Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Central Bank of Russia
Context
Year: 1993
Country: Russia Country flag
Issuing organization: Central Bank of Russia
Period:
(since 1991)
Currency:
(1992—1997)
Demonetization: 1 January 1998
Total mintage: 7,500
Material
Diameter: 22.6 mm
Weight: 8.75 g
Gold weight: 7.88 g
Thickness: 1.5 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 90% Gold
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboard453
Numista: #64111
Value
Exchange value: 50 RUR
Bullion value: $1309.28
Inflation-adjusted value: 296589.24 RUR

Obverse

Description:
Center: Bank of Russia emblem (Bilibin's double-headed eagle). Below left: metal and fineness. Center: mint mark. Below right: fine metal content. Inscriptions along dotted rim: top - "50 ROUBLES 1993", bottom - "BANK OF RUSSIA".
Inscription:
50 РУБЛЕЙ 1993 г.

Au900 ММД 7.78

БАНК РОССИИ
Translation:
50 RUBLES 1993

Au900 MMD 7.78

BANK OF RUSSIA
Scripts: Cyrillic, Latin
Language: Russian
Designer and engraver: Alexander Vasilyevich Baklanov

Reverse

Description:
Left: a lyre and laurel branch. Right: a muse with a wreath.
Inscriptions: "RUSSIA AND WORLD CULTURE" above, "SV Rakhmaninov" below.
Inscription:
РОССИЯ И МИРОВАЯ КУЛЬТУРА

С.В. РАХМАНИНОВ
Translation:
RUSSIA AND WORLD CULTURE

S.V. RACHMANINOFF
Script: Cyrillic
Language: Russian

Edge

200 corrugations

Categories

Art> Music

Mints

NameMark
Moscow Mint(ММД)

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1993ММД7,500Proof

Historical background

In 1993, the Russian Federation was engulfed in a severe monetary crisis, a direct consequence of the economic shock therapy and price liberalization begun in 1992. Hyperinflation, running at an annual rate of over 800%, was eroding savings and wages, while the Central Bank of Russia (CBR), under pressure from industrial lobbies and parliament, continued to print massive amounts of rubles to finance government deficits and provide cheap credits to failing state enterprises. This flood of money, chasing a collapsing supply of goods, created a self-reinforcing cycle of price increases and a dramatic loss of confidence in the ruble, which was still using Soviet-era designs.

The situation reached a critical point in July 1993 when the government of Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin and CBR Chairman Viktor Gerashchenko launched a sudden and confiscatory currency reform. Aimed at curbing inflation in other former Soviet states and reasserting Moscow's monetary control, the reform declared that pre-1993 Soviet and Russian ruble banknotes would be withdrawn from circulation. Citizens were given a narrow two-week window to exchange limited amounts of old cash for new Russian ruble notes, with severe restrictions on sums for non-residents. The move was widely perceived as a brutal de facto confiscation of cash savings, particularly affecting the populations of other post-Soviet republics still using the ruble zone.

The 1993 reform effectively dismantled the crumbling ruble zone, forcing independent currencies in neighboring states. While it succeeded in temporarily tightening the money supply and consolidating the Russian ruble, it came at a tremendous social cost, further devastating public trust in state institutions and the currency itself. The fundamental drivers of inflation—soft budget constraints and directed credits—remained largely unaddressed, meaning the stabilization was short-lived. The crisis of 1993 set the stage for the even more traumatic hyperinflation and monetary collapse that would culminate in the ruble's redenomination in 1998.

Series: Contribution of Russia to World Culture

3 Rubles obverse
3 Rubles reverse
3 Rubles
1993
3 Rubles obverse
3 Rubles reverse
3 Rubles
1993
25 Rubles obverse
25 Rubles reverse
25 Rubles
1993
50 Rubles obverse
50 Rubles reverse
50 Rubles
1993
100 Rubles obverse
100 Rubles reverse
100 Rubles
1993
150 Rubles obverse
150 Rubles reverse
150 Rubles
1993
3 Rubles obverse
3 Rubles reverse
3 Rubles
1994
Legendary