Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Mihajlo Nešić MihajloNesic
Context
Year: 1994
Issuer: Yugoslavia
Period:
Currency:
(since 1994)
Demonetization: 23 January 1994
Total mintage: 10,747,000
Material
Diameter: 23 mm
Weight: 5.1 g
Thickness: 1.8 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Nickel brass
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard160
Numista: #9941
Value
Exchange value: 1 YUG

Obverse

Description:
Yugoslav National Bank emblem
Inscription:
SR JUGOSLAVIJA

ЈНБ

СР ЈУГОСЛАВИЈА
Translation:
SOCIALIST FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF YUGOSLAVIA

JNB

SOCIALIST FEDERAL REPUBLIC OF YUGOSLAVIA
Scripts: Cyrillic, Latin
Language: Serbian

Reverse

Description:
Denomination in Cyrillic and Latin.
Inscription:
ДИНАР 1 DINAR

1994
Translation:
DINAR 1 DINAR

1994
Scripts: Cyrillic, Latin
Languages: English, Serbian

Edge

Plain

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
199410,747,000

Historical background

In 1994, the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (consisting of Serbia and Montenegro) was in the throes of a hyperinflationary collapse, marking one of the most severe monetary disasters in modern history. This crisis was the direct result of years of economic mismanagement, the devastating impact of international sanctions imposed due to the Balkan Wars, and the collapse of the internal Yugoslav market. The National Bank of Yugoslavia, effectively under the control of Slobodan Milošević's government, financed massive public spending and propped up failing state-owned enterprises by printing money with reckless abandon, utterly decimating the value of the dinar.

The scale of the inflation was astronomical, peaking in January 1994 at a staggering rate of 313 million percent per month. Prices doubled within hours, and the currency became virtually worthless, leading to a complete regression to barter trade and the widespread use of stable foreign currencies like the German Deutsche Mark for any meaningful transaction. The government issued a series of new dinar notes, each lopping zeros off the old currency, but these measures were merely cosmetic and failed to address the underlying fiscal indiscipline, causing public confidence in the dinar to evaporate entirely.

In response to this chaos, the government enacted a radical monetary reform on January 24, 1994, introducing the "novi dinar" (new dinar). This currency was uniquely pegged one-to-one to the Deutsche Mark and was theoretically backed by the National Bank's hard currency reserves and future government privatization revenues. The immediate effect was dramatic, halting hyperinflation in its tracks and restoring a degree of monetary stability. However, this stability was artificial and fragile, as it was not supported by fundamental fiscal reform or economic productivity, leaving the underlying structural problems of the Yugoslav economy unresolved.

Series: 1994 Yugoslavia circulation coins

1 Dinar obverse
1 Dinar reverse
1 Dinar
1994
1 Para obverse
1 Para reverse
1 Para
1994
10 Paras obverse
10 Paras reverse
10 Paras
1994
50 Paras obverse
50 Paras reverse
50 Paras
1994
5 Paras obverse
5 Paras reverse
5 Paras
1994-1995
1 New Dinar obverse
1 New Dinar reverse
1 New Dinar
1994-1995
🌱 Common