In 1935, Costa Rica's currency situation was characterized by a period of monetary stability under the gold exchange standard, a system it had formally adopted in 1896. The official currency was the
colón, which was pegged to the British pound sterling at a fixed rate of 10.625 colones to £1. This link to sterling, and indirectly to gold, provided a stable foundation for international trade and helped control inflation. The physical currency in circulation consisted of banknotes issued by three private commercial banks—the Banco Internacional de Costa Rica, the Banco Anglo-Costarricense, and the Banco de Costa Rica—under government supervision, alongside silver and bronze subsidiary coins.
However, this stability was maintained within a context of limited economic diversification and vulnerability to external shocks. The national economy remained heavily dependent on coffee and banana exports, whose prices on the global market were volatile. The Great Depression of the 1930s had sharply reduced export revenues and caused significant fiscal strain. While the colón's peg held, the government of President Ricardo Jiménez Oreamuno (1932-1936) faced persistent budget deficits and a growing internal debt, which constrained public investment and social spending.
Consequently, the mid-1930s represented a calm before a significant monetary reform. The reliance on multiple private banks for note issuance was increasingly seen as an inefficient system that limited centralized economic policy. This set the stage for the major institutional change that would follow in 1936: the creation of the
International Bank of Costa Rica (Banco Internacional de Costa Rica S.A.), which was granted the exclusive right of note issue, effectively centralizing monetary authority and paving the way for the eventual establishment of the Central Bank of Costa Rica in 1950.