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| 背面描述 | The reverse is dominated by the large denomination numeral $b. 5.000.000 at centre-left, rendered in bold letterpress against a fine guilloche underprint in orange and cream tones. A decorative rosette vignette appears at the right, with a wavy border frame enclosing the entire design. A two-line legal tender inscription appears at the top. |
| 背面铭文 | ESTE CHEQUE TIENE CIRCULACION LEGAL A NIVEL NACIONAL Y SIRVE PARA PAGOS DE TRANSACCIONES PUBLICAS Y PRIVADAS. $b. 5.000.000 (Translation: This check is legal tender at national level and is valid for payment of public and private transactions. $b. 5,000,000) |
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Bolivia's hyperinflation of 1984–1985 was among the worst in recorded history, with annual inflation peaking at roughly 23,000 percent. Notes like this one were a direct consequence — the 5,000,000 peso boliviano denomination was not a product of monetary ambition but of arithmetic desperation. The boliviano was introduced in September 1985 at a conversion rate of one million pesos bolivianos to one new boliviano, instantly rendering the entire peso series obsolete.
Printing was handled by Argentina's Casa de Moneda in Buenos Aires, a common regional arrangement when a central bank's domestic facilities couldn't keep pace with demand — which Bolivia's emphatically could not.