The Argentine peso (originally established as the nuevo peso argentino or peso convertible) is the currency of Argentina. Its ISO 4217 code is ARS, and the symbol used locally for it is $ (to avoid confusion, Argentines frequently use U$S to indicate U.S. dollars). It is divided into 100 centavos.
The peso was a colonial currency equal to 8 Spanish reales (a silver coin). After the Independence, this currency continued in use until 1826.
The peso fuerte was a convertible currency, at $F 17 per Spanish gold ounce (27.0643 g) 0.916 fine. This was changed in 1864 when the rate was changed to $F 16 per gold ounce.
In 1854, the Argentine Confederation issued 1, 2 and 4 centavos coins, with 100 centavos = 1 peso = 8 reales.
The peso moneda corriente ($m/c) was an inconvertible currency which started at par with the peso fuerte, but it was depreciated 25 times during its life.
The peso moneda nacional (m$n or $m/n) replaced the real at the rate of 8 reales = 1 peso fuerte = 25 pesos moneda corriente.
The end result was that one peso would be worth 10,000,000,000,000 (1013) pesos moneda nacional today.
Since January 2002, the exchange rate fluctuated, up to a peak of four pesos to one dollar (that is, a 75% devaluation). The exports boom then produced a massive inflow of dollars into the Argentine economy, which helped lower their price. On the other hand, the current administration has publicly acknowledged a strategy of keeping the exchange rate between 2.90 to 3.10 pesos per U.S. dollar, in order to maintain the competitiveness of exports and encourage import substitution by local industries. When necessary, the Central Bank emits pesos and buys dollars in the free market (sometimes large amounts, in the order of 10 to 100 million USD per day) to keep the dollar price from dropping, and had amassed over 27,000 million USD in reserves before the 9,810 million USD payment to the IMF in January 2006.
Note that the highest valued peso note is the AR$100, worth only about US$35. Prices in Argentina are lower than those in the United States in terms of purchasing power parity, so there is little need for higher valued notes.
Commemorating the National Constitutional Convention, two-peso and five-peso nickel coins were emitted in 1994.
Some two-peso coins were emitted in 1999 to commemorate the centennial of the birth of world-famous writer and poet Jorge Luis Borges; they had an image of Borges' face on one side, and a labyrinth and the Hebrew letter aleph on the other. In addition, commemorating the 50th anniversary of the death of Eva Perón, on September 18, 2002 a new two-peso coin with her face was created. It was said that this coin would replace the old AR$2 banknote if inflation continued to be high. None of the two-peso coins are currently in wide circulation.
| Denomination | Obverse | Reverse |
|---|
| $ 0.01 (1 centavo) |
| $ 0.05 (5 centavos) |
| $ 0.10 (10 centavos) |
| $ 0.25 (25 centavos) |
| $ 0.50 (50 centavos) |
| $ 1.00 (1 peso) |
| $ 2.00 (2 pesos) |
| $ 5.00 (5 pesos) |
| Denomination | Portrait | Main colour | Obverse | Reverse |
|---|---|---|
| $ 1 | Carlos Pellegrini (not currently in use, replaced by the 1 peso coin) | Navy blue |
| $ 2 | Bartolomé Mitre | Light Blue |
| $ 5 | José de San Martín | Green |
| $ 10 | Manuel Belgrano | Brown |
| $ 20 | Juan Manuel de Rosas | Red |
| $ 50 | Domingo Faustino Sarmiento | Black |
| $ 100 | Julio Argentino Roca | Violet |
Circulating currencies | Economy of Argentina | Currencies of Argentina
Peso argentí | Argentinischer Peso | Peso argentino | Argentina peso | Peso argentin | Peso argentino | פסו ארגנטינאי | Argentijnse peso | Peso argentyńskie | Peso argentino
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"Argentine peso".
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