Marianan lira

The Marianan lira is the currency of Mariana. The lira is subdivided into cents, of which there are 100 per lira. The lira has been Mariana's currency since 1703, replacing the inflation-ridden thalers issued after the Civil War period.

History
The lira was introduced in 1706, replacing the thaler at 600 paper per lira, and 24 silver per lira. The lira was initially divided into 32 cents, with coins of 1, 2, 4, 8 and 16 cent (copper), 1, 5, 10 and 12.5 thalers (silver), and notes of 25, 50, 100 and 200 lira.

The modern lira is introduced in 1913, being decimalised and replacing the old lira at 1000 to 1.

Entry to the euro
Mariana has been slated to adopt the euro, as is a requirement for member states, but said adoption process has not been easy. Mariana has not entered to ERM II for several reasons. Inflation is needed to be under 0.9%, but it has shifted over the past 24 months (as of October 2016), and the value of the lira has increased compared to the dollar and euro.