Table of Contents
What is the current currency of Yugoslavia?
Yugoslav dinar
Yugoslavia/Currencies
Can you still use Yugoslavian dinars?
The Yugoslav dinar (YUM) is obsolete. It was replaced by the currencies of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Macedonia, and Slovenia (at par) when the country split up.
Why did Yugoslavia have hyperinflation?
The paper demonstrates that the Yugoslav hyperinflation, the second highest and the second longest episode in economic history, was driven by excessive money supply that monetized various deficits that emerged upon the disintegration of the country.
How much is Yugoslavian money worth?
Yugoslavian convertible dinars to US dollars conversion table
amount | convert | Result |
---|---|---|
1 000 Yugoslavian convertible dinar YUN | YUN | 12.92 USD |
1 500 Yugoslavian convertible dinar YUN | YUN | 19.38 USD |
2 000 Yugoslavian convertible dinars YUN | YUN | 25.84 USD |
2 500 Yugoslavian convertible dinars YUN | YUN | 32.30 USD |
Which country uses Serbian dinar?
Serbia
Serbian dinar/Countries
How many dinara notes are in Yugoslavia?
In 1992, notes for 100, 500, 1000, 5000, 10,000 and 50,000 dinara were introduced in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Again, designs modified from the previous series of notes were used but this time not in order that notes of equal value had similar designs.
When was the first 1000 dinara note made?
In 1991, 5,000 dinara notes were added. These images are to scale at 0.7 pixels per millimetre, a standard for world banknotes. In 1992, notes for 100, 500, 1000, 5000, 10,000 and 50,000 dinara were introduced in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.
When did the 10 dinara bill change?
In 1926 the government changed the design of the 10 dinara bill. Following the change of the country’s name to Yugoslavia in 1929, the bank notes changed as well. New 10 dinara notes were printed that were the same as the old ones with a changed name and a new design of 100 dinara note was issued.