Pakistan Currency Museum The Main display at Pkistan Currency Museum shows the pictures of the past governers and events at State Bank of Pakistan One rupee note from United India, used in Pakistan with Government of Pakistan Stamp) for about one year after independence First note of one Rupee printed in 1948 by Government of Pakistan signed by Governor Mohammad Ayub In 1953 the first Bank note of Rs. 5 and Rs. 10 were printed above note is from 1953 signed by Governor Shujaat Ali Ten Rupee Note First 100 Rupees Note of Pakistan 50 Rupee note of Pakistan issued in 1957 Rs. 500 note issued in 1957 first time in Pakistan One Paia coin Issued in 1948 Note printing machine Pakistan Currency museum Plate used for printing notes Coin Molding machine
Basic Concepts Of Accounting..!! Assets:- Any item of economic value owned by an individual or organization, especially that which could be converted to cash. Examples are cash, securities, accounts receivable, inventory, office equipment, real estate, a car, and other property. According to accounting equation Assets = Liabilities + Capital (where Capital for a corporation equals Owner's Equity) *From an accounting perspective, assets are divided into the following categories: 1. Current assets (cash and other liquid items). 2. Long-term assets (real estate, plant, equipment). 3. Prepaid and deferred assets (expenditures for future costs such as insurance, rent, interest). 4. Intangible assets (trademarks, patents, copyrights, goodwill). 2) Liability:- An obligation that legally binds a person or an organization to pay a debt. When one is liable fo
Journey of Pakistani Currency From "Ana" to Paisa and to Rupee When Pakistan was carved out of the British India on 14 August 1947, it had no currency notes or coins of its own, nor a central bank or mint to print paper currency or mint coins. In order to cope up with the requirement of the new country, the Governor General of undivided India issued the ‘Pakistan (Monetary System and Reserve Bank) Order, 1947’ on 14 August 1947, the day before partition. Under this order, the Reserve Bank of India was to act as the common currency authority for India and Pakistan until 30 September 1948, allowing a cushion period of almost a year for the newly born state to issue its own currency. As an interim arrangement, the currency notes and coins issued by the Reserve Bank of India and the Government of India were to be the legal tender in Pakistan. Thus the currency of the Indian Reserve Bank was inscribed with words "Government of Pakistan" both in Ur
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