Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Numista CC BY
Context
Years: 1984–2017
Issuer: Israel Issuer flag
Issuing organization: State of Israel
Period:
(since 1948)
Currency:
(since 1986)
Total mintage: 512,840,728
Material
Diameter: 22 mm
Weight: 4 g
Thickness: 1.61 mm
Shape: Round
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard158
Numista: #1715
Value
Exchange value: 0.10 ILS = $0.03
Inflation-adjusted value: 21.27 ILS

Obverse

Description:
Replica of a coin from Mattathias Antigonus (37–40 BCE), featuring the seven-branched menorah—Israel's state emblem—with "Israel" in Hebrew, English, and Arabic.
Inscription:
إسرائيل ישראל ISRAEL
Translation:
Israel Israel ISRAEL
Scripts: Arabic, Hebrew, Latin
Languages: Hebrew, Arabic, English

Reverse

Description:
Varieties differ in minor design details: square and numeral outlines (smooth/coarse), ridge count (42 or 19), '0' shape (straight/rounded), spacing between '1' and '0', and square texture (embossed or flat, year 5751). To distinguish the numeral: an '8' (ח) has a top-right serif; a '5' (ה) does not. The rightmost digit is a 5 (5000). Mint identification: a closed '5' (ה) indicates Utrecht; an open one indicates Kongsberg.
Inscription:
10

אגורות AGOROT

התשנ"א
Translation:
Ten Agorot

5751
Scripts: Hebrew, Latin
Languages: English, Hebrew
Engraver: Gabi Neumann

Edge

Plain


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1984
198545,000,000
198692,754,048
198719,351,382
19888,640,298
1989420,000
19902,376,000
1991
19921,728,000
199325,920,000
199451,696,000
199517,280,000
199643,200,000
199721,600,000
1998
199926,203,000
200082,944,000
200146,140,000
20024,608,000
200322,980,000
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017

Historical background

In 1984, Israel faced a severe currency crisis, marked by hyperinflation that had been accelerating for nearly a decade and peaked at an annual rate of approximately 450%. The root causes were deeply structural: massive government deficits used to fund extensive social programs, settlements, and a large defense budget, all financed by printing money rather than through taxation or sustainable borrowing. This created a vicious cycle where prices soared, the Israeli shekel (IL) plummeted in value, and the public lost all confidence in the currency, preferring to hold and transact in U.S. dollars as a stable alternative.

The situation reached a critical point in the summer and fall of 1984. A national unity government, led by Shimon Peres, took office in September and recognized that economic stabilization was an immediate existential priority. The currency was in freefall, with a dual exchange rate system—one official and one semi-legal "black market"—failing to prevent capital flight and rampant speculation. The economy was caught in an "inflationary inertia" where widespread indexation of wages and prices to the Consumer Price Index (CPI) automatically baked expected inflation into the system, making it self-perpetuating.

This crisis set the stage for the historic Economic Stabilization Plan of July 1985. While implemented the following year, the desperate conditions of 1984 were the direct catalyst. The plan, crafted with guidance from American economists, would involve drastic measures: a sharp devaluation and then a fixed exchange rate for the shekel, severe budget cuts, a temporary wage and price freeze, and a commitment to cease monetary financing of the deficit. Thus, 1984 is remembered as the tumultuous prelude to a painful but necessary economic overhaul that ultimately broke the hyperinflation and restored basic monetary stability.

Series: 1984 Israel circulation coins

50 Sheqalim obverse
50 Sheqalim reverse
50 Sheqalim
1984-1985
100 Sheqalim obverse
100 Sheqalim reverse
100 Sheqalim
1984-1985
10 Agorot obverse
10 Agorot reverse
10 Agorot
1984-2017
🌱 Very Common