Paper money of the Hungarian adópengő

The adópengő bonds and certificates served as money in the last days before the introduction of the Hungarian forint.

Tax bills

Adópengő (tax-pengő) was introduced on 1 January 1946. The aim was to create a numerical basis for budget calculations, which was independent from the daily changes. The index was created daily by the Institute for Economic Research (then: Magyar Gazdaságkutató Intézet, now: GKI Gazdaságkutató Zrt.) based on retail prices (weights: food and other agricultural products: 50%, industrial products (market price): 30%, and industrial products (fixed price): 20%).[1] The so-called adójegy (tax bill - a bond for adópengő with two months maturity) was introduced in May 1946. First, tax bills were used to pay taxes and to register bank deposits and bank credits. From 23 June it was also used to pay public utility charges and from 8 July it became a legal tender, replacing the pengő, which almost totally lost its value by this time. When the tax-bills became legal tender, the even more serious adópengő inflation replaced the pengő inflation.[2]

The Ludas Matyi satirical magazine explains aptly the relationship between the pengő and the adópengő: "The pengő was the piece of paper that had no value, and the adópengő was used to measure the value of the pengő."

The Tax bills were designed by Endre Horváth.

Tax bills
ImageValueDimensionsDescriptionDate of
ObverseReverseObverseReverseprintingissuewithdrawallapse
10000 adópengő 136 × 83 mm Value Application clause 28 May 1946 13 June 1946 31 July 1946 30 September 1946
50000 adópengő 25 May 1946 30 May 1946
100000 adópengő 28 May 1946 13 June 1946
500000 adópengő 25 May 1946 30 May 1946
1000000 adópengő
10000000 adópengő 18 July 1946 30 September 1946
100000000 adópengő 25 July 1946
1000000000 adópengő never - -
These images are to scale at 0.7 pixel per millimetre. For table standards, see the banknote specification table.

Savings certificates

The Hungarian Postal Savings Bank issued adópengő non-interest-bearing savings certificates (nem kamatozó pénztárjegy) in June 1946, which also served as legal tender.

Non-interest-bearing savings certificate
ImageValueDimensionsDescriptionDate of
ObverseReverseObverseReverseprintingissuewithdrawallapse
10000 adópengő

References

  1. (in Hungarian) mtdp0309.pdf (career of István Varga, an excellent economist of the era)
  2. (in Hungarian) rs1.szif.hu (Economy of Hungary after the Second World War)
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