Want this question answered?
One Yugoslavian Dinar equals about 183/1000 of a U.S. dollar, therefore 100000000 Dinar would equal 183000 USD. In euros this would equal about 150000.
No, the Yugoslavian dinar is no longer in use. Indeed the 1993 dinar was discontinued the following year having suffered massive hyperinflation. And even the 1994 dinar only lasted for a month or so! Eventually Yugoslavia adopted a dinar that was pegged to the German mark which later became the Euro.
0 .
Go to a coin store and ask to buy a penny's worth of Zimbabwe currency from 2007. You will have to pay a premium for the bills (cheques), but you will have at least a trillion Zimbabwe dollars from their period of hyperinflation. Technically, everyone in the country was a billionaire or trillionaire when the denominations became ridiculously high and eventually completely worthless. Similar hyperinflation took place with the Turkish lira in 2005, the Yugoslavian dinar in 1993, and the Hungarian pengo in 1946 (when a bill worth 1021 pengo was printed).
No!This banknote was valid in 1993,but in that period you could by only launch for that,if you're lucky.
I think it is the same thing , but some people say it is and some don't. The yugoslavian wars were from 1991-2001 and the balkan wars were from 1992-1993 (if I remember right). But I dont know what they mean by balkan really. Where is it?
a small meal at best. 500b note was a result of insane inflation
True. At it's peak in 1993, inflation in Yugoslavia ran at 100% (prices doubling)/day in the local currency.
What is a ceska republika kc 5 in dollars
NYPD Blue - 1993 A Tushful of Dollars 3-13 is rated/received certificates of: USA:TV-14
50 Dollars
Inflation has caused the prices of goods and services to rise considerably since 1993. For example, a gallon of milk cost only 2.86 dollars, while today it can cost nearly 5 dollars.