In 1932, Portugal's currency situation was characterized by the enduring dominance of the
escudo, which had been the nation's currency since 1911, replacing the historic
real. The country was under the authoritarian
Estado Novo regime, led by António de Salazar, who had become Minister of Finance in 1928 with a mandate to stabilize the economy. A primary focus of his early policy was achieving monetary stability and defending the escudo's value after a period of post-World War I inflation and fiscal disorder. The escudo was officially placed on the
gold standard, but in practice operated under a
gold exchange standard, with its value pegged to both gold and stable foreign currencies like the British pound.
This period was one of rigorous
deflationary policy. Salazar prioritized a strong escudo, balanced budgets, and the accumulation of gold and foreign exchange reserves, even at the cost of domestic economic growth and living standards. The Banco de Portugal, under strict government control, maintained high interest rates and tight credit to defend the fixed parity. Consequently, Portugal avoided the hyperinflation that plagued some European nations, but the strong currency and conservative monetary policy also stifled industrial development and contributed to low wages and emigration.
The currency stability of 1932 must be viewed as a cornerstone of Salazar's wider political project. A strong escudo was symbolic of national pride and regime credibility, projecting an image of order and discipline. This rigid framework would, however, face significant tests in the coming years with the global impacts of the Great Depression and the impending economic disruptions of World War II. Nevertheless, in 1932, the Portuguese escudo was a tightly controlled instrument of state policy, reflecting the regime's austere financial orthodoxy and its isolation from the more volatile monetary experiments seen elsewhere in interwar Europe.