Category
page 1Currency unions

Eastern Caribbean dollar
currency of all members of the OECS
CFP Franc
currency used in the French overseas collectivities of French Polynesia, New Caledonia, and Wallis and Futuna
West African CFA franc
currency of several West African countries
Economic and Monetary Union of the European Union
set of States of the European Union that form a single market and use a single currency
Central African CFA franc
Currency of several Central African countries
currency union
two or more states sharing the same currency without them having any further integration
Latin Monetary Union
19th-century attempt to unify several European currencies into a single currency that could be used in all the member states (1865–1927)
Scandinavian Monetary Union
Napoleon
colloquial term for a former French gold coin
ASEAN Free Trade Area
free trade area of the Association of South East Asian Nations
Caribbean guilder
currency of Curaçao and Sint Maarten
East African shilling
currency issued for use in British controlled areas in East Africa from 1921 until 1969
Eco
proposed currency of ECOWAS
Khaleeji
currency
African Monetary Union
proposed economic and monetary union
optimum currency area
geographical region which efficiently shares a single currency
North American currency union
theoretical economic and monetary union
currency substitution
use of a foreign currency in parallel to or instead of a domestic currency
economic and monetary union
trade bloc with a common tariff and currency
Belgium–Luxembourg Economic Union
economic union
Common Monetary Area
Monetary union. The Rand Monetary Area, established in 1974, was transformed into the Common Monetary Area in 1986. Members are Lesotho, Namibia, South Africa and Swaziland.
SUCRE
thumb|240px|Map of participants in the ALBA
snake in the tunnel
Prototype of the European Exchange Rate Mechanism
Wendish Coinage Treaty
Wendentaler
thumb|Wendenthaler, Lüneburg, 1541
The Wendenthaler or Wendentaler was a currency coin minted in Lüneburg from 1541, which depicted the six coats of arms of the Wendish towns.