Sahrawi Peseta

currency in Western Sahara

The Sahrawi peseta (Arabic: البيزيتا الصحراوي, Spanish: Peseta Saharaui) is the currency of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic. It is divided in 100 céntimos. One céntimos coins have never been minted. No banknotes have been printed.

Sahrawi Peseta
ISO 4217 Code None
User(s) Western Sahara Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic
Inflation NA%
Source The World Factbook.
Pegged with Euro (166.386 pesetas = €1)
Subunit
1100 céntimo
Symbol
Coins 1, 2, 5, 10, 50, 100, 200, 500 pesetas
Central bank Polisario Front

The first coins were minted in 1990.[1] They did not become the national coin of Western Sahara until 1997. This territory is mostly controlled by Morocco. The currency in that part of the country is the Moroccan dirham. The Algerian dinars, Mauritanian ouguiyas and the Sahrawi peseta are used in the Sahrawi refugee camps and the SADR-controlled part of Western Sahara.

Because the coins are not an official currency and are not circulating, the exchange rate is not realistic. Despite this, the Sahrawi peseta was pegged to the Spanish peseta.[1] When the Spanish peseta was replaced with the euro, the rate became €1 for 166.386 Pts.

References

change
  1. 1.0 1.1 San Martín, Pablo (2010). Western Sahara: The Refugee Nation. University of Wales Press. p. 193. ISBN 9781783161188. The first Saharawi pesetas were coined in 1990, with an equivalence of 1:1 with the Spanish peseta. Although the Saharawi peseta has not been officially recognized, it has already been assigned an ISO 4217 international currency code: EHP.