Logo Title
obverse
reverse
pharaohra CC BY-NC
Context
Year: 1943
Country: Indonesia Country flag
Ruler: Wilhelmina
Currency:
(1854—1948)
Demonetization: 1 January 1952
Total mintage: 20,000,000
Material
Diameter: 28 mm
Weight: 10 g
Silver weight: 7.20 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Silver (72% Silver, 28% Copper)
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard330
Numista: #36509
Value
Bullion value: $20.37

Obverse

Description:
Queen Wilhelmina bust facing left, encircled by Dutch text.
Inscription:
WILHELMINA KONINGIN DER NEDERLANDEN
Translation:
Wilhelmina Queen of the Netherlands
Script: Latin
Language: Dutch

Reverse

Description:
Dutch arms between palm branch and mint mark D.
Inscription:
MUNT VAN HET KONINGRIJK DER NEDERLANDEN

1 G

D

1943
Translation:
Coin of the Kingdom of the Netherlands

1 G

D

1943
Script: Latin
Language: Dutch

Edge

Plain inscripted
Legend:
★ GOD ★ ZIJ ★ MET ★ ONS
Translation:
God be with us
Language: Dutch


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1943D20,000,000

Historical background

By 1943, the currency situation in the Japanese-occupied Netherlands East Indies (NEI) was one of severe inflation and economic degradation. The Japanese military administration, having outlawed the pre-war Netherlands Indies gulden, had replaced it with two parallel currencies: the "Netherlands Indies gulden" issued by the Japanese-controlled Nanpo Kaihatsu Kinko (Southern Development Bank) and the "gulden" military scrip (gunpyō) issued directly by the Japanese Imperial Army. Both were fiat currencies, declared legal tender by force, and were printed in ever-increasing quantities to fund the occupation and Japan's war effort, with no substantial reserves to back them.

This uncontrolled money printing led to rampant inflation, as the volume of currency in circulation skyrocketed while the availability of goods and services collapsed. The archipelago's economy was ruthlessly reoriented toward supporting Japan's military needs, causing severe shortages of food, clothing, and basic necessities. The official currency rapidly lost its value and public trust, leading to the widespread use of barter trade in rural areas and a thriving black market in the cities, where pre-war Dutch guilders, Japanese occupation guilders, and even other regional currencies traded at wildly different values based on their perceived stability.

The deteriorating currency was a direct reflection of the broader humanitarian crisis. As the money became worthless, wages for forced laborers and salaried workers became meaningless, exacerbating malnutrition and hardship for the civilian population. The Japanese authorities attempted to impose price controls and rationing, but these measures were largely ineffective against the tide of hyperinflation. By 1943, the monetary chaos was deeply entrenched, systematically impoverishing the population and eroding the last vestiges of the colonial economic order.

Series: 1943 Netherlands East Indies circulation coins

1 Sen obverse
1 Sen reverse
1 Sen
1943-1944
1 Gulden obverse
1 Gulden reverse
1 Gulden
1943
2½ Gulden obverse
2½ Gulden reverse
2½ Gulden
1943
10 Sen obverse
10 Sen reverse
10 Sen
1943-1944
5 Sen obverse
5 Sen reverse
5 Sen
1943
🌱 Fairly Common