In 1935, Tunisia's currency situation was defined by its status as a French protectorate, established in 1881. The monetary system was fully integrated into the French franc zone, with the French franc serving as the official legal tender. The Banque de l'Algérie, which also had the privilege of issuing banknotes for Tunisia, operated as the central banking authority, ensuring that the Tunisian economy was pegged to and dependent on the monetary policy and stability of metropolitan France.
This arrangement created a dual-track economy. While the franc was dominant in modern sectors, commerce, and government, the
piastre—a legacy unit of account from the pre-protectorate era—persisted in everyday vernacular and some local transactions. One piastre was conventionally valued at 5 centimes (0.05 francs), providing a familiar reference point for the local population. Furthermore, alongside the official banknotes, older Ottoman and local coins still circulated in rural markets, reflecting the lingering traditional economic practices beneath the formal French system.
The year 1935 fell within the global economic turmoil of the Great Depression, which impacted Tunisia through its French connection. The deflationary policies in France and the devaluation of the franc in the mid-1930s directly affected the protectorate, influencing prices, trade, and agricultural exports like wheat and olives. Consequently, while the currency system was formally stable and unified, the broader economic pressures of the era contributed to social strains and growing nationalist sentiments that questioned the costs of colonial economic integration.