Logo Title
obverse
reverse
mikimaus CC BY-NC-SA
Context
Years: 1990–1991
Issuer: Yugoslavia
Period:
Currency:
(1990—1992)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 180,025,000
Material
Diameter: 22 mm
Weight: 4.6 g
Thickness: 1.6 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Brass
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard141
Numista: #3291
Value
Exchange value: 0.50 YUN

Obverse

Description:
The name and coat of arms of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, proclaimed on November 29, 1943.
Inscription:
СФР JУГОСЛАВИJА

SFR JUGOSLAVIJA

29•XI•1943
Translation:
Socialist Federal Republic Yugoslavia

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

Reverse

Description:
Currency, year, value.
Inscription:
50 ПАРА·PARA·PAR·ПАРИ·1990
Translation:
Fifty Para; Para; Par; Pari; 1990
Scripts: Cyrillic, Latin

Edge

Plain

Categories

Symbols> Coat of Arms

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1990137,873,000
199142,152,000

Historical background

By 1990, the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was in the final stages of a profound economic and political crisis that would soon lead to its dissolution. The currency, the Yugoslav dinar, was severely weakened by years of structural problems, including massive foreign debt, rampant inflation inherited from the 1980s, and the inefficient self-management system. The federal government's attempts at stabilization through austerity and currency reforms had repeatedly failed, largely because the six constituent republics (Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, Montenegro, and Macedonia) could not agree on a unified economic policy. Political nationalism was rising, and economic authority was fracturing along republican lines.

The currency situation was characterized by a destructive cycle of "high inflation" (reaching over 2,700% annually by 1990) and repeated, desperate reforms. In December 1989, the federal government under Prime Minister Ante Marković had introduced a "hard dinar" pegged to the West German Deutsche Mark, which briefly stabilized prices and raised hopes. However, this strict monetary policy caused a deep recession and soaring unemployment. More critically, the peg was undermined by the refusal of republican-level banks, particularly in Serbia under Slobodan Milošević, to adhere to the federal central bank's restrictive credit policies. Serbia's unilateral issuance of massive unauthorized credits to favored enterprises destroyed the monetary unity of the country.

Consequently, by the end of 1990, Yugoslavia effectively ceased to have a single, functional currency. The Marković reform had collapsed, and hyperinflation was returning. The republics were increasingly operating as separate economic entities, with Slovenia and Croatia taking concrete steps toward establishing their own monetary systems as they moved toward independence. The failure of the common dinar symbolized the collapse of federal authority, making the violent breakup of the state in 1991 almost an economic inevitability as much as a political one.

Series: 1990 Yugoslavia circulation coins

10 Para obverse
10 Para reverse
10 Para
1990-1991
20 Para obverse
20 Para reverse
20 Para
1990-1991
50 Para obverse
50 Para reverse
50 Para
1990-1991
1 Dinar obverse
1 Dinar reverse
1 Dinar
1990-1991
2 Dinars obverse
2 Dinars reverse
2 Dinars
1990-1992
5 Dinars obverse
5 Dinars reverse
5 Dinars
1990-1992
🌱 Very Common