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20000 Dinars (Battle of Sinj) – Yugoslavia

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: 270th Anniversary of the battle at Sinj
Context
Year: 1985
Issuer: Yugoslavia
Period:
Currency:
(1966—1989)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 8,000
Material
Weight: 8 g
Gold weight: 7.20 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 90% Gold
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard125
Numista: #181964
Value
Exchange value: 20000 YUD
Bullion value: $1197.06

Obverse

Inscription:
29·XI·1943

SFR JUGOSLAVIJA

СФР ЈУГОСЛАВИЈА

D 20000 Д
Translation:
Twenty-Nine November One Thousand Nine Hundred Forty-Three

Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia

Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia

Dinar 20000 Dinara
Scripts: Cyrillic, Latin
Languages: Serbian, Serbian

Reverse

Inscription:
SINJSKA ALKA

1715 - 1985
Script: Latin

Edge

Reeded

Categories

Symbols> Coat of Arms

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
19858,000

Historical background

By 1985, Yugoslavia's currency situation was a clear symptom of its deepening economic crisis and political fragmentation. The Yugoslav dinar, theoretically a single national currency, was increasingly strained by the country's unique system of "associated labor" and regional autonomy. Runaway inflation, initially in the double digits, was accelerating due to a combination of factors: excessive money printing to cover government and enterprise deficits, a massive foreign debt burden (over $20 billion), and the fundamental inefficiencies of the self-managed socialist economy. Price controls on essentials created shortages, while a growing black market operated with hard currencies like the Deutsche Mark.

The monetary system itself was becoming dysfunctional. While the National Bank of Yugoslavia in Belgrade held nominal authority, the powerful republican and provincial banks often pursued their own credit policies, effectively creating competing monetary pressures within the federation. This institutional fragmentation prevented a coherent anti-inflation policy. Furthermore, the practice of "internal borrowing," where republics and provinces issued debt to the national bank, monetized regional deficits and fueled inflation across the entire country, creating a cycle of resentment and blame between the wealthier northern republics and the less developed south.

Internationally, the dinar was virtually inconvertible, and Yugoslavia relied heavily on IMF loans and debt rescheduling to maintain solvency. Domestically, citizens and businesses increasingly lost faith in the dinar, seeking refuge in foreign currency savings ("devizni račun") or tangible assets. The 1985 devaluation was another in a series of attempts to correct trade imbalances, but it primarily increased the cost of imports and further eroded living standards. This currency instability underscored the failure of federal economic coordination and set the stage for the hyperinflation and monetary disintegration that would accompany the country's political collapse in the early 1990s.
Legendary