Estonia to switch to euro in 2007

Published: 4 September 2005 y., Sunday

 The Estonian government has approved a plan to switch to the euro from January 1 2007. The euro will be used for bank transactions, in accounting and in contracts.
Estonian kroons will remain legal tender for two weeks after the euro is introduced, after which the local currency will be excluded from bank transactions, ATM machines and retail trade. Banks will exchange kroons for euros for six months following the switchover, and Estonia’s central bank will continue to do so after the expiration of this six month period.

The Estonian government said prices would be shown in both currencies six months before and after the changeover.

In related developments, the Czech Republic decided to postpone the introduction of the common European currency until 2010, citing necessity to bring the country’s financial performance in line with standards of euro zone countries. Analysts say the Czech Republic was unlikely to reform its fiscal policy and bring its budget deficit to less than 3 percent of the national GDP before 2010. 

Šaltinis: top.rbc.ru
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

BP pledges millions to Georgia in controversial pipeline project

British oil major BP is pledging millions of dollars to Georgia as part of the construction of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline more »

Poles line up for shares in bank

Poles signed waiting lists Sunday for a chance to buy shares in their largest bank, using a signup system from communist times to impose order on the crush of interested investors more »

The Ceremony

"GLOBAL FINANCE": KOMERCIJALNA BANKA, BEST BANK IN MACEDONIA FOR 2004 more »

Gov't Stands Firm Over PKO BP Privatization

The Polish government did not bow to pressure following Parliament's resolution on Friday's declaring that foreign investors would be excluded from the privatization of bank PKO BP more »

RUSSIAN SKY MAY CLOSE FOR ARMENIAN PLANES

Russia may stop providing air navigation lines to the national airlines of CIS member countries, including Armenia, for their debts more »

Ex-Im Bank $180 Million Guarantee Backs U.S. Exports

A four-lane highway linking Romania westward to Hungary and the rest of Central Europe and eastward to the Black Sea will be built with the assistance of a $180 million loan guarantee from the Export-Import Bank more »

Lithuania chokes over use of euro

The Lithuanian government has written to the Dutch Presidency expressing outrage at a recent decision to standardise the word 'euro' across all EU languages more »

Kazakhstan announces plans to raise oil output

Kazakhstan plans to produce about 1.3m barrels (160,000 tons) of oil a day in 2005 more »

YUKOS pays most of its tax debt

The Russian oil company YUKOS has paid RUR 75bn (about $2.53bn) out of its RUR 99.4bn (about $3.4bn) tax debt for 2000 more »

Japan Allocates Grants for US$364,971 to Uzbekistan

Representatives of Japanese embassy in Uzbekistan will sign new grant contracts in Tashkent on 8 October more »