Logo Title
obverse
reverse
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2 Euro – Finland

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: First Finnish Nature Conservation Act
Finland
Context
Year: 2023
Issuer: Finland Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1919)
Currency:
(since 2002)
Total mintage: 401,500
Material
Diameter: 25.75 mm
Weight: 8.5 g
Thickness: 2.2 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Bimetallic (Nickel brass center, Copper-nickel ring)
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard309
Numista: #353329
Value
Exchange value: 2 EUR = $2.36
Inflation-adjusted value: 2.20 EUR

Obverse

Description:
A stylized beetle with "Nature Conservation" in Finnish above and Swedish below. The Mint of Finland’s lion logo is on the left, "FI" on the right, and the date below, within the EU’s ring of stars.
Inscription:
LUONNONSUOJELU

FI

NATURSKYDD 2023
Translation:
NATURE CONSERVATION

FI

NATURE PROTECTION 2023
Script: Latin
Languages: Swedish, Finnish

Reverse

Description:
A Western Europe map spans the coin's right side, with "2 EURO" overlaid—the "2" in the Atlantic. Twelve stars flank the map, six above and six below, connected by six vertical stripes across the inner core.
Inscription:
2 EURO

LL
Script: Latin
Designer: Luc Luycx

Edge

Legend:
SUOMI FINLAND
Translation:
Finland Finland
Languages: Finnish, Swedish

Mints

NameMark
Mint of Finland(FI)

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
2023FI400,000
2023FI1,500Proof

Historical background

In 2023, Finland's currency situation was fundamentally defined by its membership in the Eurozone, using the euro (€) as its official currency. This meant the country's monetary policy was set by the European Central Bank (ECB), not by a national institution. The year was dominated by the ECB's aggressive response to high inflation, with a series of interest rate hikes that brought the key deposit facility rate from 2% at the start of the year to 4% by September. For Finnish households and businesses, this translated into significantly higher borrowing costs, cooling the housing market and impacting investment.

The national context was marked by particular economic strain. Finland's economy entered a technical recession in 2023, with two consecutive quarters of GDP contraction, driven by high inflation, rising interest rates, and weakened demand from key trading partners. Furthermore, the structure of the Finnish economy, with many households holding variable-rate mortgages, made it especially sensitive to the ECB's rate increases. This created a challenging environment where the common eurozone monetary policy, aimed at curbing inflation across 20 nations, was arguably tighter than what Finland's slowing domestic economy required.

Despite these pressures, the euro provided stability by eliminating currency risk within the Eurozone, which is crucial for Finland's open, export-driven economy. There was no serious political debate about leaving the euro, as its benefits for trade and financial integration are widely accepted. The primary domestic financial discussions in 2023 therefore centered on fiscal policy—government spending and taxation—as the main tools to navigate the recession, rather than on currency matters. The year underscored both the constraints and the protections of sharing a common currency during a period of divergent economic performance within the monetary union.

Series: Finland 2 euro commemoratives

2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2022
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2022
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2022
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2023
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2023
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2024
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2024
🌱 Common