Bolivian boliviano


The boliviano is the currency of Bolivia. It is divided into 100 cents or centavos in Spanish. Boliviano was also the name of the currency of Bolivia between 1864 and 1963. From April 2018, the manager of the Central Bank of Bolivia, Pablo Ramos, announced the introduction of the new family of banknotes of the Plurinational State of Bolivia, started with the 10 Bs note, and then gradually arrived to introduce the 200 Bs note, presented in April 2019. The new family of banknotes of the Plurinational State received several awards such as "the best banknotes in Latin America", was highlighted by its security measures, its aesthetics and its inclusion of prominent figures in Bolivian history, being among those who awarded the "Latin American High Security Printing Press Conference".

History

Currencies in use before the current second boliviano include:
  • The Spanish real from the 16th to 19th centuries, with 8 reales equal to 1 peso and 16 reales equal to 1 escudo.
  • The Bolivian sol from 1827 to 1864, replacing the Spanish real at par. 16 soles were equal to 1 Bolivian escudo, and 8 soles were equal to 1 boliviano.
  • The first boliviano from 1864 to 1963, worth eight soles and divided into 100 centécimos. The name bolivar was used for an amount of ten bolivianos.
  • The peso boliviano, from 1963 to 1986, worth 1,000 first bolivianos.
The second boliviano was introduced in 1987 at a rate of 1 boliviano = 1,000,000 pesos bolivianos.

Second boliviano

Following many years of rampant inflation, the bolivian peso was replaced in 1987 by a new boliviano at a rate of one million to one. At that time, 1 new boliviano was roughly equivalent to U.S. dollar.

Coins

In 1988, stainless-steel 2, 5, 10, 20 and 50 centavos and 1 boliviano coins were introduced, followed by stainless-steel 2 bolivianos in 1991. Copper-plated steel 10 centavos were introduced in 1997 and bi-metallic 5 bolivianos in 2001. The 2 and 5 centavo coins are no longer in circulation. The 2 boliviano coin has been minted in two sizes, both of which remain legal tender. The smaller 2 boliviano coin is almost the same as the 1 boliviano coin, leading to potential confusion, although the 2 boliviano coins are undecagonal whilst the 1 boliviano coins are round. All the coins in Bolivia have the value with the inscription "La union es la Fuerza" on the obverse. Older coins feature and the coat of arms of Bolivia with the inscription "Republica de Bolivia" on the reverse, while newer ones feature the coat of arms with the inscription "Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia".

Banknotes

In 1987, last peso boliviano banknotes and cheques de gerência were overprinted with denominations in centavos and bolivianos to produce provisional issues of 1, 5, 10 and 50 centavos, and 1, 5 and 10 bolivianos. Regular issues followed the same year in denominations of 2, 5, 10, 20, 50, 100 and 200 bolivianos. The 2 boliviano note was replaced by a coin in 1991, with the same happening to the 5 boliviano in 2001, although the Bolivian central bank still listed the 5 boliviano note as "in circulation" until 2013, when the 2 and 5 Bolivianos bills were officially out of circulation.
The Bolivianos bills depict prominent historical figures:
  • The 10 Bolivianos bill has in the obverse to the painter Cecilio Guzman and reverse an image of city of Cochabamba.
  • The 20 Boliviano bill has in the obverse to the lawyer Pantaleon Dalence and in the reverse, an image of The Golden Colonial House of Tarija. The 50 Boliviano bill has in the obverse to the painter Melchor Perez and when reversed the Tower of Church of the Society of Jesus in the city of Potosi can be seen.
  • The 100 Boliviano bill has in the obverse of the great historian Gabriel Rene Moreno and the reverse one image of the Mayor Real and Papal University of Saint Francisco Xavier of Chuquisaca in the capital, the city of Sucre.
  • The 200 Boliviano bill has to the obverse to the writer and former president of Bolivia, Franz Tamayo and in the reverse an image of ruins of the Pre-Inca empire of Tihuanaco in the shores of Lake Titicaca in the state or department of La Paz.
In 2018, the Central Bank of Bolivia unveiled a new family of banknotes, and will be issued by order of denomination. The notes are the first to bear the formal name of Bolivia "Estado Plurinacional de Bolivia", to reflect the multiculturalism of the country and all of its citizens.
ImageValueMain ColorObverseReverseWatermark
2 bolivianosGrayAntonio Vaca DiezPando refugeSimón Bolívar
5 bolivianosGreenAdela ZamudioVirgen del Socavon churchSimón Bolívar
10 bolivianosBlueCecilio Guzman de Rojas"Heroinas de la Coronilla" monument in CochabambaSimón Bolívar
20 bolivianosOrangePantaleon DalenceCasa Dorada in TarijaSimón Bolívar
50 bolivianosPurpleMelchor Pérez de HolguinTorre de la CompañiaSimón Bolívar
100 bolivianosRedGabriel René MorenoSan Francisco Xavier de Chuquisaca University in SucreSimón Bolívar
200 bolivianosBrownFranz TamayoTiahuanacoSimón Bolívar

