Issued as part of Cuba's extensive series of non-circulating legal tender coins marketed primarily to foreign collectors and the tourist economy, this piece generated hard currency for the Castro government during a period when the Soviet subsidy structure was beginning to show strain — roughly three years before the USSR's collapse would trigger the "Special Period" austerity crisis. The "Patria o Muerte" slogan had been state currency since the early 1960s, but its appearance on exportable collector coinage carried a particular irony: the coins were designed to leave the country.
Issued as part of Cuba's extensive series of non-circulating legal tender coins marketed primarily to foreign collectors and the tourist economy, this piece generated hard currency for the Castro government during a period when the Soviet subsidy structure was beginning to show strain — roughly three years before the USSR's collapse would trigger the "Special Period" austerity crisis. The "Patria o Muerte" slogan had been state currency since the early 1960s, but its appearance on exportable collector coinage carried a particular irony: the coins were designed to leave the country.