The crisis of political power in Uruguay.

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The crisis of political power in Uruguay.

So here we have the Uruguayan centimo, nominal - 10. The year of issue of this coin is 1976, mint: Santiago, Chile. Total circulation – 127.400.000.

In the mid-1950s, when the end of the Korean War lowered wool prices, Uruguay’s ranching economy declined, as did the standard of living. Politicians, responding to voters’ demands, tried to keep consumption up, first by spending Uruguay’s foreign exchange, then by taking out foreign loans and devaluing the peso. Economic conditions deteriorated: annual inflation rates rose above 60 percent, public services broke down, industries closed, and large numbers of labourers and professionals emigrated.

Voter dissatisfaction brought the Blancos to power in 1958 for the first time since 1865. Although reelected for a second term, the Blanco administration failed to improve conditions, and in 1966 a new constitution was ratified, returning the country to the presidential system. Elections in that year brought new leadership under Colorado conservatives, but inflation and a production slump continued to grip the country, precipitating increasingly stronger protests followed by a government crackdown on students and unions.

During this period guerrilla attacks were initiated in Montevideo by the Tupamaros, a leftist group named for Túpac Amaru II, an 18th-century Inca who had rebelled against Spanish rule. When the police could not stop the Tupamaros, the government unleashed the military, which defeated them in a systematic and brutal counterinsurgency campaign. Economic problems persisted, however, and in 1973 the military wrested control of the government from the nation’s discredited politicians.

Founder

Santiago, Chile.

Date

1976.

Culture

Uruguay.

Medium

Aluminum bronze.

Dimensions

3x18.5x1.8.

Classification

Coin.

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