Jordan pegged its dinar to the dollar in 1995 and has not touched the rate since, not during a global financial crisis, not during a pandemic that shut down its tourism sector, and not during a decade in which two wars broke out on or near its borders. Thirty years of constant testing without a single reset is its own kind of track record.
1995’s Rate Has Never Been Adjusted Since
The Central Bank of Jordan pegged the dinar to the dollar on Nov. 23, 1995, fixing the exchange rate at 0.708 to 0.710 fils to the dollar, a rate that has held steady at roughly 0.709 dinar per dollar ever since. The move replaced an older link to a basket of currencies including the British pound, German mark, and Japanese yen, consolidating Jordan’s foreign exchange strategy around a single reserve currency at a time when the kingdom was still recovering from a debt crisis. Three decades later, the rate remains exactly where it was set.
Reserves, Not Discretion, Are Doing the Work of Holding the Rate
What has kept that rate in place isn’t a governor making case-by-case judgment calls the way a floating or managed currency requires. It’s a reserve position sized to withstand pressure without needing to. Jordan’s foreign currency reserves reached $27.2 billion by the end of May 2026, up roughly $1.7 billion since the end of 2025 and enough to cover close to 9.5 months of imports, well above the standard adequacy benchmarks the IMF tracks. Deposit dollarization, a rough proxy for how much the public itself trusts the currency, fell from 18.4% in early 2025 to 17.7% by January 2026. An IMF Article IV review covering the same period found gross reserves exceeding 100% of the Fund’s own adequacy metric even as spillovers from regional conflicts weighed on tourism and exports, with inflation still held under 2%.
Jordan Never Needed the Independence Fight Turkey Had
That distinction matters against the backdrop of what happens when a central bank does have discretion and political leadership wants to override it. Turkey’s central bank held a policy rate it could raise or cut, and that discretion became the exact point of political pressure once leadership decided the rate should move regardless of what inflation was doing. Jordan’s central bank was never handed that same lever to begin with. Back in 2012, at the height of the Arab Spring, a Jordanian deputy governor described the fixed regime as playing a stabilizing role precisely because it absorbed nominal shocks rather than requiring a discretionary response to each one, according to Reuters reporting carried by Arab News. A currency peg doesn’t eliminate political pressure on monetary policy. It just narrows what that pressure has to act on, since the credibility comes from a framework tested repeatedly rather than one that exists only on paper, and Jordan’s version of that test has run for thirty years without a single reset.
Three Decades of Stress Tests Is Its Own Kind of Proof
Jordan’s case makes a specific point: durability, demonstrated repeatedly under real pressure, is a different and arguably stronger form of credibility than a legal guarantee that has never actually been tested. A statute promising central bank independence is a claim about what would happen under stress. Three decades of an unmoved peg through a financial crisis, a pandemic, and a region that has rarely gone a full year without a new shock is evidence of what actually did happen. Markets, and the credit rating agencies that price Jordan’s sovereign debt, have generally treated that track record as the more convincing of the two.



