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obverse
reverse
Julio Vega CC BY-NC-SA

100 Dram (Armenian dram) – Armenia

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: 30th Anniversary of the Armenian dram
Armenia
Context
Year: 2023
Issuer: Armenia Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1991)
Currency:
(since 1993)
Material
Diameter: 22.5 mm
Weight: 4 g
Thickness: 1.47 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Steel (Nickel-plated Steel)
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard328
Numista: #389449
Value
Exchange value: 100 AMD

Obverse

Description:
"30" with the Armenian dram sign.
Inscription:
ՀԱՅԱՍՏԱՆԻ ՀԱՆՐԱՊԵՏՈՒԹՅՈՒՆ



1993

2023

REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
Translation:
REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA

3 DRAM

1993

2023

REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
Scripts: Armenian, Latin
Language: Armenian

Reverse

Description:
Denomination
Inscription:
100

ԴՐԱՄ
Translation:
Dram
Script: Armenian
Languages: Grabar), Armenian

Edge

Reeded

Mints

NameMark
Royal Mint

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
2023

Historical background

In 2023, Armenia's currency, the dram (AMD), experienced a period of significant and sustained appreciation against major foreign currencies, particularly the US dollar and Russian ruble. This trend, which began in mid-2022, continued through much of the year, with the dram reaching its strongest level in over a decade. The primary drivers were substantial external inflows, including increased foreign direct investment, heightened money transfers from Russians relocating to Armenia, and expanded export revenues. This created an excess supply of foreign currency within the country, pushing the dram's value higher.

The strong dram presented a complex economic picture with clear winners and losers. On the positive side, it helped curb inflation by making imports cheaper, including essential goods like fuel and food. It also reduced the cost of servicing foreign currency-denominated debt. However, it posed a serious challenge to the crucial export sector and domestic industries competing with imports, as their goods became more expensive for foreign buyers and less competitive against now-cheaper imported products. This raised concerns from businesses, particularly in agriculture and manufacturing, about profitability and long-term viability.

In response, the Central Bank of Armenia (CBA) intervened cautiously. While generally maintaining a floating exchange rate policy, it engaged in periodic market interventions to purchase excess foreign currency, building up international reserves to record levels in an effort to moderate the appreciation pace. The CBA also lowered its key policy rate several times during the year, partly to make dram-denominated assets less attractive and ease appreciation pressures. The situation remained a central topic of economic debate, balancing macroeconomic stability against the need to protect key sectors of the real economy.

Series: 30th Anniversary of the Armenian dram

10 Dram obverse
10 Dram reverse
10 Dram
2023
20 Dram obverse
20 Dram reverse
20 Dram
2023
50 Dram obverse
50 Dram reverse
50 Dram
2023
100 Dram obverse
100 Dram reverse
100 Dram
2023
200 Dram obverse
200 Dram reverse
200 Dram
2023
500 Dram obverse
500 Dram reverse
500 Dram
2023
🌱 Fairly Common