Thanks for the input so far. As one of the designated new Maintenance Leads (also see Transfer Ballot) allow me to give a more formal answer from our side.
As you may know, Oracle has removed many features from Java 11, JavaFX probably the most prominent "victim" which was released into an Open Source ecosystem backed by a couple of other companies, a few Oracle employees and other members of the community.
JavaMoney, the wider project behind JSR 354 and some of its extensions has always played a similar role. After the Transfer Ballot, there is one company (Trivadis) and 2 Individual EG Members as Maintenance Leads. Plus a lot of others contributed extensions including large names like Red Hat or Zalando.
So JSR 354 and a likely follow-up (aka JavaMoney 2.x) compliment Java SE similar to how OpenJFX, Apache NetBeans or other Open Community efforts do without being an integral part of the JDK. I spoke to an Oracle employee familiar with OpenJDK at Eclipse Community Day and he confirmed, this was also in Oracle's interest to focus on core features of the JDK while other vendors and communities provide additional features around it.
Plus with a future Money JSR under the "iterative" release plan developed for the JDK itself, but open to an other JSR we plan to offer regular releases at a pace that matches the needs of the community. Should say Italy or another country lose its place in the Eurozone due to excessive debt or another "Brexit" like situation happen, then currencies for those countries will change. And an independent Money JSR can immediately respond to that by providing the necessary changes without having to wait for the JDK.
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