Dinari, second behind euro in Kosovo

Dinari, second behind euro in Kosovo

The wave most Serbs in Kosovo use for circulation is that of the Serbian state official. The dinar is also flowing on the Kosovo market. Gracanica, which is only 5km from downtown Pristina, is the appropriate market where this currency circulates. But residents who live in this part of Kosovo say [...]

Gracanica, which is only 5km from downtown Pristina, is the appropriate market where this currency circulates.

But residents who live in this part of Kosovo say the payments don't mind what currency they make them.

Despite the use of the central bank dinar as an economic regulator in the country, he views the currency as foreign money.

Gracanica residents demand that 100 per cent tax not harm businesses

They are trading money, the euro is turning it into the official currency of the state of Serbia.

In Gracanica, which is only 5km from Pristina, residents serve dinars.

Even prices on brands are shown in both waves.

Residents say they don't mind which currency they use, since the market in that section accepts any coin it offers.

And an Albanian-speaking Gracanica resident shows where they get the dinar to use it later on the Gracanica market.

And when it comes to the market, they didn't quite welcome the 100% tax on Serbian products because they are mainly served with it.

For this, Draganic has another message for Prime Minister Haradinaj.

For someone else, the key problem is not exactly this tax.

In the Constitution of the Republic of Kosovo, Chapter I, Article 11 says: In the Republic of Kosovo, a single currency is used as a valuable means.

In any document or report, it is clearly precise that the only currency in Kosovo is the euro.

The Kosovo Central Bank, which should be regulatory of the country's economy, is viewing it as foreign currency.

In a response to T7 they have said no bank should exceed 15 per cent of first-class capital.

Kosovo appears to be the only country in Europe to allow currency of another state, damaging the country by hundreds of millions and boosting its informal economy.

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