Logo Title
obverse
reverse
mikimaus CC BY-NC-SA
Context
Years: 1982–1986
Issuer: Yugoslavia
Period:
Currency:
(1966—1989)
Demonetization: 30 September 1988
Total mintage: 245,756,000
Material
Diameter: 24 mm
Weight: 5.6 g
Thickness: 1.64 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Nickel brass (75% Copper, 21% Zinc, 4% Nickel)
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard88
Numista: #3288
Value
Exchange value: 5 YUD

Obverse

Description:
Yugoslav coat of arms.
Inscription:
СФР JУГОСЛАВИJА

SFR JUGOSLAVIJA

29•XI•1943
Translation:
Socialist Federal Republic Yugoslavia

29 November 1943
Scripts: Cyrillic, Latin
Languages: English, Serbian

Reverse

Description:
Denomination
Inscription:
5

ДИНАРА DINARA DINARJEV ДИНАРИ

1985
Translation:
DINARA DINARA DINARS DINARI

1985
Scripts: Cyrillic, Latin
Languages: Slovenian, Serbian

Edge

Reeded

Categories

Symbols> Coat of Arms

Mints

NameMark
Belgrade

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
198240,956,000
198340,156,000
198433,023,000
198594,422,000
198637,199,000

Historical background

By 1982, Yugoslavia's currency situation was a critical symptom of its deepening economic and political crisis. The country was grappling with severe stagflation—a combination of stagnant economic growth, high unemployment, and rampant inflation. The Yugoslav dinar, though officially pegged to a basket of currencies, was losing value rapidly on the black market, which had become a parallel and essential economy. This instability stemmed from decades of heavy foreign borrowing to fund industrial growth and imports, a policy that culminated in a crushing external debt exceeding $20 billion. Servicing this debt consumed a massive portion of the country's hard currency earnings from exports and tourism, creating chronic shortages of foreign exchange.

The federal structure of Yugoslavia exacerbated the monetary problems. The country's six republics and two autonomous provinces operated with significant economic independence, leading to divergent fiscal policies, internal trade barriers, and competition for foreign loans. The National Bank of Yugoslavia struggled to implement a coherent monetary policy, as constituent regions often circumvented federal credit restrictions. This resulted in excessive money printing to cover government deficits and the losses of inefficient, socially-owned enterprises, which directly fed hyperinflation. The dinar's instability was thus a direct reflection of the political system's inability to reconcile regional interests with federal economic discipline.

Internationally, 1982 marked a pivotal year as Yugoslavia formally entered negotiations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for a major stabilization loan. This move was a desperate necessity to avoid default and secure debt rescheduling with Western commercial banks. The impending IMF agreement, finalized in 1983, would impose harsh austerity measures—devaluation, spending cuts, and price liberalization—that further eroded living standards. Therefore, the currency situation in 1982 represented the final unraveling of the Yugoslav economic model, setting the stage for the severe austerity and social unrest of the following decade, which would ultimately contribute to the state's dissolution.

Series: 1982 Yugoslavia circulation coins

25 Paras obverse
25 Paras reverse
25 Paras
1982-1983
50 Paras obverse
50 Paras reverse
50 Paras
1982-1984
1 Dinar obverse
1 Dinar reverse
1 Dinar
1982-1986
2 Dinars obverse
2 Dinars reverse
2 Dinars
1982-1986
5 Dinars obverse
5 Dinars reverse
5 Dinars
1982-1986
10 Dinars obverse
10 Dinars reverse
10 Dinars
1982-1988
🌱 Very Common