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It was created in December 1945, together with the CFA franc. The reason for the creation of these francs was the weakness of the French franc immediately after the Second World War. When France ratified the Bretton Woods Agreement in December 1945, the French franc was devalued in order to set a fixed exchange rate with the US dollar. New currencies were created in the French colonies to spare them the strong devaluation of December 1945. René Pleven, the French minister of finance, was quoted saying: "In a show of her generosity and selflessness, metropolitan France, wishing not to impose on her far-away daughters the consequences of her own poverty, is setting different exchange rates for their currency." The CFA franc and the other colonial currencies were set at a fixed exchange rate with the French franc, but the CFP franc, however, was set at a fixed exchange rate with the US dollar, which played a major role in the economy of the French Pacific territories since the Second World War. That situation ended in September 1949 when the CFP franc was given a fixed exchange rate with the French franc.
The CFP franc is issued by the IEOM (Institut d'émission d'outre-mer, i.e. "Overseas Issuing Institute") since 1967. The IEOM has its headquarters in Paris.
Exchange rate:
The 1960 and 1999 events are merely changes in the currency in use in France: the relative value of the CFP franc (XPF) vs. the French franc / euro is unchanged since 1949.