Logo Title
obverse
reverse
tolnomur CC BY-NC-SA
Context
Year: 1925
Issuer: Yugoslavia
Currency:
(1918—1941)
Demonetization: 20 April 1940
Total mintage: 37,500,410
Material
Diameter: 23 mm
Weight: 4.92 g
Thickness: 1.8 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper-nickel (75% Copper, 25% Nickel)
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard5
Numista: #4865

Obverse

Description:
Portrait of King Alexander I of Yugoslavia in left profile.
Inscription:
АЛЕКСАНДАР I. КРАЉ СРБА, ХРВАТА И СЛОВЕНАЦА

A.PATEY
Translation:
ALEXANDER I. KING OF THE SERBS, CROATS, AND SLOVENES

A.PATEY
Scripts: Cyrillic, Latin
Language: Serbian

Reverse

Description:
Crown above. Oak and laurel wreath encircling the value and date, with the Poissy mintmark left of the ribbon.
Inscription:
1

ДИНАР

1925
Translation:
DINAR

1925
Scripts: Cyrillic, Latin
Language: Serbian

Edge

Reeded


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
192537,500,410

Historical background

In 1925, the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (soon to be renamed Yugoslavia) was in the midst of a critical monetary and financial crisis. The state, formed after World War I, had inherited a chaotic situation with four different currencies in circulation from its predecessor states, each with varying values and backed by different central banks. Initial attempts at unification, including the 1920 introduction of the Yugoslav krone, failed to bring stability, as the government financed its reconstruction and agrarian reform through rampant money printing, leading to severe hyperinflation that peaked disastrously in the early 1920s.

The turning point came with the Financial Reconstruction Act of 1925, a landmark piece of legislation masterminded by British financial expert Sir Arthur Young and Finance Minister Milan Stojadinović. This act established a new, stable currency, the Yugoslav dinar, which was placed on the gold exchange standard. It was defined as containing 26.5 milligrams of pure gold and was made fully convertible, with its value pegged not only to gold but also to the British pound and the French franc. This move was designed to restore domestic and, crucially, international confidence in the nation's economy.

The immediate effect in 1925 was a period of hard-won stabilization. The new dinar successfully ended the hyperinflation, allowing for predictable pricing and trade. Furthermore, the act led to the creation of the independent National Bank of the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, which was granted a monopoly on currency issuance and was legally prohibited from financing the government's budget deficits. This institutional reform was intended to prevent a return to inflationary financing. While the stabilization attracted foreign loans and investment, it also imposed a rigid, deflationary discipline on the economy, setting the stage for future political and social tensions as the state grappled with the constraints of the gold standard during the global economic shifts of the late 1920s.

Series: 1925 Yugoslavia circulation coins

50 Para obverse
50 Para reverse
50 Para
1925
1 Dinar obverse
1 Dinar reverse
1 Dinar
1925
2 Dinars obverse
2 Dinars reverse
2 Dinars
1925
20 Dinars obverse
20 Dinars reverse
20 Dinars
1925
🌱 Very Common