Too Much of a Souvenir: NZ Money
Apr. 30th, 2024 09:25 pmWe bought a few different souvenirs on our recent trip to New Zealand. There's one simple souvenir I always bring home: foreign money. As I explained when I brought home a few dollars from Australia, I've always been curious about various world currencies. A bit of money from a country I've visited is, for me, a nice little memento. I brought home more than just a few dollars from New Zealand, though.

New Zealand's a country that has not just dollar coins but also two dollar coins. You can see a small stack of each in the photo above (top left). Having higher denomination coins is nice because it means you can buy a modest lunch, or at least a midday snack, with pocket change— without being that person who rolls up to the register with a sack of coins and a grudge against the lowly paid cashiers of the world. I also got a 50 cent piece, two 20 cent coins, and two 10 cent coins.
Just the coins, totaling NZD 12.10, were already more than I meant to keep. It turned out I had stashed coins in two places so I came home with more than I meant. Then when I got home I found that $10 note still in my wallet. I mean, keeping that note is nice because it has the Maori name of New Zealand, Aotearoa, on it, but altogether this collection of $22.10 NZ, worth about $13.50 US (remember: NZ dollars are in kilometers), is more than I meant to keep.

New Zealand's a country that has not just dollar coins but also two dollar coins. You can see a small stack of each in the photo above (top left). Having higher denomination coins is nice because it means you can buy a modest lunch, or at least a midday snack, with pocket change— without being that person who rolls up to the register with a sack of coins and a grudge against the lowly paid cashiers of the world. I also got a 50 cent piece, two 20 cent coins, and two 10 cent coins.
Just the coins, totaling NZD 12.10, were already more than I meant to keep. It turned out I had stashed coins in two places so I came home with more than I meant. Then when I got home I found that $10 note still in my wallet. I mean, keeping that note is nice because it has the Maori name of New Zealand, Aotearoa, on it, but altogether this collection of $22.10 NZ, worth about $13.50 US (remember: NZ dollars are in kilometers), is more than I meant to keep.
no subject
Date: 2024-05-01 01:45 pm (UTC)I went to Vietnam for work in ... 2015? a while ago now, and had a similar experience with their currency, except:
1) It's not a factor of 0.6, the exchange rate is around 25000:1, so when I had 140k VND left over it literally was worth more to me to keep it as the best-looking Monopoly money ever, vs. exchanging back for USD.
2) I said VND above, that stands for Vietnamese Dongs. The currency is dong. And I'm apparently still 12.
no subject
Date: 2024-05-01 04:11 pm (UTC)The most lopsided exchange rate I've dealt with in traveling is South Korea— and that's less than 1/10th what you dealt with. Ten years ago Korean Won (KRW) were around 1,000 to the USD. It was conceptually easy just to drop a everything after the last comma to understand prices. Though then the exchange rate surged to 1,400. That wasn't so much a problem as, "Woohoo! Everything's on sale!"
During that surge I withdrew a bunch of money from Korean ATMs... Not enough to be an F/X investor but enough for, say, 2 weeks of pocket money. My little arbitrage worked nicely as the exchange rate returned to 1000:1 within two months. Though I see in the last few years it has drifted back up to around 1400:1.