin and banknote designs. Also, a list of famous people was compiled in order to determine who should be featured.

The Bank of Lithuania was established on March 1, 1990. Ten days later Lithuania declared independence. At first the Lithuanian government negotiated in vain with François Charles Oberthur, a press located in France to print the banknotes. In November 1990 The Bank of Lithuania decided to work with the United States Banknote Corporation (now American Banknote Corporation). In late fall, 1991 the first shipments of litas banknotes and coins arrived in Lithuania.

In November 1991, the Currency Issue Law was passed and the Litas Committee was created. It had the power to fix the date for the litas to come into circulation, the terms for the withdrawal from circulation of the ruble, the exchange rate of the litas and other conditions. Officials waited for a while for the economy to stabilize to not to expose the young litas to inflation. About 80% of Lithuania's trade was with Russia and the government needed to find a way to smooth the transition from the ruble zone. Also, Lithuania needed to gather funds to form a stabilization fund.

Gathering funds

At first, Lithuania did not have gold or any other securities to back up the litas. Lithuania needed to find about 200 million U.S. dollars to form the stabilization fund. First, it sought to recover its pre-war gold reserves (about 10 tons) from France, United Kingdom, Switzerland, etc. In the interwar period Lithuania stored its gold reserve in foreign banks. After the occupation in 1940 those reserves were “nobody’s”: there was no Lithuania and most western countries condemned the occupation as illegal and did not recognize the Soviet Union as a successor. The Bank of England, for example, sold the reserves to the Soviets in 1967. However, in January 1992 it announced that this action was a “betrayal of the people of the Baltic states” and that it would return the originally deposited amount of gold, now worth about 90 million pound sterling, to the three Baltic states. Lithuania received 18.5 million pounds or 95,000 ounces of gold and remained a customer of the bank. Similarly, in March 1992 Lithuania reclaimed gold from the Bank of France and later from the Bank of Sweden.

In October 1992, the International Monetary Fund (Lithuania joined this organization on April 29, 1992) granted the first loan of 23.05 million U.S. dollars[9] to create the stabilization fund. However, it is estimated that at the time of the introduction of the new currency, Lithuania managed to gather only $120 million for the stabilization fund. For a brief while it was kept a secret so as not to further damage the reputation and trust in of the litas.

Delayed introduction of the litas

Lietuvos Rytas journalists investigated the production of the litas and found that for a while it was purposely held back. For example, 6 million litas designated to pay for printing the banknotes stayed in a zero interest bearing account for a year in a bank in Sweden. By 1992, the litas was ready for introduction, but the banknotes were of extremely low quality (one could easily counterfeit them with a simple color printer; especially the 10, 20, and 50 litų banknotes).

Newly elected President Algirdas Brazauskas dismissed the Chair of the Bank of Lithuania, Vilius Baldišis, for incompetence just two months before the introduction of the litas. Baldišis was later charged for negligence that cost Lithuania $3,000,000. Some claim that the Russian secret services were behind the affair. Baldišis’ explanation was that he was trying to cut the costs of printing the banknotes and thus did not order better security features. Also, “U.S. Banknote Corporation” was accused of violation of the contract terms.

But when the new issue of litas banknotes was redesigned, reprinted, and introduced in June 1993, it was found that the quality of the money was still too low and the banknotes would have to be redesigned further in the future. All these scandals and the small backup of gold reserve (about $120 million instead of $200 million) damaged the reputation of the litas. Thankfully, the newly appointed chair, Romualdas Visokavičius, moved things quickly and managed to win the trust of the public. Unfortunately, in October he was asked to resign mostly because of his involvement with a private bank "Litimpex."

Introduction of the litas

Official litas and U.S. dollar exchange rate June 1993 - March 1994 according to statistics published by the Bank of Lithuania

On June 25, 1993, the litas was finally introduced at the rate of 1 litas to 100 talonas. 1 U.S. dollar was worth 4.5 litai and decreased to about 4.2 a couple of weeks later. Even the introduction of the litas was followed by a scandal. The government allowed the changing of unlimited amounts of talonas to the litas without having to show the source of the talonas. This allowed criminal groups to legalize their funds.

In July, circulation of the talonas was stopped and on August 1, 1993, the litas became the only legal tender. Following the reintroduction of the litas, there was an effort to weed out U.S. dollars from the market. The talonas was never really trusted by the people and the ruble was very unstable. Thus, people started using U.S. dollars as a stable currency. Another alternative was the German mark, but it was not available in larger quantities. A lot of shops printed prices in several different currencies, including dollars, and the economy was very "dollarised" as it was legal to make trades in foreign currencies.

Early litas lacked necessary protection

Due to poor banknote quality (both talonas and early litas) it was easy to counterfeit them. Most shops were forced to acquire ultra violet lamps to check for forgeries. One group, for example, printed 500 talonas banknotes in Turkey. It is estimated that their notes totaled 140,000 litas.[10]

From April 1, 1994 to February 1, 2002, the litas was pegged to the U.S. dollar at the rate of 4 to 1 (the litas was stable around 3.9 for half a year before the pegging). The main reasons for this fixation was little trust in the emerging monetary system, fear of high fluctuations in currency exchange rates, desire to attract foreign investors, and International Monetary Fund recommendations. The peg was renewable every year. For a while a peg was considered to a basket of currencies: the European Currency Unit. At around this time Lithuania also established a currency board.

