Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Central Bank of Russia

3 Rubles (Russia/Belarus Commonwealth) – Russian Federation

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: First Anniversary of Russia/Belarus Commonwealth
Russia
Context
Year: 1997
Country: Russia Country flag
Issuing organization: Central Bank of Russia
Period:
(since 1991)
Currency:
(1992—1997)
Demonetization: 1 January 1998
Total mintage: 10,000
Material
Diameter: 39 mm
Weight: 34.88 g
Silver weight: 31.39 g
Thickness: 3.3 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 90% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboard575
Numista: #29030
Value
Exchange value: 3 RUR
Bullion value: $89.85
Inflation-adjusted value: 101.95 RUR

Obverse

Description:
Artist I. Bilibin's two-headed eagle design. Rim inscriptions: top — "3 РУБЛЯ 1997 г.", bottom — "БАНК РОССИИ". Letters below indicate metal, fineness, weight, and mint mark.
Inscription:
3 РУБЛЯ 1997г.

Ag 900 ММД 31,1

БАНК РОССИИ
Translation:
3 RUBLES 1997

Ag 900 MMD 31.1

BANK OF RUSSIA
Scripts: Cyrillic, Latin
Language: Russian
Designer and engraver: Alexander Vasilyevich Baklanov

Reverse

Description:
Top left and right: State Emblems of Russia and Belarus. Center top: "ДОГОВОР ОБ ОБРАЗОВАНИИ СООБЩЕСТВА РОССИИ И БЕЛАРУСИ" (THE RUSSIA/BELARUS COMMONWEALTH TREATY). Left: Moscow view with the Kremlin. Right: Minsk view with Victory Square obelisk and Government House. Bottom: signing date "2 АПРЕЛЯ 1996" (APRIL 2, 1996).
Inscription:
Договор об образовании сообщества России и Беларуси

2 апреля 1996
Translation:
Treaty on the Formation of the Community of Russia and Belarus

April 2, 1996
Script: Cyrillic
Language: Russian

Edge

300 corrugations

Mints

NameMark
Moscow Mint(ММД)

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1997ММД10,000Proof

Historical background

By 1997, the Russian Federation's currency situation appeared deceptively stable on the surface, following the turbulent hyperinflation of the early post-Soviet years. The government, under President Boris Yeltsin, had introduced a new ruble in 1998 (redenominating at a rate of 1,000 old rubles to 1 new ruble) and maintained a "crawling peg" exchange rate band. This policy, managed by the Central Bank of Russia (CBR), aimed to control inflation by tethering the ruble to the US dollar within a narrow corridor, which boosted public and investor confidence. Foreign capital flowed into high-yielding government short-term bonds (GKOs), creating an illusion of economic normalisation and monetary stability.

However, this stability was fragile and built on unsustainable foundations. The core problem was a severe fiscal crisis; the government was unable to collect sufficient taxes due to a weak economy, widespread evasion, and political resistance from powerful oligarchs and regions. To finance its persistent budget deficits, it relied heavily on issuing GKOs to foreign investors, creating a dangerous short-term debt pyramid. Simultaneously, a collapse in global commodity prices—particularly oil, a key export—dramatically worsened the trade balance, eroding the foreign currency reserves the CBR needed to defend the ruble's peg.

Consequently, by late 1997, the system was under acute strain. The contagion from the Asian Financial Crisis led foreign investors to rapidly reassess emerging market risks, triggering capital flight from Russia. Pressure on the ruble intensified, forcing the CBR to spend billions of its dwindling reserves in a futile defence of the exchange rate band. While the full-blown crisis—the devaluation and default of August 1998—would erupt the following year, the currency situation by the end of 1997 was a pressure cooker of overvalued exchange rates, unpayable short-term debt, and evaporating market confidence, setting the stage for the impending collapse.
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