Wladyslaw Dominik Grabski (pronounced [vwa'd?swaf 'grapsk?i]; 7 July 1874 – 1 March 1938) was a Polish National Democratic politician, economist and historian.
He was the main author of the currency reform in the Second Polish Republic and served as Prime Minister of Poland in 1920 and from 1923–1925.
He was the brother of Stanislaw Grabski and Zofia Kirkor-Kiedroniowa.
He was responsible for the creation of the Bank of Poland and implementing the Polish currency.
Grabski's cabinet became the longest standing cabinet in interwar Poland.
At the same time, however, Grabski's cabinet was severely criticized.
Stanislaw Glabinski, for example, criticized Grabski's inefficiencies in the sphere of international relations, and Wincenty Witos disapproved of Grabski's deficient agricultural reform, as well as his inability to inform the public of the state's real financial situation.