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Heritage Auctions

150 Rubles – Soviet Union

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: 1980 Summer Olympics, Moscow
Russia
Context
Year: 1977
Country: Russia Country flag
Issuer: Soviet Union Issuer flag
Period:
(1922—1991)
Currency:
(1961—1991)
Demonetization: 1991
Total mintage: 34,070
Material
Diameter: 28.6 mm
Weight: 15.55 g
Platinum weight: 15.53 g
Thickness: 1.5 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 99.9% Platinum
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboard152
Numista: #26867
Value
Exchange value: 150 SUR
Bullion value: $0.00

Obverse

Description:
USSR coat of arms; value, date.
Inscription:
СССР

150

РУБЛЕЙ
Translation:
One hundred fifty rubles USSR
Script: Cyrillic
Language: Russian

Reverse

Description:
Olympics rings.
Inscription:
ИГРЫ XXII ОЛИМПИАДЫ · МОСКВА · 1980

ЛМД

1977
Translation:
GAMES OF THE XXII OLYMPIAD · MOSCOW · 1980

LMD

1977
Script: Cyrillic
Language: Russian

Edge

Reeded

Mints

NameMark
Saint Petersburg(ЛМД)

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1977ЛМД9,910
1977ЛМД24,160Proof

Historical background

In 1977, the Soviet Union’s currency situation was characterized by a stark duality between the domestic ruble and foreign exchange. Internally, the State Bank (Gosbank) maintained a strictly controlled and non-convertible ruble. Its official exchange rate was artificially set at approximately 0.66 rubles to the US dollar, a figure used for statistical purposes and in limited state-planned foreign trade, but which bore no relation to its real economic value. Within the closed Soviet economy, money functioned primarily as an accounting unit and a means for limited consumer purchases, as the state set prices and the allocation of key goods and resources was dictated by the plan, not currency strength.

The reality for foreign trade and citizens was far more complex. For international transactions, a separate "transferable ruble" was used within the Comecon bloc, but for trade with Western nations, hard currency (US dollars, British pounds, etc.) was paramount. The USSR desperately sought these currencies to purchase vital grain, technology, and consumer goods it could not produce efficiently. This need created a vast black market where the ruble traded at a fraction of its official value, often at 4 to 10 rubles per dollar. The government itself operated a network of "Beryozka" shops, where Soviet citizens with access to foreign currency (e.g., from relatives abroad or work overseas) and privileged foreigners could purchase high-quality deficit goods unavailable for rubles.

This bifurcated system highlighted the fundamental weaknesses of the late Soviet economy. The strong official ruble was a facade, masking growing stagnation, technological lag, and consumer goods shortages. The reliance on hard currency imports and the thriving black market underscored the ruble's lack of genuine purchasing power on the global stage. While the currency situation appeared stable on the surface in 1977, it was symptomatic of a deeper structural crisis, as the planned economy increasingly depended on external capitalist markets and illicit exchanges to mitigate its own inefficiencies.
💎 Very Rare