What currency will Bougainville have?

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Bougainville has recently announced that it is looking at September 1st, 2027 as its Independence Day, which is less than 2½ years away. This has got me thinking, when it becomes independent, what currency will it use? Will it continue to use the Kina, will it immediately start minting its own coins and banknotes, or will it wait a few years then do it?

Did you know that Pluto is still a planet in Illinois and New Mexico and has de facto recognition as a planet in Arizona?

My understanding is that Bougainville plans to adopt the Niue Dollar as the Official Currency.

I have a feeling that they won’t do that, since Niue barely uses it’s own currency

Did you know that Pluto is still a planet in Illinois and New Mexico and has de facto recognition as a planet in Arizona?

I suspect that that was a joke. 🤣

 

Niue is very much the poster child for issuing insane “collector coins” here on Numista. Though they are, of course, not the only country to licence minting of “collector coins”, collectors here have a somewhat justified opinion of them being extreme in terms of both volume & design. There was a whole big discussion about the topic (with Niue identified as a big “offender”). I reckon just reading the first few posts will give you a feel for the tone: https://en.numista.com/forum/topic146084-4.html#

 

Back to your topic, I have no idea. Given the rather low GDP per capita, they'll struggle with any new currency issuing (though they might establish a continued relationship with the rest of Papua New Guinea). Depending on the tone of the separation, I think they'll either continue to use the PNG Kina or adopt another reserve currency (often USD for countries in similar positions, but given the current political turmoil in the US…) for the time being. Maybe a new functional currency thereafter.

A Collector

I suspect that that was a joke. 🤣

 

Niue is very much the poster child for issuing insane “collector coins” here on Numista. Though they are, of course, not the only country to licence minting of “collector coins”, collectors here have a somewhat justified opinion of them being extreme in terms of both volume & design. There was a whole big discussion about the topic (with Niue identified as a big “offender”). I reckon just reading the first few posts will give you a feel for the tone: https://en.numista.com/forum/topic146084-4.html#

 

Back to your topic, I have no idea. Given the rather low GDP per capita, they'll struggle with any new currency issuing (though they might establish a continued relationship with the rest of Papua New Guinea). Depending on the tone of the separation, I think they'll either continue to use the PNG Kina or adopt another reserve currency (often USD for countries in similar positions, but given the current political turmoil in the US…) for the time being. Maybe a new functional currency thereafter.

Niue has a insane currency

I agree with what you said about them either keeping the Kina or adopting the USD, and I find what you said about the US pretty funny, considering that I live in the U.S., so I get a front row seat to it.

 

With the amount of countries/territories using the USD, there should be a coin set commemorating them, like the 50 state quarters

Did you know that Pluto is still a planet in Illinois and New Mexico and has de facto recognition as a planet in Arizona?

I would expect it's more likely to keep the Kina, if they retain good terms with PNG - which so far as I know, they seem to have. I could see AUD or NZD being a possibility, being relatively close geographically as well as having Commonwealth status.

 

Well, I try not to get political on here. But sometimes it's unavoidable so it's trying to appear neutral-ish. But the US does seem to be a bit more …unpredictable… compared to usual so I can see why people may be less willing to adopt it.

I know what it's like living through chaos first-hand though. I'm British & I raise you Brexit. 😛

 

I don't think USD is perhaps as widespread as you'd expect within the public domain. It's certainly the largest reserve currency by far, but I think only 4 other nations openly use USD (Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Palau, & El Salvador) as the official currency. Then about 5 more use it as a official secondary currency alongside their own issue, and maybe 5 more unofficially. Something like that.

 

But given that three of the four official users are (relatively) local neighbours, I do think USD has a chance.

 

Though I do hope they make their own designs. Always exciting to see new things out there (besides modern USD issues are just so… bland).

I've heard that as the name of this island is that of the French navigator who discovered it, they will most likely use French Communities of the Pacific Franc. Vanuatu will become the New Hebrides again and Salomon islands will be annexed by New Caledonia.

Referee of south atlantic islands

part 3 of 3, but a very good article the describes the situation:

https://theworld.org/stories/2024/10/30/bougainville-the-worlds-next-new-country

 

I hope whoever partners with Bougainville respects the local culture and doesn't steamroll over it.

 

As for currency, I think they'll adopt whoever they partner with on the copper mine, but that is a highly uneducated guess and one that won't be resolved until the mining issue moves forward.

A Collector

I would expect it's more likely to keep the Kina, if they retain good terms with PNG - which so far as I know, they seem to have. I could see AUD or NZD being a possibility, being relatively close geographically as well as having Commonwealth status.

 

Well, I try not to get political on here. But sometimes it's unavoidable so it's trying to appear neutral-ish. But the US does seem to be a bit more …unpredictable… compared to usual so I can see why people may be less willing to adopt it.

I know what it's like living through chaos first-hand though. I'm British & I raise you Brexit. 😛

 

I don't think USD is perhaps as widespread as you'd expect within the public domain. It's certainly the largest reserve currency by far, but I think only 4 other nations openly use USD (Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Palau, & El Salvador) as the official currency. Then about 5 more use it as a official secondary currency alongside their own issue, and maybe 5 more unofficially. Something like that.

