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| Issuer | People's Republic of Bulgaria |
|---|---|
| Year | 1952 |
| Type | Log in to see details |
| Value | 400 Leva |
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| Obverse description | Log in to see details |
|---|---|
| Obverse lettering | НАРОДНА РЕПУБЛИКА БЪЛГАРИЯ 2% ДЪРЖАВЕН КОНВЕРСИОНЕН ЗАЕМ 1952 ГОДИНА ОБЛИГАЦИЯ 400 ЗА ЧЕТИРИСТОТИН ЛВ. НА ПРИНОСИТЕЛЯ София - 1952 год. |
| Reverse description | Unprinted plain white paper; the obverse design is visible as a faint bleed-through impression, confirming the reverse carries no printed text or vignettes. |
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| Comments |
The 1952 Bulgarian state loan vouchers were instruments of compulsory borrowing, not voluntary investment. The postwar Bulgarian government ran several rounds of forced subscription drives through the early 1950s, pressuring citizens and state enterprises to "purchase" loan bonds as a condition of political and economic participation. The 400 Leva denomination placed this squarely in the working-population tier — large enough to represent a meaningful extraction, small enough to avoid the separate bureaucratic handling reserved for institutional subscribers.
The attached coupon strips allowed holders to claim periodic interest payments, though redemption in practice was erratic and the real value of returns was steadily eroded by the lev's controlled exchange conditions following the 1952 currency reform, which itself wiped out a significant fraction of older monetary savings.