Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Ulmo
Context
Years: 1925–1939
Issuer: Poland Issuer flag
Period:
(1918—1939)
Currency:
(1924—1949)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 181,540,000
Material
Diameter: 17.6 mm
Weight: 2 g
Thickness: 1.2 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Bronze
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboard9a
Numista: #4113

Obverse

Description:
Polish Coat of Arms (1927–1939)
Inscription:
RZECZPOSPOLITA POLSKA·1938·
Translation:
REPUBLIC OF POLAND·1938·
Script: Latin
Language: Polish

Reverse

Description:
Stylized flowers flank the denomination.
Inscription:
2 GROSZE
Script: Latin

Edge

Plain

Mints

NameMark
Mint of Poland

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1925W39,000,000
1927W15,300,000
1928W13,400,000
1930W20,000,000
1931W9,500,000
1932W6,500,000
1933W7,000,000
1934W9,350,000
1935W5,800,000
1936W5,800,000
1937W17,360,000
1938W20,530,000
1939W12,000,000

Historical background

In 1925, Poland faced a severe currency crisis that threatened the economic stability achieved in the early years of its rebirth. Following independence in 1918, the country had grappled with hyperinflation driven by wartime destruction, reconstruction costs, and a lack of unified fiscal policy. To combat this, Finance Minister Władysław Grabski implemented a sweeping reform in 1924, introducing a new national currency, the złoty, to replace the depreciated Polish mark. The złoty was placed on a gold standard, pegged to both the US dollar and gold, which initially restored confidence, stabilized prices, and attracted foreign investment.

However, the underlying fundamentals for sustaining the gold peg were weak. Poland's trade balance was deeply negative, as the country needed to import crucial machinery and goods for modernization, while its agricultural exports faced stiff competition and falling prices on the world market. This drained gold and foreign currency reserves. Furthermore, the government, continuing to run a budget deficit, resorted to borrowing from the Bank of Poland, which increased the money supply and undermined the złoty's gold backing. A poor harvest in 1924 exacerbated the outflow of reserves, creating a growing gap between the official gold-backed rate and the market's perception of the currency's value.

By mid-1925, the situation became untenable. As reserves plummeted, the Bank of Poland could no longer defend the fixed peg. In July 1925, the government was forced to suspend gold convertibility and effectively devalue the złoty, abandoning the cornerstone of the Grabski reforms. The crisis led to a sharp economic downturn, a return of inflation, and the collapse of Grabski's government. It exposed the fragility of Poland's interwar economy, highlighting the challenges of maintaining monetary stability without sufficient industrial exports and fiscal discipline, a lesson that would shape financial policy for the remainder of the decade.
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