Logo Title
obverse
reverse
The Royal Mint, 2010
United Kingdom
Context
Years: 2010–2012
Currency:
Total mintage: 2,379
Material
Diameter: 27 mm
Weight: 17.03 g
Gold weight: 15.61 g
Shape: Round
Composition: 91.67% Gold
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard1137
Numista: #172035
Value
Exchange value: 50 GBP = $67.75
Bullion value: $2602.29
Inflation-adjusted value: 85.70 GBP

Obverse

Description:
Queen Elizabeth IV facing right, wearing the Girls of Great Britain and Ireland tiara.
Inscription:
ELIZABETH ' II ' D ' G REG ' FID ' DEF

IRB

' 50 ' POUNDS '
Translation:
Elizabeth the Second, by the Grace of God, Queen, Defender of the Faith

Fifty Pounds
Script: Latin
Language: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Britannia helmeted and draped facing right, surrounded by legend.
Inscription:
BRITANNIA 1/2 OUNCE FINE GOLD

2010
Script: Latin
Engraver: Suzie Zamit

Edge

Reeded

Mints

NameMark
Royal Mint

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
20101,301BU
20101,053Proof
201225Proof

Historical background

In 2010, the United Kingdom's currency situation was dominated by the profound and lingering effects of the 2007-2008 Global Financial Crisis. The economy had just emerged from a deep recession, and the newly elected Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government, under Prime Minister David Cameron and Chancellor George Osborne, immediately framed the national economic narrative around a dire need for fiscal austerity. Their central argument was that a record post-war budget deficit, exceeding 11% of GDP, posed an existential threat to market confidence in the pound sterling and the UK's sovereign credit rating. The fear of a sterling crisis or a loss of the UK's prized AAA credit rating was a powerful political tool used to justify sweeping public spending cuts.

Against this backdrop, the pound sterling (GBP) was in a period of relative weakness and volatility following a sharp depreciation during the crisis. Having fallen from over $2.00 to nearly $1.35 against the US dollar in 2009, it traded in a range between $1.45 and $1.60 for much of 2010. The Bank of England, under Governor Mervyn King, maintained an ultra-accommodative monetary policy to support the fragile recovery, holding the base interest rate at a historic low of 0.5% and continuing its Quantitative Easing (QE) programme. This policy divergence with other central banks, combined with eurozone debt anxieties, kept sterling under pressure, though it avoided the catastrophic collapse some austerity warnings had implied.

Ultimately, the currency's fate in 2010 was intertwined with the twin pillars of aggressive fiscal consolidation and sustained monetary stimulus. While the austerity agenda was intended to protect sterling's long-term value by restoring fiscal credibility, the immediate effect of low rates and QE worked to suppress it. This created a complex environment where the pound was seen as stable but fundamentally vulnerable, reflecting the broader economic uncertainty of a nation grappling with the legacy of a banking crisis and the untested experiment of large-scale deficit reduction during a recovery.

Series: Gold Britannia

100 Pounds obverse
100 Pounds reverse
100 Pounds
2009
10 Pounds obverse
10 Pounds reverse
10 Pounds
2010
25 Pounds obverse
25 Pounds reverse
25 Pounds
2010
50 Pounds obverse
50 Pounds reverse
50 Pounds
2010-2012
100 Pounds obverse
100 Pounds reverse
100 Pounds
2010
10 Pounds obverse
10 Pounds reverse
10 Pounds
2011
25 Pounds obverse
25 Pounds reverse
25 Pounds
2011
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