Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Münzkabinett Berlin CC0
Context
Years: 1982–1984
Issuer: Greece Issuer flag
Period:
Currency:
(1954—2001)
Demonetization: 28 February 2002
Total mintage: 30,310,000
Material
Diameter: 31 mm
Weight: 12 g
Thickness: 2 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper-nickel (75% Copper, 25% Nickel)
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard134
Numista: #566
Value
Exchange value: 50 GRD
Inflation-adjusted value: 914.32 GRD

Obverse

Description:
"50 ΔΡΑΧΜΕΣ" at center, with country name above and mintmark below, over a sea background.
Inscription:
ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΗ ΔΗΜΟΚΡΑΤΙΑ

50

ΔΡΑΧΜΕΣ

1982
Translation:
HELLENIC REPUBLIC

50

DRACHMAS

1982
Script: Greek
Language: Greek
Engraver: V. Sampatakos

Reverse

Description:
A left-profile portrait of Solon (c. 638–558 BC), the Athenian statesman and poet, bears his name in Greek.
Inscription:
Β.Σ.

ΣΟΛΩΝ
Translation:
Solon
Script: Greek
Language: Greek
Engraver: V. Sampatakos

Edge

Plain


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
198218,899,000
198411,411,000

Historical background

In 1982, Greece’s currency situation was defined by its recent entry into the European Monetary System (EMS) in 1979 and the ongoing struggle to control high inflation and a volatile drachma. Membership in the EMS’s Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) was intended to impose monetary discipline and stabilize the drachma against other European currencies, notably the German Deutsche Mark. However, Greece operated under a "special status," meaning it did not fully participate in the ERM’s fixed parity grid, reflecting the economy's fragility and the government's need for greater flexibility.

Domestically, the currency was under significant pressure from persistent structural issues. Inflation remained stubbornly high, averaging around 21% in 1982, severely eroding the drachma's purchasing power. This was fueled by expansive fiscal policies, substantial public sector deficits, and widespread indexation of wages to prices, creating a vicious cycle. Consequently, the drachma experienced multiple devaluations within the EMS framework to restore competitiveness, as the country struggled to balance the external constraint of the EMS with internal economic realities.

The broader context was Greece's political and economic integration into the European Community (EC), which it had joined in 1981. The socialist PASOK government, elected that same year, faced the difficult task of reconciling its populist welfare promises with the need for austerity to meet European monetary standards. Thus, the currency situation in 1982 was a tense balancing act: an attempt to anchor the drachma to a more stable European system while grappling with deep-rooted domestic inflation and political pressures, setting the stage for future monetary challenges.

Series: 1982 Greece circulation coins

2 Drachmai obverse
2 Drachmai reverse
2 Drachmai
1982-1986
5 Drachmai obverse
5 Drachmai reverse
5 Drachmai
1982-2000
10 Drachmai obverse
10 Drachmai reverse
10 Drachmai
1982-2000
20 Drachmai obverse
20 Drachmai reverse
20 Drachmai
1982-1988
50 Drachmai obverse
50 Drachmai reverse
50 Drachmai
1982-1984
🌱 Very Common