ImageValueMain ColorObverseReverseWatermark
10 bolivianosBlueJosé Santos Vargas "El Tambor Vargas", Apiaguaiki Tumpa, Eustaquio Méndez "El Moto Méndez". Umajalanta Cavern Landscape of Isla del Pescado in Salar de Uyuni salt flat. Giant hummingbird and Puya raimondiiJosé Santos Vargas, drum and electrotype 10
20 bolivianosOrangeGenoveva Ríos, Tomás Katari and Pedro Ignacio Muiba. El Fuerte de SamaipataBlack caiman and Toborochi Genoveva Ríos and electrotype 20
50 bolivianosPurpleJosé Manuel Baca "Cañoto", Bruno Racua, Pablo Zárate also known as Willka. Incallajta FortressNevado Sajama, Andean flamingo and QuinoaJosé Manuel Baca "Cañoto", guitar and electrotype 50
100 bolivianosRedJuana Azurduy de Padilla, Alejo Calatayud, Antonio José de Sucre. National Mint of BoliviaArco Iris Waterfall, Heliconia rostrata, Hyacinth Macaw
200 bolivianosBrownTúpac Katari, Bartolina Sisa, Simón Bolivar. House of FreedomTiwanaku, Cantua buxifolia, Andean Mountain Cat

Exchange rates

In a fixed exchange rate regime system, the Central Bank of Bolivia undertakes to buy and sell foreign currency at the price it previously set of Bs 6.86 for the purchase and Bs 6.96 for the sale for 1 $US, respectively, from November 2011 to the present, which is more than eleven continuous years. The consequences of this system are crucial, although in practice they are not understood in their real dimension of its effects in the short and long term on the country's economy. Since 2023 in Bolivia there has been a shortage of United States dollars, so the "parallel" dollar began to settle in streets and some exchange houses, reaching an exchange rate of Bs 15 for sale for 1 $US although the Central Bank of Bolivia enabled the option of carry out the sale of dollars in their offices at the official price.
Since the emergence of a parallel exchange market, several websites have begun tracking informal U.S. dollar prices in Bolivia using peer-to-peer exchange data from platforms such as Binance. These sources provide reference exchange rates based on market transactions rather than official figures.

Manufacture and production

As of 2013 boliviano coins and banknotes are still being produced abroad, in countries such as the United Kingdom, France, and Chile, even though Bolivia has been politically independent since 1825.
Though Bolivia was one of the main mints of the colonial era the coining and printing of currency stopped due to lack of political interest and on the idea that foreign made coins and banknotes could be acquired at a lower price than the Bolivian-made coins and banknotes.

US dollar-related currency (MVDOL)

MVDOL is a unit of currency. It has a value, inflation-adjusted between the Bolivian boliviano and the US dollar. It is used in financial instruments due to its stable value.
The name :wikt:MVDOL is derived from moneda nacional con mantenimiento de valor al dólar estadounidense.