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obverse
reverse
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1000 Yen (Local Autonomy Law) – Japan

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: 60th anniversary of Local Autonomy Law
Japan
Context
Year: 2009
Issuer: Japan Issuer flag
Ruler: Heisei
Currency:
(since 1871)
Total mintage: 100,000
Material
Diameter: 40 mm
Weight: 31.1 g
Silver weight: 31.07 g
Thickness: 3.5 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 99.9% Silver
Standard: Silver ounce
Magnetic: No
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboard154
Numista: #19551
Value
Exchange value: 1000 JPY = $6.41
Bullion value: $90.12
Inflation-adjusted value: 1123.56 JPY

Obverse

Description:
H-II rocket and Mt. Tsukuba, colorized.
Inscription:
日 本 国

茨城県

IBARAKI

千 円
Translation:
Japan

Ibaraki Prefecture

IBARAKI

One Thousand Yen
Languages: English, Japanese

Reverse

Description:
Cherry blossoms, crescent, and snowflakes with latent images.
Inscription:
(47/60)

地方自治六十年

1000

YEN

平成21年
Translation:
60 Years of Local Autonomy

1000

YEN

Heisei 21
Languages: Japanese, Chinese

Edge

Slanted reeding right

Mints

NameMark
Japan Mint

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
2009100,000Proof

Historical background

In 2009, Japan was grappling with the severe aftermath of the global financial crisis, which had triggered a sharp appreciation of the yen as a "safe-haven" currency. The yen's surge, reaching a 13-year high against the dollar in late 2008, severely damaged the country's export-dependent economy. Major corporations like Toyota and Sony faced plummeting overseas profits, leading to historic losses and widespread job cuts. This created a deflationary trap, where falling prices and a strong currency discouraged spending and investment, threatening to deepen a recession that was already one of the worst among advanced economies.

The government and the Bank of Japan (BOJ) responded with aggressive but largely conventional measures. The BOJ had already cut its benchmark interest rate to 0.1% in late 2008, leaving little room for traditional monetary easing. In 2009, it focused on quantitative easing (QE) policies, such as purchasing commercial paper and corporate bonds to provide liquidity and stabilize financial markets. However, these actions were perceived as insufficient to halt the yen's climb or decisively combat deflation. Public debt, already the highest in the industrialized world, constrained fiscal policy, even as the new Democratic Party of Japan government launched stimulus packages.

This period set the critical stage for the more radical monetary experiments that would follow in the next decade. The persistent strength of the yen, entrenched deflation, and the limited impact of existing tools in 2009 highlighted the perceived need for a dramatic shift in policy. The experiences of this year directly paved the way for the "Abenomics" program in 2012, which would introduce unprecedented levels of monetary easing under BOJ Governor Haruhiko Kuroda, explicitly targeting a weaker yen and 2% inflation to break Japan's long-standing economic stagnation.

Series: 47 prefectures of Japan coin program

1000 Yen obverse
1000 Yen reverse
1000 Yen
2009
500 Yen obverse
500 Yen reverse
500 Yen
2009
1000 Yen obverse
1000 Yen reverse
1000 Yen
2009
500 Yen obverse
500 Yen reverse
500 Yen
2009
1000 Yen obverse
1000 Yen reverse
1000 Yen
2009
500 Yen obverse
500 Yen reverse
500 Yen
2009
1000 Yen obverse
1000 Yen reverse
1000 Yen
2009
💎 Very Rare