Tehran, August 23 (RHC)-- Iran has removed the U.S. Dollar from its official currency rate reporting platform and replaced it with China’s Yuan in an effort that Tehran says could be a key step toward ditching the greenback in trade.
As of this week, the Dollar was taken off Sanarate.ir -- a website affiliated to the Central Bank of Iran (CBI) used to display the average rates of the country’s most trade-able currencies such as the Dollar, the Euro and UAE’s Dirham. Searches in the archives of the website would also show the Yuan instead of the Dollar.
The rates are the average trading figures obtained from licensed currency exchange shops across the country in different intervals of the day.
In their reports over the move, Iran’s media said the CBI had removed the Dollar after the prices of the hard currency exceeded those of the Euro -- what they said was an “unreasonable” phenomenon as the Dollar used to always be sold at rates below the Euro.
In February, Iran announced that it had stopped using the Dollar as the official reporting currency and instead switched to the Euro. This was seen in line with efforts to reduce the impacts of returning U.S. sanctions against Iran that included restricting the country’s access to the greenback among other bans.
Iran has taken several other measures to reduce its vulnerability to U.S. economic sanctions specifically the depreciation of its Rial. Earlier this month, the government of President Hassan Rouhani unveiled a much-awaited package of policies to strengthen the Rial.
The package, which was unveiled by the Governor of the Central Bank of Iran (CBI) Abdolnasser Hemmati during a live televised interview, most importantly comprised mechanisms to control the U.S. dollar rates through a recently launched “secondary currency market.”
The package started to show immediate effects after the rates of the Dollar that had gone as high as Rials 120,000 over the weeks prior to the unveiling of the package started to slide to as low as Rials 90,000 and stood around the same level for several succeeding weeks.
Iran switches to Chinese Yuan, throwing out U.S. Dollar as trade currency
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