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Heritage Auctions

100 Rubles (Russian Minting) – Soviet Union

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: 1000th Anniversary of Russian Minting Serie
Russia
Context
Year: 1988
Country: Russia Country flag
Issuer: Soviet Union Issuer flag
Period:
(1922—1991)
Currency:
(1961—1991)
Demonetization: 1991
Total mintage: 14,000
Material
Diameter: 30 mm
Weight: 17.45 g
Gold weight: 15.71 g
Thickness: 1.8 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 90% Gold
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
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Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboard214
Numista: #55964
Value
Exchange value: 100 SUR
Bullion value: $2616.23

Obverse

Description:
The Soviet Union's coat of arms; value.
Inscription:
СССР

Au900

15.55

ММД

100

РУБЛЕЙ

1988
Translation:
USSR

Au900

15.55

Moscow Mint

100

RUBLES

1988
Script: Cyrillic
Language: Russian

Reverse

Description:
Vladimir's zlatnik, an ancient Rus gold coin.
Inscription:
1000-ЛЕТИЕ ДРЕВНЕРУССКОЙ МОНЕТНОЙ ЧЕКАНКИ

988 г.

ЗЛАТНИК

ВЛАДИМИРА
Translation:
MILLENNIUM OF ANCIENT RUSSIAN COINAGE

988

ZLATNIK

OF VLADIMIR
Script: Cyrillic
Language: Russian

Edge

Reeded

Mints

NameMark
Moscow Mint(ММД)

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1988ММД14,000

Historical background

By 1988, the Soviet Union's currency situation was characterized by a profound and worsening contradiction between an overabundance of rubles in circulation and a severe shortage of goods to purchase with them. This "monetary overhang" was the direct result of decades of central planning, which set prices administratively with little relation to supply or demand. While the state kept prices for basic necessities artificially low, it simultaneously paid wages to a largely unproductive workforce and ran massive budget deficits, primarily financed by printing money. The result was that citizens accumulated rubles they could not spend, as shelves emptied of desirable goods, forcing savings into unproductive channels or the black market.

The economic reforms of Perestroika, initiated by Mikhail Gorbachev, inadvertently exacerbated these monetary pressures. Policies like the 1987 Law on State Enterprise, which gave factories more autonomy but without introducing market mechanisms, led managers to raise wages without corresponding increases in output. The anti-alcohol campaign also severely slashed a key source of state revenue. Meanwhile, the legalization of small private cooperatives in 1988 began to introduce goods at market prices, but this only highlighted the absurdity of the official price system and further drained rubles from the population, deepening the imbalance.

Consequently, the ruble was becoming increasingly meaningless as a unit of value. Confidence in the currency collapsed, as citizens preferred to hold hard currency or tangible assets. A thriving black market, where the ruble traded at a fraction of its official exchange rate, became a more accurate gauge of its worth. This monetary crisis was a critical symptom of the broader systemic failure of the command economy. By 1988, the growing overhang created a ticking time bomb, setting the stage for the desperate and poorly planned price reforms of the early 1990s that would culminate in hyperinflation and the ruble's effective demise.
Legendary