note, so-called "Góral". Bank Emisyjny
de facto replaced the independent
central bank of Poland, the
Bank Polski SA, which managed to evacuate most of its assets, including
gold, and part of the
mint, before the invasion. Officially, however, the Bank Polski still existed, as the Germans unsuccessfully tried to use it on the international scene to regain the assets evacuated and under the control of the
Polish government in exile. The bank's main functions were: issuing currency,
discounting promissory notes and
cheques, issuing short-term loans, and taking deposits. The official exchange rate was set as 2
złoty = 1
reichsmark. This system, favoring the German currency, by artificially undervaluing the Reichsmark, was one of the ways of boosting the German economy by pillaging that of the conquered country. A
black market exchange rate varied between three and four złotys to a reichsmark. From 1940 until 1945 it helped finance the German economy. The Bank, as well as other financial institutions in occupied Poland, were tasked with gathering as much
capital as possible, to be invested in the German economy. Approximately 11 billion złotys (5.5 billion reichsmarks) were transferred to the
German army. It printed new
currency (unofficially named after the Bank headquarters "złoty krakowski" - Złoty of Kraków - or after director Młynarski "the
młynarki") with no backing which resulted in increasing
inflation (market prices rose by three to six times and the exchange rate with the American dollar doubled over the war period). In January 1945, the remaining assets and German personnel of the Bank were evacuated into Germany proper. It was officially liquidated by the Polish communist government in 1950. ==Resistance connections==