Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Numista CC BY
Context
Year: 1939
Issuer: Italy Issuer flag
Currency:
(1861—2001)
Demonetized: Yes
Material
Diameter: 21.65 mm
Weight: 3.98 g
Thickness: 1.67 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Acmonital
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard75c
Numista: #11201
Value
Exchange value: 0.20 ITL

Obverse

Description:
King Vittorio Emanuele III, left-facing portrait. Engraver's name below.
Inscription:
VITT·EM·III· RE·E·IMP·

G.ROMAGNOLI
Translation:
To the Victory of Emperor, by Decree of the Senate, Imperator.

G. Romagnoli
Script: Latin
Language: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Italy personified as a woman, facing a fasces adorned with the Savoy shield. Value and dates flank the mintmark below.
Inscription:
ITALIA

R

XVIII

1939

C.20
Translation:
Italy

Year 18

1939

L.20
Script: Latin
Languages: Latin, Italian

Edge

Mints

NameMark
RomeR

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1939R

Historical background

In 1939, Italy’s currency situation was tightly controlled by the Fascist regime under Benito Mussolini, operating within a framework of economic autarky and preparation for war. The lira was not a freely convertible currency on international markets; its value was artificially maintained by the government through strict exchange controls and fixed rates set by the National Institute of Foreign Exchange. This system was designed to conserve scarce gold and foreign currency reserves, prioritize imports essential for the military-industrial complex, and shield the economy from external pressures, albeit at the cost of stifling normal trade and fostering a thriving black market for dollars and sterling.

The underlying economic reality was one of significant strain. Years of heavy spending on the Ethiopian campaign, intervention in the Spanish Civil War, and massive military rearmament had depleted resources, caused high inflation, and led to a substantial increase in public debt. While official propaganda proclaimed the lira’s strength—evoking Mussolini’s 1927 “Quota 90” policy which pegged the lira at 90 to the British pound—the reality was a severely overvalued currency. This overvaluation hurt exports, making Italian goods expensive abroad, and further exacerbated the country's balance of payments problems.

Consequently, by the eve of World War II, Italy’s financial system was increasingly isolated and fragile. The economy was directed toward militarization, with currency policy serving as a tool for state control rather than a reflection of genuine economic health. The complex system of multiple exchange rates for different types of transactions, coupled with pervasive barter agreements in foreign trade, highlighted a managed economy under severe duress, setting the stage for the profound monetary crises and rampant inflation that would follow during the war years.
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