In 1933, Vatican City's currency situation was intrinsically tied to its unique status as a newly established sovereign entity. The Lateran Treaty of 1929, which created the state, granted it the right to issue its own coinage. However, lacking a central bank or a true national economy, its monetary system was a practical hybrid. The Vatican lira was pegged at par with the Italian lira, making the Italian currency the de facto circulating medium within the tiny city-state's walls. Vatican coins, minted for ceremonial and commemorative purposes, held legal tender status but circulated alongside, and were often overshadowed by, Italian banknotes and coinage.
This arrangement was both a necessity and a strategic choice. Economically, the Vatican's operations—funded by donations, investments, and tourism—were deeply enmeshed with Italy. Adopting the Italian lira ensured seamless financial transactions and stability. Politically, it avoided the complexities of establishing an independent monetary policy for a non-commercial state with a minuscule permanent population. The issuance of its own coinage, therefore, served more as a symbol of sovereignty and a source of numismatic revenue than as a functional economic tool.
The year 1933 itself did not bring a major monetary shift, but the context was shaped by global economic turbulence. The Great Depression impacted the Vatican's investments and the flow of Peter's Pence donations from worldwide faithful. While the lira's stability was managed by the Bank of Italy, the broader financial pressures underscored the Vatican's fiscal vulnerability despite its symbolic monetary autonomy. Thus, the currency situation reflected the broader reality of the Papal State: a sovereign entity in political and religious affairs, yet economically dependent on and integrated with its Italian host.