Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Mike Bentley CC BY-NC

2 Euro – Spain

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: Monastery and Site of the Escorial
Spain
Context
Year: 2013
Issuer: Spain Issuer flag
Currency:
(since 2002)
Total mintage: 4,055,300
Material
Diameter: 25.75 mm
Weight: 8.5 g
Thickness: 2.2 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Bimetallic (Nickel brass center, Copper-nickel ring)
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard1305
Numista: #42976
Value
Exchange value: 2 EUR = $2.36
Inflation-adjusted value: 2.52 EUR

Obverse

Description:
Inner view of San Lorenzo del Escorial Monastery. Outer ring features the twelve stars of the European flag.
Inscription:
ESPAÑA 2013

M
Translation:
Spain 2013
Script: Latin
Language: Spanish

Reverse

Description:
Map of Europe with fifteen EU nations, flanked by six stars above and six below.
Inscription:
2 EURO

LL
Script: Latin
Engraver: Luc Luycx

Edge

Reeded with 2's & stars
Legend:
2 ** 2 ** 2 ** 2 ** 2 ** 2 **

Mints

NameMark
Royal Mint of Madrid(M)

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
2013M4,000,000
2013M54,000BU
2013M1,300Proof

Historical background

In 2013, Spain was in the midst of a profound economic and banking crisis, but its currency situation was uniquely stable because it was a member of the Eurozone. The country used the euro, having fully adopted it in 2002, which meant it did not have an independent national currency to devalue. This was a double-edged sword: it provided stability and prevented a speculative currency collapse, but it also stripped Spain of the critical tool of monetary devaluation to regain competitiveness against its trading partners. Consequently, the necessary economic adjustments had to occur through a painful internal devaluation—forcing down wages and prices through austerity and high unemployment.

The year was dominated by the aftermath of the 2012 European sovereign debt crisis, with Spain having officially requested a €100 billion European financial assistance package for its banking sector in June of that year. While this averted a full bailout of the state itself, 2013 was a period of stringent conditionality and fiscal consolidation. The government, led by Mariano Rajoy, implemented severe austerity measures and labor market reforms to reduce the budget deficit and address the economy's deep structural issues. The focus was on repairing bank balance sheets, with a comprehensive stress test and restructuring process overseen by the European authorities.

Despite the stable euro, the economic context was dire. Unemployment peaked at over 26% (and above 55% for youth), and the country endured a deep recession with collapsing domestic demand. There was ongoing market pressure on Spanish government bond yields, reflecting fears about sovereign debt sustainability, though these had fallen from their 2012 peaks due to the European Central Bank's pledge to do "whatever it takes" to preserve the euro. The currency situation, therefore, was paradoxically calm on the surface, embedded within the Eurozone's framework, while the underlying economic reality was one of severe distress and a grinding struggle to restore competitiveness without the traditional lever of exchange rate policy.

Series: UNESCO World Heritage

2½ Euro obverse
2½ Euro reverse
2½ Euro
2012
2½ Euro obverse
2½ Euro reverse
2½ Euro
2012
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2013
5 Euro obverse
5 Euro reverse
5 Euro
2013
200 Euro obverse
200 Euro reverse
200 Euro
2013
100 Euro obverse
100 Euro reverse
100 Euro
2013
2.5 Euro obverse
2.5 Euro reverse
2.5 Euro
2013

Series: Spain 2 euro commemoratives

2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2011
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2012
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2012
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2013
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2014
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2014
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2015
🌱 Very Common