International Reserve Dollar (Narisis)

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International Reserve Dollar
List of names
ISO 4217
Unit
PluralDollars
Symbol$
Denominations
Subunit
 1/100Cent
Banknotes$1, $5, $10, $20, $50, $100

$500, $1000, $5000, $10000 (Rarely Used)
Coins1, 5, 10, 20, 50 cents
Demographics
User(s)List of users
Issuance
Central bankInternational Clearing Union
Valuation
Pegged withInternational balance of trade

The International Reserve Dollar (plural: Dollars, symbol: $, currency code: IRD), sometimes colloquially termed as Interes (plural: Interesi), is an internationally-utilized unit of account and world reserve currency. Developed in 1967 as part of the Treyarnon Accords, in response to the Panic of 1965, a major global depression resulting from numerous punitive tariffs and a subsequent slowdown of world trade over the prior decade, largely thought of as being due to the widening political divide between the traditional and radical powers and their respective spheres of influence following the close of the Great Continental War in 1912. Originally developed to not to act as a currency, but rather the source of all financial reserves to draw global finance away from older systems of hard currency and a single unit of account for which to track the balance of world trade, it was converted into its modern, currency-based form in 1987 in order to provide greater access to world markets for businesses and individuals in developing countries, though its currency form has been utilized by other global financial institutions in the decades since.

Overview

History

Panic of 1965

Treyarnon Accords and First Iteration

1987 Reforms

21st Century

List of Users

Coinage

Notes