The official exchange rate was set at zl 2 for RM 1.[2] The exchange system was meant to boost the German economy at the expense of the Polish economy.[2] The black market exchange rate varied between three and four zlotys to one reichsmark.[2]
The most famous of the notes was the 500 zloty note, the góral ("highlander" or "mountaineer") named after the image of a góral on its front.[1] The note is still popular among currency collectors. Counterfeiting of the currency was rampant.[5] The name was also reflected in one of the actions of the Polish resistance, Operation Góral, a 1943 heist in which the insurgents took over a currency shipment then worth over US$1 million.[6][7] The 500 note was also the standard "unit of corruption"; the minimum bribe that representatives of the occupation authorities required to facilitate the carrying out of illicit activity.[8] In that role, it was immortalised in a popular underground street song in Warsaw, Siekiera, motyka.[9]
The currency notes were used exclusively within the General Government but not the Polish areas annexed by Nazi Germany.[2] They were withdrawn from circulation between 1944 and 1945.[2]
^ abcdefghiAndrzej Gojski, Etapy i cele niemieckiej polityki bankowej w GG. Plany niemieckie wobec Generalnego Gubernatorstwa w latach 1939–1945, BANK I KREDYT, August 2004, pdfArchived 2009-03-05 at the Wayback Machine
^"Strona 5". Niewiarygodne.pl. Archived from the original on 2014-06-09. Retrieved 2014-06-09.
^Łukaszewska-Bułat, Irena (2005). Droga powrotna: warszawskie Termopile 1944 : wspomnienia powstańców (in Polish). Fundacja "Warszawa Walczy 1939-1945". pp. 40–45.
^Res humana (in Polish). Rada Krajowa Towarzystwa Kultury Świeckiej. 2005. p. 12.