The Euro: How It Started 20 Years Ago

As Europe rang in the New Year 20 years ago, 12 of its nations said goodbye to their deutschmarks, French francs, liras and pesetas as they welcomed the euro single currency.

On January 1, 2002, euro notes and coins became a reality for some 300 million people from Athens to Dublin, three years after the currency was formally launched in “virtual” form.

Here is a recap of the event, drawn from AFP reporting at the time:

In a far cry from the austere New Year’s celebrations imposed by the COVID-19 pandemic 20 years later, fireworks, music and lights blazed at midnight into the early morning of January 1, 2002, to mark the biggest monetary switch in history.

AFP reported that many people passed on their traditional New Year’s Eve parties, choosing instead to queue up at cash dispensers in their enthusiasm to get hold of the first pristine euro notes.

In Berlin, Germans said hello to the euro and goodbye to their beloved mark at a special ceremony at the Brandenburg Gate, as up to 1 million people thronged the streets for the traditional giant New Year’s Eve street party there.

The euro cash was also a hit in the coffee shops and red-light district of Amsterdam.

Irish revelers were, however, less in a hurry to welcome the euro, continuing to pay for Guinness, Ireland’s favorite tipple, in the national currency, leaving the headache of the changeover until the next day.

As many feared, the euro switch provoked sporadic price hikes across Europe.

From Spanish bus tickets, which jumped by 33%, to a Finnish bazaar, where “everything for 10 markka (1.68 euros)” was now “everything for two euros,” many price tags were a bit heftier since the single currency became legal tender.

The European Central Bank president at the time, Wim Duisenberg, who warned merchants not to take advantage of the euro launch to increase prices, said he had not seen signs of widespread abuse.

“When I bought a Big Mac and a strawberry milkshake this week it cost 4.45 euros, which is exactly the same amount as I paid for the same meal last week,” Duisenberg told reporters.

Europe surprised itself with the almost glitch-free transition to the single currency, AFP reported.

The Germans — reputedly skeptical about the single currency and nostalgic for their mark — turned out to be among the most enthusiastic.

An editorial in the popular German tabloid Bild proclaimed: “Our new money is moving full speed ahead. No problems whatsoever in saying adieu to the mark, no tears to be shed.”

Initial “europhoria” was, however, tempered as a few hiccups appeared, such as cash shortages and long lines in banks, post offices and at toll booths.

France urged citizens to not rush all at once to the banks with their savings, often hoarded under mattresses and in jam jars, since they had until June 30 to get rid of their francs at commercial banks and until 2012 at the Bank of France.

And the European Commission reported minor problems in getting small euro bills and coins distributed in most countries.

Duisenberg said, however, he was sure that January 1, 2002, would be written into history books as the start of a new European era.

Source: Voice of America

Japan provides USD640,000 for nine Grassroots Projects in Laos

The Government of Japan has decided to provide grant assistance worth USD640,000 for nine projects on education, health, infrastructure and agriculture through its Grant Assistance for Grassroots Human Security Projects (GGP).

The development projects include five education projects in Phongsaly, Luang Prabang, Xayaboury, Vientiane (province) and Xekong, two health projects in Phongsaly and Oudomxay, one infrastructure project in Luang Prabang and one agriculture project in Savannakhet.

The grant contract was signed on Dec 17 between Ambassador of Japan to the Lao PDR Kobayashi Kenichi and representatives of the respective provincial authorities where the projects are implemented.

The education projects are for the construction of new buildings at Somsavart Primary School in Xayaboury, Huaidam-Mai Primary School in Xekong, Lahang-nyai Lower Secondary School in Phongsaly, Kasi Lower Secondary School in Vientiane and Muang-Khay Secondary School in Luang Prabang to improve the educational environment.

The health projects for the construction of water supply systems will be implemented in Longnya and Senlat villages in Oudomxay where safe water is not sufficiently available due to aging water supply facilities and a shortage of water station, and Sapa village in Phongsaly where there are difficulties with access to safe water due to water pollution in the area.

The infrastructure project is to construct a bridge and a rural road in Done-ngeun village in Luang Prabang to improve the transportation access in the neighboring areas since heavy rains has washed away existing bridges and made road conditions worse in every wet-season.

The agriculture project is to construct an irrigation channel in Kengkok-Nua Village in Savannakhet Province to improve the agricultural system since the wet-season rice crop is extremely unstable and low-yielding in this area due to the frequent large-scale floods in recent years.

Grant Assistance for Grassroots Human Security Projects (GGP) provides necessary funds for relatively small-scaled projects that directly benefit local residents and are aimed at economic and social development in developing countries, based on the principle of human security. In order to ensure “no-one left behind” through rectification of regional disparity, Japan will continue to support and improve the basic standard of living at grassroots level in the Lao PDR.

Source: Lao News Agency