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obverse
reverse
Heritage Auctions

200 Zlotys – Poland

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: Visit of Pope Ioannes Paulus II
Poland
Context
Years: 1982–1986
Issuer: Poland Issuer flag
Period:
Currency:
(1949—1994)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 6,763
Material
Diameter: 40 mm
Weight: 28.3 g
Silver weight: 21.23 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 75% Silver
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboard137
Numista: #63788
Value
Exchange value: 200 PLZ
Bullion value: $61.69
Inflation-adjusted value: 852274.81 PLZ

Obverse

Description:
Eagle spreading wings over date.
Inscription:
· POLSKA · RZECZPOSPOLITA · LUDOWA ·

19 82

CHI

ZŁ 200 ZŁ
Translation:
PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF POLAND

19 82

CHI

200 ZŁ 200 ZŁ
Script: Latin
Language: Polish

Reverse

Description:
Bust of Pope Paul II, left-facing.
Inscription:
JAN · PAWEŁ · II
Translation:
JOHN PAUL II
Script: Latin
Language: Latin

Edge

Plain

Mints

NameMark
ValcambiCHI

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1982CHI3,000
1982CHI3,650Proof
1985CHI1
1985CHI5Proof
1986CHI32
1986CHI75Proof

Historical background

In 1982, Poland's currency situation was a direct reflection of the profound economic and political crisis engulfing the nation. The imposition of martial law in December 1981 by the communist regime, aimed at crushing the Solidarity trade union, further isolated the country internationally, leading to severe Western sanctions and a collapse in foreign credit. This exacerbated an already disastrous economic reality characterized by hyperinflation, widespread shortages of basic goods, and a massive foreign debt burden. The official złoty became increasingly worthless, with the government resorting to drastic price hikes for essentials while wages were suppressed, dramatically reducing real incomes and pushing much of the population into poverty.

The economy operated through a dysfunctional dual system. Alongside the official economy, a vast black market flourished where goods could be obtained for hard currencies like the US dollar or through barter. The government itself tacitly acknowledged the dollar's supremacy by operating a chain of state-run Pewex and Baltona shops, where Poles could purchase otherwise unavailable Western and luxury items exclusively with foreign currency. This created a stark social divide between those with access to hard currency (often from remittances from abroad) and those reliant solely on the rapidly depreciating złoty. The official exchange rate set by the government was a meaningless fiction, with a vastly different and highly volatile rate prevailing on the black market.

Monetary policy was powerless to address the core issues, as the crisis was fundamentally rooted in the failures of central planning and the political standoff. Printing money to cover state subsidies for loss-making industries and to placate social unrest only fed the inflationary spiral. There was no meaningful convertibility of the złoty, and attempts at economic reform were stymied by the political priorities of the authoritarian regime. Consequently, the currency chaos of 1982 symbolized the complete erosion of public trust in the state's economic management and highlighted the unsustainable nature of Poland's command economy within a collapsing socialist bloc.
Legendary