Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Katz Coins Notes & Supplies Corp.
Context
Years: 1896–1942
Issuer: Argentina Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1861)
Currency:
(1881—1969)
Demonetization: 1 January 1943
Total mintage: 192,399,610
Material
Diameter: 19 mm
Weight: 3 g
Thickness: 1.3 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper-nickel (75% Copper, 25% Nickel)
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard35
Numista: #2594
Value
Exchange value: 0.10 ARM

Obverse

Description:
Oudine's Liberty head in Phrygian cap, left-facing, with country name above and date below.
Inscription:
REPUBLICA ARGENTINA

* 1933 *
Translation:
Argentine Republic

* 1933 *
Script: Latin
Languages: Spanish, Latin

Reverse

Description:
Wreath's worth
Inscription:
10

CENTAVOS
Script: Latin

Edge

Reeded

Mints

NameMark
Buenos Aires

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
18961,877,182
18978,581,588
18988,533,635
18998,889,182
19053,784,704
19063,853,744
19072,355,249
19082,279,812
19093,738,727
19103,025,558
19112,142,442
19122,992,557
19131,827,707
1914750,733
19152,607,466
1916835,059
19183,897,193
19192,516,838
19207,508,887
192111,563,988
19226,541,955
19235,300,614
19243,488,549
19255,414,963
19265,055,000
19275,205,000
19288,255,021
19292,500,934
193014,585,586
1931892,873
19335,393,968
19343,318,887
19351,018,344
19363,000,433
193711,765,992
193810,494,600
19395,585,472
19403,955,431
19414,101,405
19422,962,332

Historical background

In 1896, Argentina was in the final years of the Ley de Conversión (Conversion Law) of 1891, which had established a new monetary regime following the devastating Baring Crisis of 1890. The law created a currency board (the Caja de Conversión) that pegged the Argentine peso to gold at a fixed rate, making it fully convertible. This was a deliberate move to restore international financial credibility and attract the foreign capital deemed essential for the nation's rapid expansion. However, the system was inherently deflationary and rigid, as the money supply was directly tied to the country's gold reserves, limiting the government's ability to respond to economic fluctuations.

The economy in 1896 was experiencing a strong recovery, driven by booming agricultural exports, particularly beef and wheat. This export surge generated the trade surpluses needed to accumulate gold reserves, thereby supporting the currency peg. Yet, the benefits were uneven. The gold standard and fiscal austerity required by the system placed a heavy burden on the domestic economy, especially the interior provinces and the working class. While financiers and large landowners connected to the export sector prospered, many Argentines faced tight credit, stagnant wages, and the social tensions that would later fuel the rise of political movements like the Radical Civic Union.

Thus, the currency situation in 1896 was one of superficial stability masking underlying strains. The gold peg had successfully ended the hyperinflation of the early 1890s and reintegrated Argentina into global markets, but it created a brittle financial structure. The system's dependence on continuous export growth and capital inflows made the economy vulnerable to external shocks, a weakness that would be brutally exposed following World War I and during the Great Depression, ultimately leading to the abandonment of the gold standard.

Series: 1896 Argentina circulation coins

5 Centavos obverse
5 Centavos reverse
5 Centavos
1896-1942
10 Centavos obverse
10 Centavos reverse
10 Centavos
1896-1942
20 Centavos obverse
20 Centavos reverse
20 Centavos
1896-1942
🌱 Very Common