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obverse
reverse
Katz Coins Notes & Supplies Corp.

1 Peso – Cuba

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: Esperanto Congress
Cuba
Context
Year: 1990
Issuer: Cuba Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1959)
Currency:
(since 1914)
Demonetization: 1990
Total mintage: 6,000
Material
Diameter: 29.9 mm
Weight: 11.3 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper-nickel
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard250
Numista: #14174
Value
Exchange value: 1 CUP

Obverse

Description:
Cuba coat of arms, curved country name above, face value below, flanked by two 5-pointed stars.
Inscription:
REPUBLICA DE CUBA

★ 1 PESO ★
Translation:
REPUBLIC OF CUBA

★ 1 PESO ★
Script: Latin
Language: Spanish

Reverse

Description:
Dr. Luis Lázaro Zamenhof at right, with a stylized globe. Cuba, highlighted with a star and an "E", is on the globe. Stylized "75" above. Event name in Esperanto curves around the top. Mintmark on right; place and year at bottom.
Inscription:
UNIVERSALA KONGRESO 75 DE ESPERANTO

HAVANO

1990
Translation:
75th Universal Congress of Esperanto

Havana

1990
Script: Latin
Languages: Spanish, Esperanto

Edge

Plain


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
19906,000BU

Historical background

The currency situation in Cuba in 1990 stood on the precipice of a profound crisis, marking the final moments of a relatively stable, albeit isolated, mono-monetary system. Since the 1970s, the country operated primarily with the Cuban Peso (CUP), a non-convertible currency sustained by massive subsidies and preferential trade from the Soviet Union. This relationship allowed Cuba to maintain a command economy where the peso, while weak internationally, provided for basic goods and services through a rationing system (libreta) and state-set prices. The economy was artificially insulated, and the possession of foreign currency by citizens was illegal.

However, 1990 was the year the foundation of this system violently collapsed. With the dissolution of the Soviet bloc, Cuba lost approximately 85% of its foreign trade almost overnight, entering the "Special Period in Time of Peace." The Soviet subsidies, which had amounted to billions of dollars annually, vanished, crippling Cuba's ability to import essential goods like food, medicine, and oil. While the formal dual-currency system (introducing the U.S. dollar alongside the peso) would not be fully legalized until 1993, 1990 was the catalyst. The black market for dollars exploded as the state's peso economy began to seize up, creating a de facto but illegal two-tier economy where access to hard currency became the key to survival.

Consequently, 1990 represents the decisive turning point from stability to severe scarcity. The Cuban Peso's purchasing power plummeted as production stalled and import capacity vanished, while the U.S. dollar's underground value soared. This period set the immediate stage for the government's reluctant but necessary legalization of the U.S. dollar in 1993, a desperate measure to attract remittances and stimulate a collapsing economy. Thus, the currency situation of 1990 is defined by the abrupt end of Soviet-backed stability and the chaotic, unregulated birth of the dual-currency reality that would dominate Cuban life for decades.
🌟 Limited