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obverse
reverse
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50 Centavos (General Güemes' Death) – Argentina

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: 179th Anniversary of General Güemes' Death
Argentina
Context
Year: 2000
Issuer: Argentina Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1861)
Currency:
(since 1992)
Total mintage: 5,000
Material
Diameter: 25.2 mm
Weight: 5.8 g
Thickness: 1.8 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Aluminium bronze
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard129.2
Numista: #365222
Value
Exchange value: 0.50 ARS

Obverse

Description:
Bearded right-facing portrait of General Güemes.
Inscription:
REPÚBLICA ARGENTINA

GRAL. MARTÍN MIGUEL DE GÜEMES
Translation:
Argentine Republic
General Martín Miguel de Güemes
Script: Latin
Language: Spanish

Reverse

Description:
Value & branch.
Inscription:
17 de JUNIO de 1821 2000

50

CENTAVOS
Script: Latin

Edge

Reeded

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
20005,000

Historical background

Argentina entered the year 2000 trapped in the rigid constraints of its Convertibility Plan, established in 1991 to halt hyperinflation. This law pegged the Argentine peso at a one-to-one parity with the U.S. dollar, making the Central Bank effectively a currency board that could only issue new pesos if backed by an equal amount of dollar reserves. Initially successful in stabilizing prices and attracting foreign investment, the system created a profound loss of monetary sovereignty. The government could no longer print money to finance deficits, and the peso's value was entirely dependent on the maintenance of full foreign exchange reserves.

However, by 2000, the structural flaws of convertibility had become critical. A series of external shocks, including the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis and the 1999 Brazilian devaluation, severely damaged Argentina's export competitiveness. Stuck with an overvalued peso, the economy sank into a deep and prolonged recession beginning in 1998. Tax revenues plummeted while public debt, much of it denominated in dollars, ballooned. The government resorted to severe austerity and borrowed heavily from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), but confidence evaporated. A growing perception that the dollar peg was unsustainable led to capital flight, steadily draining the very reserves that backed the currency.

Thus, the currency situation in 2000 was one of acute vulnerability and impending crisis. The fixed exchange rate, once a pillar of stability, had become a straitjacket that prevented economic adjustment and fueled a vicious cycle of recession, deflation, and rising debt burdens. Despite massive IMF bailouts, the drain on reserves continued unabated, setting the stage for the catastrophic collapse of convertibility that would occur at the end of 2001.
Somewhat Rare