Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Heritage Auctions
Context
Years: 1943–1944
Period:
(1940—1944)
Currency:
(1943—1944)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Diameter: 41 mm
Weight: 38 g
Silver weight: 34.20 g
Thickness: 7 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 90% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboardA2a
Numista: #49612
Value
Bullion value: $97.88

Obverse

Description:
Inscription:
Translation:
Rich
Language: Chinese
Engraver: R. Mercier

Reverse

Description:
Chinese and Lao lettering.
Inscription:
ຫນຶ່ງດອນລາ

銀正兩一
Translation:
One Dollar

One Tael of Pure Silver
Languages: Chinese, Lao
Engraver: R. Mercier

Edge

Reeded

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection

Historical background

In 1943, the currency situation in French Indochina was a complex and deteriorating system under the dual pressures of Japanese occupation and Vichy French colonial administration. Officially, the currency remained the French Indochinese Piastre (ICPI), issued by the Banque de l'Indochine. However, its stability had been severely compromised. To finance their military occupation and procure local resources, Japanese forces compelled the Banque de l'Indochine to provide massive, unsecured advances. This was facilitated through a special account, effectively forcing the bank to print currency to cover the Japanese expenditures, leading to rampant inflation and a growing disconnect between the printed money and the colony's real economic output.

The monetary landscape became a tangled hierarchy of currencies. Alongside the increasingly devalued piastre, the Japanese introduced their own military scrip, the Japanese Military Yen (JMY), which circulated at a forced, artificial parity with the piastre. This created a dual-currency system where both forms of money were losing value, but the JMY was particularly distrusted by the local population. Furthermore, hoarding of silver piastres and a retreat into barter trade became common as inflation eroded purchasing power, especially for essential goods which were scarce due to wartime blockades and the Japanese prioritization of resource extraction.

This unstable financial environment served as a significant factor in rising social discontent and hardship. The Vichy French authorities, while retaining nominal administrative control, had no power to refuse Japanese financial demands, making them complicit in the inflationary spiral in the eyes of the local populace. The currency crisis of 1943 thus weakened the legitimacy of the colonial regime, exacerbated economic suffering, and laid the groundwork for the severe hyperinflation and monetary chaos that would engulf the region in the final years of the war and its immediate aftermath.

Series: 1943 French Indochina circulation coins

1 Cent obverse
1 Cent reverse
1 Cent
1943
5 Cents obverse
5 Cents reverse
5 Cents
1943
½ Tael obverse
½ Tael reverse
½ Tael
1943-1944
1 Tael obverse
1 Tael reverse
1 Tael
1943-1944
1 Tael obverse
1 Tael reverse
1 Tael
1943-1944
1 Tael obverse
1 Tael reverse
1 Tael
1943-1944
💎 Extremely Rare