Introduction After several earlier attempts the
Austro-Hungarian Empire adopted the
gold standard in 1892 according to a plan drawn up by the Hungarian Minister of Finance
Sándor Wekerle. This plan included the introduction of the new currency, the Krone. It consisted of 100
Heller (Austria) or
Fillér (Hungary). The value of the Krone was set at 2 kronen = 1 gulden. From 1900 onward, Krone notes were the only legal banknotes of the Empire.
First World War The currency depreciated sharply as a result of the
First World War, which was financed mostly by the issue of War Bonds rather than through taxation. Consumer prices rose sixteenfold during the war, as the government had no hesitation in running the
Austro-Hungarian Bank's printing presses to pay its bills: this triggered a higher inflation rate than in other combatant countries.
After 1918 Austria After the end of the First World War it was initially hoped that the Krone might remain the common currency of the Empire's
successor states, but in January 1919 the
Kingdom of Serbs, Croats, and Slovenes (later
Yugoslavia) became the first successor state to
overstamp the Austro-Hungarian Bank's notes, limiting their validity to its own territory.
Czechoslovakia followed suit in February 1919, and on 12 March 1919 the new Republic of
Austria stamped the notes circulating in its territory with "DEUTSCHÖSTERREICH". The Austrian economy did not stabilise after the war, and a period of
hyperinflation followed: the
money supply increased from 12 to 30 billion Kronen in 1920, and to about 147 billion Kronen at the end of 1921. In August 1922 consumer prices were 14,000 times greater than before the start of the war eight years earlier. The highest-denomination banknote issued was the 500,000 Kronen note, issued in 1922. Faith in the currency had been lost, and people spent money as fast as they received it. In October 1922 Austria secured a loan of 650 million gold Kronen from the
League of Nations, with a League of Nations Commissioner supervising the country's finances. This stabilized the currency at a rate of 14,400 paper Kronen to 1 gold Krone. On 2 January 1923 the Austrian National Bank (Österreichische Nationalbank) began operations, taking over control of the currency from the Austro-Hungarian Bank which had gone into liquidation. In December 1923 the Austrian Parliament authorised the government to issue silver 5,000, 10,000, and 20,000-kronen coins which were to be designated
half-Schilling,
Schilling, and
double Schilling. The
Schilling became the official currency of Austria currency on 20 December 1924, at a rate of 10,000 Kronen to 1 Schilling. ==Banknotes==