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| 正面描述 | 登录 以查看详情 |
|---|---|
| 正面铭文 | BANCO CENTRAL DE LA REPUBLICA ARGENTINA CINCUENTA PESOS CONVERTIBLES DE CURSO LEGAL DOMINGO FAUSTINO SARMIENTO (Translation: Central Bank of the Argentine Republic Fifty Pesos Convertible of Legal Tender Domingo Faustino Sarmiento) |
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| 背面铭文 | REPUBLICA ARGENTINA en unión y libertad CINCUENTA PESOS Domingo Faustino Sarmiento (San Juan 1811-Paraguay 1888). Presidente de la nacion, gobernador de San Juan, pedagogo, escritor, estadista y militar. (Translation: Argentine Republic Fifty Pesos Domingo Faustino Sarmiento (San Juan 1811-Paraguay 1888). President of the nation, governor of San Juan, pedagogue, writer, statesman and military man.) |
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This series was printed entirely within Argentina by Casa de Moneda — notable because earlier high-denomination peso convertible issues had relied on foreign printers. The Convertibility Plan, which pegged the peso one-to-one with the US dollar from 1991, gave the 50-peso note its unusual monetary weight: each note was legally equivalent to fifty US dollars, a parity the government defended until December 2001, when the collapse of convertibility triggered the largest sovereign debt default in history to that point.
Notes from the 1999–2003 print run straddle that crisis. Post-2001 examples may show heavier circulation wear owing to the bank runs and cash hoarding that preceded the corralito — the emergency freeze on bank withdrawals imposed in December 2001.