 

But given that three of the four official users are (relatively) local neighbours, I do think USD has a chance.

 

Though I do hope they make their own designs. Always exciting to see new things out there (besides modern USD issues are just so… bland).

I am aware that US Dollar coins & bills are bland, but Panama, Ecuador, and East Timor mint their own coins, but use US banknotes. So I think that if Bougainville adopts the USD as it’s currency, it could still mint their own coins

Did you know that Pluto is still a planet in Illinois and New Mexico and has de facto recognition as a planet in Arizona?

A Collector

I would expect it's more likely to keep the Kina, if they retain good terms with PNG - which so far as I know, they seem to have. I could see AUD or NZD being a possibility, being relatively close geographically as well as having Commonwealth status.

 

Well, I try not to get political on here. But sometimes it's unavoidable so it's trying to appear neutral-ish. But the US does seem to be a bit more …unpredictable… compared to usual so I can see why people may be less willing to adopt it.

I know what it's like living through chaos first-hand though. I'm British & I raise you Brexit. 😛

 

I don't think USD is perhaps as widespread as you'd expect within the public domain. It's certainly the largest reserve currency by far, but I think only 4 other nations openly use USD (Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Palau, & El Salvador) as the official currency. Then about 5 more use it as a official secondary currency alongside their own issue, and maybe 5 more unofficially. Something like that.

 

But given that three of the four official users are (relatively) local neighbours, I do think USD has a chance.

 

Though I do hope they make their own designs. Always exciting to see new things out there (besides modern USD issues are just so… bland).

Timor Leste officially uses USD

A Collector

I don't think USD is perhaps as widespread as you'd expect within the public domain. It's certainly the largest reserve currency by far, but I think only 4 other nations openly use USD (Marshall Islands, Micronesia, Palau, & El Salvador) as the official currency. Then about 5 more use it as a official secondary currency alongside their own issue, and maybe 5 more unofficially. Something like that.

To be pedantic Ecuador and Panama officially use the US dollar, and dollars are used pretty widespread across Latin America, some much more than others. Here in TJ for example you can pay in dollars anywhere

 

The official government website says it will be the kina in the meantime, though I can see the Australian dollar taking over

Kenny

- Verifying your Asian and British-territorial coins everyday with the best quality photos and the best information.

Check out my Facebook, Kenneth Gucyski.

guys why NZD? look at the historic ties, this was an Australian “colony” after Britain and Australia is closer and bigger. ChatGPT concludes 
 

Medium term (early independence, if finalized)

  • De facto AUD use is very likely, even if not formally adopted.
  • Bougainville’s trade, aid, and institutional support are overwhelmingly tied to Australia.
  • AUD is already familiar in the region (cash, pricing, accounting), especially for:
    • Mining
    • Aid-funded projects
    • Imported goods
  • Expect currency substitution: kina for local transactions, AUD for savings, contracts, and cross-border trade.
     

Formal adoption of AUD?

Possible—but not automatic.

  • Pros:
    • Monetary stability
    • Low inflation credibility
    • Investor confidence (especially mining)
  • Cons:
    • Zero control over monetary policy
    • Political optics (looks like outsourcing sovereignty)
       
  • Australia historically allows AUD use (see Pacific microstates), but Bougainville would need:
    • Political settlement with PNG
    • Clear fiscal discipline
    • Functional banking supervision
       

What’s very unlikely

  • A new Bougainville currency in the first decade
    (too expensive, too fragile, too risky)
  • Sudden abandonment of kina before independence
    (would trigger legal and diplomatic backlash)
     

Most realistic outcome

A three-stage evolution:

  1. PNG kina (official)
  2. Mixed economy: kina + AUD (practical reality)
  3. Either continued dual use or formal AUD adoption


 

Another possible solution is looking eastwards. Bougainville's identity is more linked to the Solomon Islands than Papua New Guinea. What is to stop them adopting the Solomon Islands Dollar Like the SI, Bougainvilleans are Melanesian, where as P.N.G. People are a mix of that and the 900 Papuan peoples.

 

But the Solomon's is extremely unstable as well and has had wars and a currency that is a Pacific pariah, at its launch in 1977 it was parity with the Australian dollar, now its worth around 20 cents, then again the Kina is worth around 40 cents and was also at parity until 1982.

 

Niue is West Polynesian and very far removed physically and culturally from Bougainville.

I love coins. Especially silver, gold and anything really old.
Member of the Royal Numismatic Society of New Zealand and the Auckland Numismatic Society

Ethnic affinity  is not a criterion for adopting a currency. One seeks on the one hand fiscal independence - the ability to control your own money supply and interest rates - but this can be a huge effort for a small nation with proportionally few educated economists. So if you don’t go for your own currency, your choice will depend on trading partners  - which is how you get ther currency into your country and circulating there - and stability of that currency. 

Bougainville will most likely have both Australian Dollars & the Kina.

 

It is unknown what status an independent Bougainville would have - either as an unstable republic or as a Dominion of the Crown with King Charles III being declared King of Bougainville.

 

Aidan.

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