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obverse
reverse
Heritage Auctions

200 Escudos – Portugal

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: 500t Anos da Partilha do Mundo
Portugal
Context
Year: 1994
Issuer: Portugal Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1974)
Currency:
(1911—2001)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 4,000
Material
Diameter: 36 mm
Weight: 27.2 g
Gold weight: 24.94 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 91.7% Gold
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard672b
Numista: #106874
Value
Exchange value: 200 PTE
Bullion value: $4167.08
Inflation-adjusted value: 409.27 PTE

Obverse

Description:
Map of South America showing the Treaty of Tordesillas line, flanked by the coats of arms of Spain (west) and Portugal (east). A 16th-century Portuguese carrack is to the right. The title "Division of the World" and the treaty year appear below, with a cartographic scale border.
Inscription:
200

esc

REPUBLICA

PORTUGUESA

1994

INCM

A.MARINHO
Translation:
REPUBLIC

PORTUGUESE

1994

INCM

A.MARINHO
Script: Latin
Language: Portuguese

Reverse

Description:
Portuguese coat of arms, a Euro-African map, navigation symbols, and a scale border.
Inscription:
A PARTILHA

DO MUNDO

1494
Script: Latin

Edge

Reeded

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1994INCM4,000Proof

Historical background

In 1994, Portugal's currency situation was defined by its strategic and disciplined participation in the European Monetary System (EMS) and its determined march toward European Economic and Monetary Union (EMU). The country's currency, the escudo (PTE), was operating within the EMS Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM), which required it to maintain a fixed but adjustable parity against a central European Currency Unit (ECU) and, by extension, relative stability against other member currencies, most importantly the Deutsche Mark. This period followed a significant devaluation in 1992, which had realigned the escudo's central rate to a more competitive level, and by 1994, the currency was demonstrating notable stability within its narrow fluctuation band of ±2.25%.

This stability was not accidental but the result of a concerted national policy effort. The Banco de Portugal, the country's central bank, pursued a tight monetary policy focused on inflation reduction and exchange rate stability, often shadowing the policies of the German Bundesbank to maintain credibility. High interest rates were used to defend the escudo's peg and curb domestic demand, a necessary but painful strategy that came with the economic cost of subdued growth. The primary driver was political: fulfilling the Maastricht Treaty convergence criteria on inflation, interest rates, budget deficits, and exchange rate stability was the paramount national objective to secure Portugal's place in the first wave of the single European currency.

Consequently, the currency landscape in 1994 was one of transition and preparation. The escudo was effectively in a "hard currency" regime, serving as a training ground for the impending loss of monetary sovereignty. Financial markets and institutions were beginning to adapt to a future without the escudo, while the government's fiscal austerity measures aimed to rein in the public deficit to meet the Maastricht targets. Thus, the story of the escudo in 1994 is one of a currency being carefully managed not for its own long-term future, but to ensure its orderly retirement and Portugal's entry into the Eurozone, which was ultimately achieved on January 1, 1999.

Series: V-Portuguese Discoveries

200 Escudos obverse
200 Escudos reverse
200 Escudos
1994
200 Escudos obverse
200 Escudos reverse
200 Escudos
1994
200 Escudos obverse
200 Escudos reverse
200 Escudos
1994
200 Escudos obverse
200 Escudos reverse
200 Escudos
1994
200 Escudos obverse
200 Escudos reverse
200 Escudos
1994
200 Escudos obverse
200 Escudos reverse
200 Escudos
1994
200 Escudos obverse
200 Escudos reverse
200 Escudos
1994
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