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Money and Economy
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Korea's currency is the won (W). Paper money comes in denominations of W1,000, W5,000, and W10,000, while coins come in denominations of W10, W50, W100, and W500. Banks also use aluminum W1 coins to keep track of transactions which are not exact multiples of 10 won, but you will probably never actually use one. Bank checks (sup'yo) in denominations of W100,000, W500,000, and W1,000,000 can be used, but merchants often tack on a surcharge for handling them, especially if they were issued by a bank in a different city. Instead, most people carry huge wads of W10,000 notes.

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Through much of the 1980s and 1990s, the won usually traded between 700-850 won/dollar. During 1997 it steadily lost ground until it reached the 950 level in October. After that, demand by companies trying to clear their year-end dollar-based debt pushed the won to almost daily record lows. Since the IMF intervened in December and agreed to loan Korea over $57 billion, the won has traded between 1,400 and 1,800. (Up to the minute exchange rates can be found on www.bloomberg.com). Search WorldlyInvestor.com for recent economic information about Korea.)

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