South Sudan’s central bank has introduced a new banknote of 1,000 South Sudanese pounds (SSP) as Africa's youngest nation continues to struggle with hyperinflation amid a shortage of foreign reserves.
Dier Tong Ngor, governor of the Bank of South Sudan, on Tuesday said the bank will soon embark on a nationwide campaign to educate the public on the new banknote features that include the image of the country’s revolutionary late leader John Garang.
“It is in the view of the need to make our currency more convenient to use that we are today introducing the SSP 1000 banknote into circulation to complement the existing banknotes to ensure convenience, and bring about efficiency in the printing of currency to generate savings for the country,” Ngor told reporters in Juba.
He said for the past few years the east African nation has been characterized by high inflation, including perpetual depreciation of the currency has eroded the face value of the young nation’s banknotes.
“This new higher value denomination will only partially restore the dollar value of SSP 10 in 2011, but high enough to significantly reduce the deadweight loss and high transaction cost in making high-value purchases in a cash-based economy like South Sudan,” he added.
The currency structure of South Sudan consists of banknotes and coins and is denoted in South Sudanese Pound (SSP).
The following denominations are currently in circulation: Bank Notes include SSP 1 SSP 5, SSP 10 SSP 20, SSP25, SSP 50, SSP 100 and SSP 500, now SSP 1000. The coin denominations include: 10 piasters , 20 piasters and 50 piasters, 1 Pound and 2 Pound.
South Sudan depends on oil revenue for 98 percent of its budget, but production decreased significantly due to civil strife that erupted in December 2013, causing most oilfields in the country’s oil-rich northern region to shut down.
The Central Bank of #SouthSudan just launched 1000 pound bill this morning | Credit | Emmanuel Akile/Eye Radio pic.twitter.com/9OxzqeyMOK
— Eye Radio (@EyeRadioJuba) February 9, 2021