The Serbian half-dinar denomination was reintroduced following the dissolution of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and the establishment of the new dinar under the National Bank of Serbia. Fractional paper notes of this size are uncommon in modern European currency — by the early 2000s most central banks had long abandoned sub-unit paper in favor of coin — making this an oddity of the post-Milošević monetary reorganization rather than routine issue policy.
Circulation life was short. The denomination was effectively redundant from the outset given prevailing price levels.
The Serbian half-dinar denomination was reintroduced following the dissolution of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and the establishment of the new dinar under the National Bank of Serbia. Fractional paper notes of this size are uncommon in modern European currency — by the early 2000s most central banks had long abandoned sub-unit paper in favor of coin — making this an oddity of the post-Milošević monetary reorganization rather than routine issue policy.
Circulation life was short. The denomination was effectively redundant from the outset given prevailing price levels.