美国亚马逊 Zimbabwe 100 Trillion Dollars (Ten $10 Trillion Dollar Notes)历史价格和网友评论,海淘商品名Zimbabwe 100 Trillion Dollars (Ten $10 Trillion Dollar Notes)
At the present time, the only value of the unique 100 Trillion Dollar bill is as a collectors item. It is an interesting lesson in history showing what happens when confidence in a currency is lost. The 100 Trillion Dollar bill represents an interesting time in history when Zimbabwe went ...
These naturally balancing rocks were pictured on every Zimbabwean banknote, up to the 100 trillion-dollar note.
Hyper-inflation has forced the central bank to keep issuing new banknotes which quickly become almost worthless. There is an official exchange rate, but most Zimbabweans resort to the informal market for currency transactions. Previous banknote issues have done little to ease the plight of Zimbabwe...
2009: Zimbabwe dollar is de-monetised (struck off as legal tender) as the use of multi-currencies takes precedence. 2016: The bond note, a currency the central bank claims has the same value as the US dollar, is introduced in December. ...
Zimbabwean trillion dollar notes ID: 114645025 收藏 加入清单 下载版权DenissFilipovs TIFF大小 46MB 格式JPG 以图搜图 大图:4928× 3264 像素·41.72 cm × 27.64 cm·300dpi·JPG 中图:1000× 662 像素·35.28 cm × 23.35 cm·72dpi·JPG 小图:500× 331 像素·17.64 cm × 11.68 cm·72dpi·JPG ...
A central message was a display of one hundred trillion Zimbabwean dollar notes. Bond notes were shown as the successor to the dead, deceased, defunct Zimbabwean currency in the form of Mickey Mouse monopoly money. Our demonstration was dedicated to the bravery of people like Ishmael, a Tajamu...
would double while the value of cash halved, day in day out. So at one point there were 10 trillion dollar bank notes (worth a meagre 30 USD when issued). Eventually the country simply gave up on its own national legal tender and resorted to the US dollar as the everyday currency. ...
Exchange rates for conversion of 10000000000 U.S. Dollar (USD) to Zimbabwe Dollar (ZWD) today Thu, 10 Apr 2025.
Zimbabwe has started circulating a new currency to replace one that has been battered by depreciation and often outright rejection by the people.