Logo Title
obverse
reverse
mikimaus CC BY-NC-SA
Context
Years: 1965–1981
Issuer: Yugoslavia
Issuing organization: National Bank of Yugoslavia
Period:
Currency:
(1966—1989)
Demonetization: 31 December 1985
Total mintage: 172,700,000
Material
Diameter: 16 mm
Weight: 1.5 g
Thickness: 1.15 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Aluminium brass (85% Copper, 14.5% Zinc, 0.5% Aluminium)
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard43
Numista: #2002
Value
Exchange value: 0.05 YUD

Obverse

Description:
The Yugoslav coat of arms featured six torches, representing its six republics, united by a ribbon.
Inscription:
СФР JУГОСЛАВИJА

SFR JUGOSLAVIJA

29·XI·1943
Translation:
SOCIALIST FEDERAL REPUBLIC YUGOSLAVIA

SOCIALIST FEDERAL REPUBLIC YUGOSLAVIA

29·XI·1943
Scripts: Cyrillic, Latin

Reverse

Description:
Center legend.
Inscription:
ПАРА·PARA

19 5 76

PAR·ПАРИ
Translation:
PARA·PARA

19 5 76

PAR·PARI
Scripts: Cyrillic, Latin
Languages: Latin, Russian

Edge

Reeded

Categories

Symbols> Coat of Arms

Mints

NameMark
Belgrade

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
196516,200,000
197336,384,000
19743,628,000
197520,272,000
197630,490,000
197710,270,000
197812,000,000
197920,414,000
198022,412,000
1981630,000

Historical background

In 1965, Yugoslavia implemented a significant economic reform package, known as the "Economic Reform of 1965," which directly addressed its troubled currency situation. The Yugoslav dinar was fundamentally overvalued and non-convertible, propped up by complex and restrictive multiple exchange rates. This system, managed by the National Bank, created severe distortions: it subsidized inefficient import-dependent industries, discouraged competitive exports, and fostered a growing black market for foreign currency. The overvaluation acted as a hidden tax on the agricultural and export sectors, widening the regional economic disparities between the more developed republics (like Slovenia and Croatia) and the less developed ones.

The reform aimed to integrate Yugoslavia more fully into the world market by introducing a single, devalued exchange rate to make exports more competitive and imports more expensive. The official dinar was devalued by approximately 67%, moving from 750 dinars to 1,250 dinars per US dollar. Furthermore, the government took steps toward partial convertibility for business transactions, allowing enterprises greater autonomy in retaining and using foreign exchange earnings. This was a cornerstone of the broader shift away from a centrally planned economy toward the unique system of "market socialism" and worker self-management.

However, the currency reforms of 1965 had mixed and ultimately destabilizing consequences. While they initially boosted exports, the devaluation also fueled inflation by making imported machinery and goods more costly. The reforms failed to fully dismantle the underlying structural weaknesses, such as soft budget constraints for large enterprises and politically-directed investments. Consequently, the temporary stabilization gave way to persistent trade deficits, rising foreign debt, and recurring inflationary pressures throughout the 1970s and 1980s, setting the stage for the chronic monetary crises that would plague Yugoslavia in its final decades.

Series: 1965 Yugoslavia circulation coins

5 Paras obverse
5 Paras reverse
5 Paras
1965
5 Paras obverse
5 Paras reverse
5 Paras
1965-1981
10 Paras obverse
10 Paras reverse
10 Paras
1965-1981
20 Paras obverse
20 Paras reverse
20 Paras
1965-1981
50 Paras obverse
50 Paras reverse
50 Paras
1965-1981
1 Dinar obverse
1 Dinar reverse
1 Dinar
1965
🌱 Very Common