The £sd system continued in much of Western Europe for nearly a thousand years, until the "
decimalisations" of the 18th and 19th centuries. Britain considered following the continental example, and a parliamentary select committee was set up in 1821 to inquire into decimalisation. The committee recommended retaining the £sd system. However, pressure groups formed inside Britain advocating the adoption of decimalisation of the currency, and Parliament returned to the matter in the 1850s. Various decimalisation schemes were considered – the Pound-and-Mil scheme, the Farthing scheme, the Half-penny scheme, the Alb scheme, etc. – but all were determined to have deficiencies, and the transition appeared too difficult and expensive. Thus, the £sd system was maintained in Britain until 1971. As countries of the
British Empire became independent, some abandoned the £sd system quickly, while others retained it almost as long as the UK itself. The United States of America was among the first to drop the £sd system and adopt a decimal currency in 1792, 10 years after independence from the British Empire, but retains many other aspects of the
customary units for length and weight. Australia, on the other hand, only changed to using a decimal currency on 14 February 1966. New Zealand did so on 10 July 1967. Still others, notably
Ireland,
decimalised only when the UK did. The UK abandoned the old penny on
Decimal Day, 15 February 1971, when one
pound sterling became divided into 100
new pence. This was a change from the system used in the earlier wave of decimalisations in Australia,
New Zealand,
Rhodesia and
South Africa, in which the pound was replaced with a new major currency called either the "dollar" or the "rand". The British
shilling was replaced by a
5 new pence coin worth one-twentieth of a pound. In Europe, decimalisation of currency (as well as other weights and measures) began in
Revolutionary France with the law of 1795 ("Loi du 18 germinal an III", 7 April 1795), replacing the £sd accounting system of the
Ancien régime with a system of 1 franc = 10 decimes = 100 centimes. Decimalisation was propagated by France to neighbouring European countries during the
Napoleonic wars. By the mid-19th century, most of continental Europe had decimalised, leaving the
United Kingdom as the only major country to continue to operate the £sd system. All countries and territories that formerly used the £sd system have now
decimalised their currency, with most decimalisations occurring after the
Second World War.
Malta decimalised its currency in 1972, while
Nigeria decimalised in 1973. The British
pound sterling and
Irish pound were among the last to be decimalised, on
15 February 1971. In places where £sd was used, there were several approaches to decimalisation: • The pound remained the base unit (in Malta, using the Maltese name "lira"), but was subdivided into new fractional units of of a pound. The new fractional unit (called the "new penny" in the UK and
Ireland and the "cent" in
Malta) was worth 2.4 old pence. Malta also created a fractional unit worth of a pound, called the "
mil", worth slightly less than a farthing (0.24 old pence). • A new base unit (often called the "dollar") was created equal to ten shillings (half a pound), and subdivided into 100 fractional units, with one fractional unit (usually called the "cent") equal to of a shilling or 1.2 old pence. This was the approach adopted in
South Africa (as the Rand),
Australia,
New Zealand,
Jamaica,
Fiji and many other countries. • A new base unit called the "dollar" was created at parity with the
United States dollar. This was done in
Canada in 1858 and in many places in the
West Indies in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In
Bermuda in 1970, as the pound was fixed at US$2.40, i.e. US$1 = 100d., this made the new Bermudian dollar equal to exactly 100 old pence, with the new cent equal to one old penny. • Some countries have adopted alternative approaches, such as
Ghana, which created a new base unit equal to 100 old pence (not equal to the U.S. dollar), with a fractional unit equal to one old penny,
Bahamas, which adopted a new base unit equal to seven shillings, with a fractional unit equal to 0.84 old pence, and
The Gambia, which created a new base unit equal to four shillings, with a fractional unit equal to 0.48 old pence. The following table shows the conversion rates of common denominations of coins of the £sd systems. The d, 1d and 3d coins were all demonetised on decimalisation; in the UK and Ireland, the 6d (as 2p) continued in use until demonetised subsequently. The following coins were not in common circulation in the UK at the time of decimalisation, though the ten shilling note and the pound note were. The
half crown might have continued in use as 12p but had already been demonetised. == Pre-decimal coins and banknotes ==