Exchange rate history Prior to 1983, Australia maintained a
fixed exchange rate. The Australian pound was initially at par from 1910 with the British pound or £A1 = £1 (United Kingdom); from 1931 it was devalued to £A1 = GB£0.80 (16
shillings sterling). This reflected its historical ties as well as a view about the stability in value of the British pound. From 1946 to 1971, Australia maintained a peg under the
Bretton Woods system, a fixed exchange rate system that pegged the
U.S. dollar to gold, but the Australian dollar was effectively pegged to sterling until 1967 at £1 sterling = A$2.50 = US$2.80 (A$1 = 8s sterling). In 1967, Australia did not follow the pound sterling devaluation and remained fixed to the U.S. dollar at A$1 = US$1.12 = 9s 4d sterling. With the breakdown of the Bretton Woods system in 1971, Australia converted the traditional peg to a
managed float regime against the US dollar. In September 1974, Australia managed the dollar's exchange rate against a basket of currencies (called the
trade weighted index (TWI)) in an effort to reduce the fluctuations associated with its tie to the US dollar. The daily TWI valuation was changed in November 1976 to a periodically adjusted valuation. The highest valuation of the Australian dollar relative to the U.S. dollar was during the period of the peg to the U.S. dollar. On 9 September 1973, the peg was adjusted to US$1.4875, the fluctuation limits being changed to US$1.485–US$1.490; on both 7 December 1973 and 10 December 1973, the noon buying rate in New York City for cable transfers payable in foreign currencies reached its highest point of 1.4885 U.S. dollars to one dollar. news report on the first day of trading with a floating dollar In December 1983, the
Australian Labor government led by
Prime Minister Bob Hawke and
Treasurer Paul Keating ended the managed exchange rate scheme in favour of a
floating exchange rate set by supply and demand on international money markets. The decision was made on 8 December 1983 and announced on 9 December 1983. In the two decades that followed, its highest price relative to the US dollar was US$0.881 in December 1988. The lowest ever price of the Australian dollar after it was floated was 47.75 US cents in April 2001. It returned to above 96 US cents in June 2008, and reached 98.49 later that year. Although the price of the Australian dollar fell significantly from this high towards the end of 2008, it gradually recovered in 2009 to 94 US cents. On 15 October 2010, the Australian dollar reached parity with the US dollar for the first time since becoming a freely traded currency, trading above US$1 for a few seconds. The currency then traded above parity for a sustained period of several days in November, and fluctuated around that mark into 2011. On 27 July 2011, the dollar hit a record high since floating, at $1.1080 against the US dollar. Some commentators speculated that its high value that year was related to
Europe's sovereign debt crisis, and Australia's strong ties with material importers in Asia and in particular
China. Since the end of China's large-scale purchases of Australian commodities in 2013, however, the Australian dollar's price in US dollar terms fell to US$0.88 as of end-2013, and to as low as US$0.57 in March 2020. As of 2024, it has traded at a range of US$0.63 to US$0.68.
Determinants of value In 2016, the Australian dollar was the fifth most traded currency in world
foreign exchange markets, accounting for 6.9% of the world's daily share (down from 8.6% in 2013) behind the
United States dollar, the
euro, the
Japanese yen and the
pound sterling. The Australian dollar is popular with currency traders, because of the comparatively high interest rates in Australia, the relative freedom of the foreign exchange market from government intervention, the general stability of
Australia's economy and political system, and the prevailing view that the Australian dollar offers diversification benefits in a portfolio containing the major world currencies, especially because of its greater exposure to Asian economies and the commodities cycle. For decades, Australia's balance of trade has depended primarily upon commodity exports such as minerals and agricultural products. This means the Australian dollar varies significantly during the business cycle, rallying during global booms as Australia exports raw materials, and falling during recessions as mineral prices slump or when domestic spending overshadows the export earnings outlook. This movement is in the opposite direction to other reserve currencies, which tend to be stronger during market slumps as traders move value from falling stocks into cash. The Australian dollar is a
reserve currency and one of the most traded currencies in the world. Other factors in its popularity include a relative lack of central bank intervention, and general stability of the Australian economy and government. In January 2011 at the
World Economic Forum in
Davos,
Switzerland,
Alexey Ulyukaev announced that the
Central Bank of Russia would begin keeping Australian dollar reserves.
Current exchange rates == Legal tender ==