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obverse
reverse
Coinsberg

2 Hryvni – Ukraine

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: Malva
Ukraine
Context
Year: 2012
Issuer: Ukraine Issuer flag
Issuing organization: National Bank of Ukraine
Period:
(since 1991)
Currency:
(since 1996)
Total mintage: 8,000
Material
Diameter: 13.92 mm
Weight: 1.24 g
Gold weight: 1.24 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 99.99% Gold
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard656
Numista: #69166
Value
Exchange value: 2 UAH
Bullion value: $206.84

Obverse

Description:
The Small Coat of Arms of Ukraine is centered within a bead circle, with the year 2012 above it. Between the circle and the coin's edge are the semicircular inscriptions: "НАЦІОНАЛЬНИЙ БАНК УКРАЇНИ" above and "2 ГРИВНІ" below. To the left is "Au 999,9", and to the right of the Coat is "1,24" with the Mint's logotype.
Inscription:
НАЦІОНАЛЬНИЙ БАНК УКРАЇНИ

2012

2 ГРИВНІ
Translation:
NATIONAL BANK OF UKRAINE

2012

2 HRYVNIAS
Script: Cyrillic
Language: Ukrainian
Designer and engraver: Volodymyr Demianenko

Reverse

Description:
A malva picture with the legends "МАЛЬВА" on the left and "MALVA" on the right.
Inscription:
МАЛЬВА

MALVA
Translation:
Malva
Script: Cyrillic
Languages: Latin, Ukrainian
Designer and engraver: Volodymyr Demianenko

Edge

Plain

Categories

Plants> Flower


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
20128,000Special Uncirculated

Historical background

In 2012, Ukraine's currency, the hryvnia (UAH), operated under a managed floating exchange rate regime, pegged loosely to the U.S. dollar within a narrow band set by the National Bank of Ukraine (NBU). The year was characterized by relative stability on the surface, with the official exchange rate hovering around 7.99-8.00 UAH per USD for much of the period. This stability was artificially maintained by the NBU through significant market interventions, utilizing the country's foreign currency reserves to support the hryvnia and meet International Monetary Fund (IMF) targets under a suspended standby agreement.

However, this apparent calm masked mounting underlying economic pressures. The economy was heavily dependent on steel and chemical exports, which suffered due to falling global commodity prices. Simultaneously, the cost of Russian gas imports remained cripplingly high, creating a persistent current account deficit. Furthermore, excessive government spending ahead of the October 2012 parliamentary elections, including populist measures like raising pensions and public sector wages, fueled inflation and increased budget deficits. These fundamental weaknesses created a growing overvaluation of the hryvnia, with a widening gap between the official rate and the weaker rate in the limited unofficial market.

Consequently, by the end of 2012, Ukraine was in a precarious position. The NBU's interventions to defend the currency had depleted international reserves to dangerously low levels, leaving the country vulnerable to external shocks. The IMF program was stalled due to the government's unwillingness to implement necessary austerity measures, such as raising domestic gas prices. While a full-scale currency crisis did not erupt until 2014 following political upheaval and the loss of Crimea, the unsustainable policies of 2012—artificial exchange rate stability, dwindling reserves, and lack of structural reforms—laid the crucial groundwork for the severe financial turmoil that would follow.

Series: The Smallest Golden Coin

2 Hryvni obverse
2 Hryvni reverse
2 Hryvni
2008
2 Hryvni obverse
2 Hryvni reverse
2 Hryvni
2009
2 Hryvni obverse
2 Hryvni reverse
2 Hryvni
2009
2 Hryvni obverse
2 Hryvni reverse
2 Hryvni
2010
2 Hryvni obverse
2 Hryvni reverse
2 Hryvni
2010
2 Hryvni obverse
2 Hryvni reverse
2 Hryvni
2011
2 Hryvni obverse
2 Hryvni reverse
2 Hryvni
2012
Legendary