Bank of Uganda set to replace Ksh.38 paper notes with coins
File image of Ugandan Shs1000 notes. PHOTO | COURTESY
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The Ugandan government is considering phasing
out low-denomination banknotes and substituting them with coins, in a move that
seeks to tame the high cost of printing.
Ugandan
publication The Daily Monitor says the country’s Finance Minister Matia Kasiaja
and Bank of Uganda Executive Director Research Adam Mugume, in a letter to the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) in June, noted that an increase in printing
costs for banknotes has necessitated a market study to see which ones can be
replaced with coins.
“Given
high currency printing costs, we have conducted a market study to compare
printing costs, and a cost-benefit analysis of replacing low denomination
banknotes with coins,” the joint letter reportedly read.
Although
Mugume did not reveal the progress, he said the Central Bank will first phase
out the Shs1,000 (Ksh.38.95) paper note before moving on to others.
“The
entire Shs1000 note will be gradually withdrawn. The notes are heavily used in
transactions and, therefore, soiled heavily, which renders them unusable or
reduces their lifespan. We have to reprint them frequently, yet the cost of
printing relative to value is quite high,” Mugume told The Daily Monitor.
The
pronouncement comes even as the East African nation has in the past wholly
replaced more minor currencies ranging from Shs1 to Shs500 with coins.
The
Bank of Uganda in 2012 issued a Shs1,000 coin in its commemoration of 50 years
of independence and the coin is still in circulation even though it is less
visible compared to the paper notes.
The country’s
Central Bank has cited durability and easy handling of the coins as a more
preferred form of currency.

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