Yugoslavia's 1994 coinage was issued during one of the worst hyperinflationary episodes in recorded history. By January 1994, the monthly inflation rate had reached approximately 313 million percent, and the dinar was being redenominated repeatedly — this issue emerged from the so-called "fourth dinar," itself replaced within months by the novi dinar, pegged temporarily to the German mark at parity.
Coins from this period rarely circulated in any meaningful sense; transactions at those price levels were conducted in Deutsche marks or avoided altogether.
Yugoslavia's 1994 coinage was issued during one of the worst hyperinflationary episodes in recorded history. By January 1994, the monthly inflation rate had reached approximately 313 million percent, and the dinar was being redenominated repeatedly — this issue emerged from the so-called "fourth dinar," itself replaced within months by the novi dinar, pegged temporarily to the German mark at parity.
Coins from this period rarely circulated in any meaningful sense; transactions at those price levels were conducted in Deutsche marks or avoided altogether.