In 1904, Serbia's currency situation was defined by its use of the
Serbian dinar, which operated within the framework of the Latin Monetary Union. The country had officially adopted the LMU's bimetallic standard (gold and silver) in 1878, pegging the dinar to the French franc at a fixed rate of 1 dinar = 1 franc. This alignment was a strategic political and economic choice, integrating Serbia with Western European financial systems and facilitating trade and foreign investment, particularly from France and Austria-Hungary.
However, this formal peg belied underlying strains. Serbia's economy was still largely agrarian and carried significant foreign debt from military modernization and railway construction. The state's finances were often precarious, relying heavily on loans. Consequently, while the dinar maintained its official parity, the actual gold and silver reserves backing the currency were not always robust, leading to occasional concerns about stability and convertibility among foreign creditors and traders.
The year 1904 itself fell within a period of relative monetary calm before the major economic dislocations of the Balkan Wars and World War I. The system's stability was largely propped up by continued foreign borrowing. Nevertheless, the underlying dependency on foreign capital highlighted the dinar's vulnerability. The currency's true test would come in the following decade, when the pressures of war would ultimately force Serbia off the gold standard and lead to significant inflation, exposing the fragility masked by the pre-war LMU arrangement.