The litas and the euro

On 2 February 2002 the litas was pegged to the euro at a rate of 3.4528 to 1; this rate is not expected to change until the litas is completely replaced by the euro.[citation needed] After the peg, Lithuania became a member of the Eurozone de facto. Since 28 June 2004, the litas has been part of the ERM II,[11] the EU's exchange rate mechanism. The design of Lithuanian euro coins is already prepared.

Lithuania has postponed its euro day several times, since the country does not meet the convergence criteria. High inflationwhich reached 11% in October 2008, well above then acceptable limit of 4.2%.[12]has contributed to Lithuania's failure to meet the criteria.

Coins

In 1993, coins were introduced (dated 1991) in denominations of 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 and 50 centų, 1, 2 and 5 litai. The 1, 2 and 5 centai pieces were minted in aluminium, the 10, 20 and 50 centų in bronze and the litas coins were of cupro-nickel. In 1997, nickel-brass 10, 20 and 50 centų coins were introduced, followed by cupro-nickel 1 litas and bimetallic 2 and 5 litai in 1998. All have the obverse designs showing the coat of arms in the center and the name of the state "Lietuva" in capital letters.

The first coins were minted in the United Kingdom and arrived in Lithuania on October 31, 1990. Currently, all coins are minted in the state-owned enterprise "Lithuanian Mint", which started its operations in September 1992 and helped to cut the costs of introducing the litas.

Banknotes

In 1993, banknotes (dated 1991) were issued in denominations of 1, 2, 5, 10, 20, 50 and 100 litų. Due to poor designs, these were found to be easily copied and a second series of notes was swiftly introduced in denominations of 1, 2, 5, 10, 20 and 50 litų, with only the 100 litų notes of the first series remaining in circulation. 200 litų notes were introduced in 1997, followed by 500 litų in 2000.

Current LTL exchange rates
From Google Finance: AUD CAD CHF EUR GBP HKD JPY USD RUB
From Yahoo! Finance: AUD CAD CHF EUR GBP HKD JPY USD RUB
From XE.com: AUD CAD CHF EUR GBP HKD JPY USD RUB
From OANDA.com: AUD CAD CHF EUR GBP HKD JPY USD RUB
From fxtop.com: AUD CAD CHF EUR GBP HKD JPY USD RUB

See also

  • Lithuanian euro coins
  • Lithuanian grammar: Noun modification by numeral usage of forms litas, litai, litų
  • Economy of Lithuania

Notes

  1. Linzmayer, Owen (2013). "Lithuania". The Banknote Book. San Francisco, CA: www.BanknoteNews.com. 
  2. http://www.15min.lt/en/article/politics/lithuanian-government-endorses-euro-introduction-plan-526-310363
  3. Germany Deaf to Currency Reform, New York Times, March 5, 1923, page 22
  4. Vidas Žigas (2002). "Nenukalto auksinio penkiasdešimtličio istorija". Mokslas ir Gyvenimas (in Lithuanian) (9). Retrieved 2007-01-13. 
  5. Tom Walker and Anatol Lieven (1991-09-07). "Foreign ministers welcome Baltic states but offer little financial help". The Times. 
  6. Deutsches Reichsgezettsblatt 1939 Teil I. Available at: http://alex.onb.ac.at/cgi-content/alex-iv.pl
  7. Romuald J. Misiunas and Rein Taagepera (1993). The Baltic States. University of California Press. p. 32. ISBN 0-520-08228-1. 
  8. Peter Gumbel (1989-07-21). "Soviets Are at a Loss About Ethnic Unrest". The Wall Street Journal. 
  9. Republic of Lithuania Government (1993-02-03). "LIETUVOS RESPUBLIKOS VYRIAUSYBĖ POTVARKIS". Retrieved 2007-01-03. 
  10. "Forged Coupons Printed in Turkey". BBC Monitoring Service:Former USSR. 1993-08-27. 
  11. "Lithuanian litas included in the Exchange Rate Mechanism II (ERM II)". ECB. Retrieved 22 December 2008. 
  12. "SEB: no euro for Lithuania before 2013". The Baltic Course. Retrieved 22 December 2008. 

References

Further reading

  • Documentaries directed by Rimtautas Šilinis "Iš lito istorijos: Banknotai" (From History of the Litas: Banknotes (2004)) and "Iš lito istorijos: Monetos" (From History of the Litas: Coins (2002))
  • Bronė Vainauskienė, "Skandalingoji lito istorija" (Scandalous History of Litas (2003)) - collection of articles by Lietuvos Rytas journalist who spend 6 years investigating the history of the litas in the early years of independence. ISBN 9986-448-12-3

External links

First litas
Preceded by:
German Ostmark and German Ostruble
a.k.a. Lithuanian auksinas

Reason: independence (in 1918)
Currency of Lithuania
1922 1941
Succeeded by:
Soviet ruble
Reason: annexation
Second litas
Preceded by:
Lithuanian talonas
Reason: replacement of temporary currency
Currency of Lithuania
1993 unknown yet
Succeeded by:
Euro
Reason: joining the eurozone
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