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India Firm On Currency Identity
27 February 2010,
NEW DELHI - There is no official currency sign or symbol in India. But that would be history, as the government is set to release the symbol of the Indian currency soon. The Indian rupee would shortly be joining the elite league of global currencies like US dollar, British pound, euro and Japanese Yen from this fiscal onwards, the government said Friday.
The government said that the symbol is in the Indian National Language Script (INLS) in form of a visual representation, and is applicable to the standard computer keyboard. Announcing this finance minister Pranab Mukherjee in his budget presentation said the Indian rupee design will represent the historical and cultural ethos of India.
In the ensuing year, we intend to formalise a symbol for the Indian rupee, he said. With this, Indian Rupee will have a clear distinguishing identity, he pointed out. Unlike a host of global currencies, the Indian Rupee does not have a unique symbol and Rs is the abbreviated form which it shares with currencies from Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Seychelles.
While it is not immediately clear what prompted the government to search for a symbol for the Indian currency, top officials in the ministry for finance told Khaleej Times that Indias growing influence on global economy could have prompted the government in taking such a decision.
Other currencies such as the Swiss Franc (CHF) also do not have a symbol of their own. The US shared the dollar ($) symbol with a host of currencies ranging from Australian dollar, to that of Canada and Hong Kong, but this was owing to the origin of the currency that came into existence much before the United States came into being.
Such has been the enthusiasm in India for the currency symbol that the government recently announced a competition to select the sign, where the winning entry for the rupee symbol carried a prize.
The designer of the symbol is believed to have surrendered the copyright to the government.
It is believed that the jury of examiners for the competition consisted seven members drawn from art institutes such as Sir JJ Institute of Applied Art, National Institute of Design, Lalit Kala Akademi, Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Art & Culture and officials from the government and the Reserve Bank of India.
India Firm On Currency Identity
27 February 2010,
NEW DELHI - There is no official currency sign or symbol in India. But that would be history, as the government is set to release the symbol of the Indian currency soon. The Indian rupee would shortly be joining the elite league of global currencies like US dollar, British pound, euro and Japanese Yen from this fiscal onwards, the government said Friday.
The government said that the symbol is in the Indian National Language Script (INLS) in form of a visual representation, and is applicable to the standard computer keyboard. Announcing this finance minister Pranab Mukherjee in his budget presentation said the Indian rupee design will represent the historical and cultural ethos of India.
In the ensuing year, we intend to formalise a symbol for the Indian rupee, he said. With this, Indian Rupee will have a clear distinguishing identity, he pointed out. Unlike a host of global currencies, the Indian Rupee does not have a unique symbol and Rs is the abbreviated form which it shares with currencies from Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Seychelles.
While it is not immediately clear what prompted the government to search for a symbol for the Indian currency, top officials in the ministry for finance told Khaleej Times that Indias growing influence on global economy could have prompted the government in taking such a decision.
Other currencies such as the Swiss Franc (CHF) also do not have a symbol of their own. The US shared the dollar ($) symbol with a host of currencies ranging from Australian dollar, to that of Canada and Hong Kong, but this was owing to the origin of the currency that came into existence much before the United States came into being.
Such has been the enthusiasm in India for the currency symbol that the government recently announced a competition to select the sign, where the winning entry for the rupee symbol carried a prize.
The designer of the symbol is believed to have surrendered the copyright to the government.
It is believed that the jury of examiners for the competition consisted seven members drawn from art institutes such as Sir JJ Institute of Applied Art, National Institute of Design, Lalit Kala Akademi, Indira Gandhi National Centre for the Art & Culture and officials from the government and the Reserve Bank of India.
India Firm On Currency Identity