In 2019, the currency situation in the unrecognized Pridnestrovian Moldavian Republic (Transnistria) remained a complex and unique "triple-currency" system, a direct legacy of its political isolation. The region officially used the
Transnistrian ruble (PRB), a non-convertible currency issued by the Transnistrian Republican Bank. However, due to a lack of international recognition and the need for external trade, the
US dollar and the
euro functioned as parallel de facto currencies for significant transactions, savings, and real estate. The Russian ruble also circulated, though to a lesser extent, reflecting the region's political and economic dependence on Russian support.
Economically, the Transnistrian ruble was artificially stabilized by authorities but existed in a near-permanent state of controlled crisis. Its value was not set by a free market but administratively pegged to a basket of currencies, primarily the US dollar. This created a persistent gap between the official exchange rate and the higher black-market rate, which citizens and businesses often relied upon for practical conversion. Inflation was a constant concern, and the currency's instability discouraged long-term banking in PRB, pushing the population toward dollarization for financial security.
The year 2019 saw no major shifts in this fragile equilibrium, but the underlying pressures were mounting. The region's economy remained reliant on a few large, export-oriented industrial enterprises (like the steel plant MMZ), which conducted trade in foreign currency. This dynamic perpetuated a cycle where hard currency earnings entered the economy but were hoarded or used for imports, while the local ruble primarily facilitated domestic wages and small-scale trade. Consequently, the currency situation continued to symbolize Transnistria's broader predicament: a functionally separate entity operating with a fragile monetary system, entirely dependent on external economic ties and political patronage to sustain its viability.