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Heritage Auctions

1000 Zlotys (Election of Pope Ioannes Paulus II) – Poland

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: 10th Anniversary of the Election of Pope Ioannes Paulus II
Poland
Context
Year: 1988
Issuer: Poland Issuer flag
Period:
Currency:
(1949—1994)
Demonetized: Yes
Total mintage: 1,000
Material
Diameter: 18 mm
Weight: 3.1 g
Gold weight: 3.10 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 99.9% Gold
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboard174
Numista: #63796
Value
Exchange value: 1000 PLZ
Bullion value: $517.63
Inflation-adjusted value: 879752.45 PLZ

Obverse

Inscription:
· POLSKA RZECZPOSPOLITA LUDOWA ·

19 88

mw

ZŁ 1000 ZŁ
Translation:
PEOPLE'S REPUBLIC OF POLAND

1988

m w

1000 ZŁOTYCH 1000 ZŁ
Script: Latin
Language: Polish

Reverse

Inscription:
JAN PAWEŁ II X LAT PONTYFIKATU

E
Translation:
JOHN PAUL II TEN YEARS OF PONTIFICATE
Script: Latin
Language: Polish

Edge

Plain

Mints

NameMark
Mint of Poland(MW)

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1988MW1,000Proof

Historical background

By 1988, Poland's currency situation was a critical symptom of its collapsing command economy. The Polish złoty (PLN) was officially pegged at an artificially high rate by the communist government, but this bore little relation to reality. A vast and tolerated black market for foreign currency, primarily US dollars, operated openly, with exchange rates several times higher than the official one. This "dollarization" of the economy meant that key goods, services, and even apartments were often only accessible with hard currency, undermining the złoty's basic function as a medium of exchange and store of value.

The root causes were decades of economic mismanagement, including printing money to cover massive budget deficits, chronic shortages of consumer goods, and an unsustainable foreign debt burden. Hyperinflation was taking hold, with prices skyrocketing by 60% in 1988 alone, effectively wiping out savings and wages. The government's attempts at reform, including a limited legalization of private enterprise, were too little and too late to stabilize the currency, as public confidence in both the złoty and the state's economic competence had evaporated.

This monetary chaos created a paradoxical dual economy: one for those with access to dollars or Western goods, and one of empty shelves and worthless złoty for everyone else. The currency crisis fueled widespread social unrest, most visibly through the waves of strikes led by the Solidarity trade union in 1988. These strikes directly pressured the government into the Round Table Talks of 1989, which would lead to the end of communist rule and set the stage for the radical "shock therapy" economic reforms, including a new złoty, in the early 1990s.
Legendary