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obverse
reverse
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100 Dinars – Yugoslavia

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: 1984 Winter Olympics Bobsledding
Context
Year: 1983
Issuer: Yugoslavia
Period:
Currency:
(1966—1989)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 48,074
Material
Diameter: 30 mm
Weight: 13 g
Silver weight: 12.03 g
Thickness: 1.8 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 92.5% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard99
Numista: #22869
Value
Exchange value: 100 YUD
Bullion value: $34.02

Obverse

Description:
Olympic logo above Sarajevo 1984 logo and SFRY coat of arms in side shields, within a flat-bottomed circle. Denomination below.
Inscription:
СФР ЈУГОСЛАВИЈА SFR JUGOSLAVIJA

1983

29·XI·1943

Д 100 D
Translation:
Socialist Federal Republic Yugoslavia

1983

29 November 1943

100 Dinars
Scripts: Cyrillic, Latin
Languages: Serbian, Serbian

Reverse

Description:
Bobsled athletes.
Inscription:
XIV ZIMSKE OLIMPIJSKE IGRE

SARAJEVO '84
Translation:
XIV Winter Olympic Games

Sarajevo '84
Script: Latin
Language: Serbo-Croatian

Edge

Milled

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
198348,074Proof

Historical background

In 1983, the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was in the grip of a severe and worsening economic crisis, with its currency, the Yugoslav dinar, at the center of the turmoil. The nation was burdened by massive foreign debt exceeding $20 billion, high inflation, and chronic trade deficits. While the official exchange rate was artificially pegged by the government, a vast and thriving black market for hard currencies like the US dollar and Deutsche Mark had become the real benchmark for economic activity. This parallel economy reflected a profound loss of confidence in the dinar, as citizens and businesses alike sought to preserve value outside the crumbling official financial system.

The root causes were deeply structural. Yugoslavia’s unique model of "self-managing socialism" involved complex monetary financing of inefficient state enterprises and republic-level banks, leading to excessive money creation. Furthermore, the decentralized political structure allowed the six constituent republics and two autonomous provinces to borrow independently abroad, creating an uncontrollable aggregate debt. By 1983, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) had stepped in with a stringent stabilization program, demanding devaluation, austerity, and market reforms in exchange for debt rescheduling. This imposed a harsh squeeze on living standards, causing widespread social discontent.

Consequently, the currency situation was one of duality and distortion. The government maintained strict foreign exchange controls and an overvalued official dinar to service its debt, but this only stifled legitimate exports and encouraged capital flight. Meanwhile, the black market rate told the true story of hyperinflation in its early stages, eroding savings and wages. This monetary dysfunction was a critical symptom of the deeper fractures within the Yugoslav federation, exposing the unsustainable gap between its decentralized political system and the need for coherent federal economic policy, setting the stage for the more extreme hyperinflation and political collapse of the subsequent decade.

Series: Sarajevo 1984 Winter Olympic Games

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🌟 Limited