Dataset
Foreign Exchange Rates by Country and Currency: 2006
The Statistical Abstract files are distributed by the US Census Department as Microsoft Excel files. These files have data mixed with notes and references, multiple tables per sheet, and, worst of all, the table headers are not easily matched to their rows and columns.
A few files had extraneous characters in the title. These were corrected to be consistent. A few files have a sheet of crufty gibberish in the first slot. The sheet order was shuffled but no data were changed.
The tables that were changed (this is table 1360):
0166 0257 0362 0429 0445 0446 0459 0461 0462 0464 0465 0466 0467 0469 0479 0480 0481 0482 0483 0484 0485 0486 0487 0559 0628 0629 1144 1227 1231
This dataset consists of a table of 193 rows and 4 columns.
Foreign currency units per U.S. dollar. Rates shown include market, official, principal, and secondary rates
Footnotes
- End-of year values were used if annual averages were unavailable.
Some values were estimated using partial year data. - The euro became the official currency of the 11 Euro Area (EMU) nations on January 1, 1999, and Greece in 2001.
The 1999 values shown in this table are computed values for the former national currencies. - With the establishment of diplomatic relations with China on January 1, 1979, the U.S. government
recognized the People’s Republic of China as the sole legal government of China and acknowledged
the Chinese position that there is only one China and that Taiwan is part of China. - “Congo” is the official short-form name for both the Republic of Congo
and the Democratic Republic of the Congo. To distinguish one from the other
the U.S. Dept. of State adds the capital in parentheses. This practice is
unofficial and provisional.
License
Public Domain (Government Work)
This dataset was prepared by the government and is therefore in the public domain. There are no restrictions upon its use.