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5 Pesos

Issuer Banco Central de la República Argentina
Year 2003-2015
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Shape Rectangular
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Reverse lettering CINCO PESOS
REPUBLICA ARGENTINA
EN UNIÓN Y LIBERTAD
José Francisco de San Martín (Yapeyú 1776 - Boulogne-sur-Mer 1850)
Padre de la patria, libertador de Argentina, Chile y Perú
CERRO DE LA GLORIA - MENDOZA
CASA DE MONEDA
(Translation: Five Pesos / Argentine Republic / In Union and Freedom / José Francisco de San Martín (Yapeyú 1776 - Boulogne-sur-Mer 1850) / Father of the country, liberator of Argentina, Chile and Peru / Hill of Glory - Mendoza / National Mint)
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Protection description General José de San Martín's portrait, visible when held to light; embedded security thread running vertically through the note.
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Comments

This note entered circulation in the wake of Argentina's 2001–2002 financial collapse, when the peso had just been unpegged from the dollar after a decade of convertibility. The Banco Central was rebuilding public trust in domestic currency from essentially zero — a 5-peso note in early 2003 was worth a fraction of what the pre-crisis equivalent had commanded, and Argentines who remembered the corralito were in no hurry to hold paper.

Casa de Moneda de Argentina printed the entire series domestically, an intentional assertion of self-sufficiency following years of reliance on foreign security printers. The security specification is modest by contemporary standards — watermark and thread only, no color-shifting ink or microprinting — reflecting both budget constraints and the relatively low face value.