Logo Title
obverse
reverse
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1 Yuan (Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region) – People's Republic of China

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: 40th Anniversary of the Inner Mongolian Autonomous Region
China
Context
Year: 1987
Country: China Country flag
Period:
(since 1949)
Currency:
(since 1955)
Total mintage: 9,056,000
Material
Diameter: 30 mm
Weight: 9.32 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper-nickel
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard158
Numista: #13852
Value
Exchange value: 1 CNY = $0.15
Inflation-adjusted value: 5.06 CNY

Obverse

Description:
Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region Congress Building
Inscription:
中华人民共和国

内蒙古自治区成立四十周年

1987
Translation:
The People's Republic of China

Fortieth Anniversary of the Founding of the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region

1987
Language: Chinese

Reverse

Description:
Grazing: animals feeding on growing grass.
Inscription:
1元

"The fortieth anniversary of Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region" in Mongolian

1947-1987
Translation:
One Yuan

The Fortieth Anniversary of Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region

1947-1987
Languages: Chinese, Mongolian

Edge

Reeded

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
19872,000Proof
19879,054,000

Historical background

In 1987, the People's Republic of China was navigating a critical phase of its economic reform program under Deng Xiaoping. The currency, the Renminbi (RMB), operated under a complex dual-track system. Officially, it maintained a fixed, overvalued exchange rate set by the state for planned economy transactions and essential imports. Alongside this, a secondary "swap centre" rate existed, which was significantly more depreciated and reflected market forces more closely for foreign-invested enterprises and special economic zones. This created distortions, encouraged arbitrage, and was a source of inefficiency as the country sought greater integration with the global economy.

Domestically, the currency faced pressures from price liberalization reforms. The mid-1980s saw bouts of inflation as controls on certain goods were relaxed, leading to a loss of public confidence in the RMB's store of value. This period was marked by "panic buying" sprees, as citizens rushed to convert savings into durable goods to preserve wealth. The government's response was a cycle of tightening credit and re-imposing some administrative controls, highlighting the tension between moving toward a market system and maintaining macroeconomic stability.

The currency situation of 1987 was thus a microcosm of China's broader transitional economy. The RMB was not yet a convertible currency and served as a key tool for state planning, yet it was being gradually—and sometimes painfully—exposed to market influences. The inconsistencies of the dual-exchange rate regime and inflationary pressures underscored the necessity for deeper financial reforms, which would eventually lead to the unification of exchange rates in 1994 and set the stage for the RMB's modern trajectory.
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