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| 正面铭文 | PROVINCIA DE ENTRE RIOS LETRAS DE TESORERIA PARA CANCELACION DE OBLIGACIONES DE LA PROVINCIA DE ENTRE RIOS -- `FEDERAL` VENCIMIENTO AL PORTADOR 30 DE JUNIO DE 2003 LEY N° 9359/01 DIEZ PESOS (Translation: PROVINCE OF ENTRE RIOS TREASURY LETTERS FOR CANCELLATION OF OBLIGATIONS OF THE PROVINCE OF ENTRE RIOS - `FEDERAL` EXPIRATION TO THE BEARER JUNE 30, 2003 LAW N° 9359/01 TEN PESOS) |
| 背面描述 | The reverse is entirely text-based, presenting an extended legal extract in small letterpress type across the full field of the note. Multiple numbered articles of Ley N° 9359/01 are set out in dense columns, detailing the terms, conditions, and obligations governing the issuance of these Treasury Letters. The place and date of issue — Paraná, 31 de Diciembre de 2001 — appear in the lower margin. |
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Entre Ríos was one of several Argentine provinces that issued its own quasi-currency during the 2001–2002 financial collapse, when the federal government froze bank deposits under the corralito and provincial administrations ran out of pesos to pay salaries and suppliers. These notes — formally called bonos — were legal tender within the province for tax payments and public transactions, though private acceptance was uneven and often grudging.
Casa de Moneda's involvement gave the series a degree of physical credibility that some other provincial emissions lacked. Several provinces resorted to far cruder production methods during the same crisis.