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Convert 1983 South African Rand (ZAR) to Japanese Yen (JPY)

Exchange rates used for currency conversion updated on April 29th 2024 ( 04/29/2024 )

Below you will find the latest exchange rates for exchanging South African Rand (ZAR) to Japanese Yen (JPY) , a table containing most common conversions and a chart with the pair's evolution. The South African Rand (ZAR) to Japanese Yen (JPY) rates are updated every minute using our advanced technology for live forex currency conversion. Check back in a few days for things to buy with this amount and information about where exactly you can exchange currencies online and offline.

If you need to SWAP these currencies go to Japanese Yen (JPY) to South African Rand (ZAR) page.

1983 ZAR = 16837.0581 JPY

The currency exchange rate, calculated between South African Rand and Japanese Yen on 04/29/2024 is 1 ZAR = 8.4907 JPY - AVERAGE intraday quotes were used for this currency conversion.

Convert 1983 ZAR / 1983 JPY to major currencies

ZAR to JPY Exchange Rate History Chart

Last 7 days History

Date ZAR JPY
2024-04-28 1983 ZAR = 235.56051 JPY
2024-04-27 1983 ZAR = 235.30337 JPY
2024-04-26 1983 ZAR = 240.86852 JPY
2024-04-25 1983 ZAR = 241.89114 JPY
2024-04-24 1983 ZAR = 244.94023 JPY
2024-04-23 1983 ZAR = 246.51201 JPY
2024-04-22 1983 ZAR = 244.5776 JPY
One year History

About South African Rand (ZAR)

The official currency of South Africa is the rand. The rand is subdivided into 100 cents and is issued in denominations of R 10, R 20, R 50, R 100 and R 200. Foreign currency can be exchanged at most banks as well as at currency exchange offices that are conveniently located around the country in major cities, at airports and most major hotels.

About Japanese Yen (JPY)

Under the monetary policy and issuance directives of the Bank of Japan the JPY, when measured by value, is the world's third largest reserve currency and fourth most traded currency in open currency markets. It is the official currency of Japan and has shown contrarian resilience against world markets initially in the 1980's and more recently in the 2008 world credit crisis as the Bank of Japan retains there command economic policies while refusing to engage in economic stimulus.

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