Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Joseph Kunnappally
Context
Years: 1950–1955
Issuer: India Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1950)
Currency:
(1950—1957)
Demonetization: 1 April 1957
Total mintage: 1,006,375,000
Material
Diameter: 21 mm
Weight: 2.92 g
Thickness: 1.14 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Bronze
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard1
Numista: #1627

Obverse

Description:
Ashoka's lion pillar emblem.
Inscription:
GOVERNMENT·OF·INDIA
Translation:
GOVERNMENT OF INDIA
Script: Latin
Languages: Latin, English

Reverse

Description:
Left-facing prancing horse.
Inscription:
ONE PICE ⭑ एक पैसा 1955
Translation:
One Pice ⭑ One Paisa 1955
Scripts: Devanagari, Latin
Languages: Hindi, English

Edge

Plain

Categories

Animal> Horse


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
195014,000,000
195032,080,000
1950Proof
1951127,300,000
1951104,626,000
1952213,830,000
1953111,000,000
1953◀▶
1953242,358,000
1954
1954136,758,000
1954Proof
1954◀▶
195524,423,000
1955◀▶

Historical background

In 1950, India’s currency situation was a direct legacy of its colonial past and the tumultuous partition of 1947. The monetary system was governed by the Reserve Bank of India Act of 1934, with the Indian Rupee (₹) pegged to the British Pound Sterling under a fixed exchange rate regime. This link reflected the country's continued integration with the Sterling Area, a bloc of currencies tied to the Pound, which dictated India's foreign exchange reserves and trade financing. The physical currency in circulation consisted of notes issued by the Reserve Bank of India and coins by the Government of India, but the system was still recovering from the economic dislocations of World War II and partition, which had strained resources and caused inflationary pressures.

The immediate post-independence period was characterized by a severe shortage of foreign exchange, a large trade deficit, and a low level of gold reserves. India's economy was primarily agrarian and lacked industrial diversification, making it vulnerable. A critical task for the new government was to assert monetary sovereignty and manage the currency to serve national development goals rather than imperial interests. This led to a deliberate policy of a controlled and regulated economy, where foreign exchange transactions were tightly managed through licenses and the rupee's parity was carefully controlled to conserve scarce reserves for essential imports like capital goods and food grains.

Thus, in 1950, India's currency framework was in a transitional phase—formally stable under a fixed peg but operating within a context of economic fragility and deliberate control. The stage was set for the planned economic development of the 1950s, where monetary policy would become a key instrument for channeling resources into industrialization, eventually leading to a decimalized currency system in 1957 and a shift in foreign exchange management as the country sought greater economic independence.

Series: 1950 India circulation coins

1 Paisa obverse
1 Paisa reverse
1 Paisa
1950-1955
½ Anna obverse
½ Anna reverse
½ Anna
1950-1955
1 Anna obverse
1 Anna reverse
1 Anna
1950-1954
2 Annas obverse
2 Annas reverse
2 Annas
1950-1955
¼ Rupee obverse
¼ Rupee reverse
¼ Rupee
1950-1956
½ Rupee obverse
½ Rupee reverse
½ Rupee
1950-1956
1 Rupee obverse
1 Rupee reverse
1 Rupee
1950-1954
🌱 Very Common