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20 Pesos

Emittent Banco Nacional de Cuba
Jahr 1991
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Im Umlauf bis 1 June 2003
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Vorderseitenbeschreibung Portrait of Camilo Cienfuegos at right, with his name inscribed below; to the left, the coat of arms of the Banco Nacional de Cuba with the face value expressed in words beneath. The issuer's name appears in two lines across the top, and a tactile mark for the visually impaired is positioned at upper right. The note is printed in blue tones with red serial numbers.
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Rückseitenlegende REPUBLICA DE CUBA 20 PROGRAMA ALIMENTARIO ESTE BILLETE TIENE CURSO LEGAL Y FUERZA LIBERATORIA ILIMITADA, DE ACUERDO CON LA LEY, PARA EL PAGO DE TODA OBLIGACIÓN CONTRAÍDA O A CUMPLIR EN EL TERRITORIO NACIONAL 20 PESOS
(Translation: Republic of Cuba 20 Food Program This note is legal tender and has unlimited liberatory force, in accordance with the law, for payment of all obligations, contracted or to be fulfilled, on the whole national territory 20 Pesos)
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Anmerkungen

By 1991, Cuba's peso had been structurally isolated from hard currency for years, and the collapse of Soviet subsidies was already forcing the island into what Havana would officially call the "Special Period." Notes like this one were printed domestically in terms of function but manufactured abroad — the contract with China Banknote Printing and Minting Corporation reflected both the end of Soviet printing arrangements and the limited options available to a sanctioned economy.

Watermarking remains the sole listed security feature, a notably spare specification for the period. Cuban peso notes of this era saw genuine mass circulation under conditions of acute shortages, and heavily worn survivors are the rule rather than the exception.