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10 Pence – United Kingdom

United Kingdom
Context
Years: 1985–1992
Currency:
Demonetization: 30 June 1993
Total mintage: 1,642,473
Material
Diameter: 28.5 mm
Weight: 11.31 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper-nickel (75% Copper, 25% Nickel)
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard938
Numista: #17902
Value
Exchange value: 0.10 GBP = $0.14
Inflation-adjusted value: 0.41 GBP

Obverse

Description:
Third crowned portrait of Queen Elizabeth II facing right, wearing the George IV State Diadem.
Inscription:
ELIZABETH II D·G·REG·F·D·1986

RDM
Translation:
Elizabeth II, by the Grace of God, Queen, Defender of the Faith, 1986
Script: Latin
Language: Latin

Reverse

Description:
Crowned lion passant guardant, with legend above and denomination below.
Inscription:
TEN PENCE

10
Script: Latin

Edge

Milled

Categories

Animal> Feline

Mints

NameMark
Royal Mint

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1985178,375BU
1985102,015Proof
1986167,224BU
1986104,597Proof
1987172,425BU
198788,659Proof
1988134,067BU
198879,314Proof
198977,569BU
198985,704Proof
199079,052Proof
1990102,606BU
199174,975BU
199155,144Proof
199278,421BU
199262,326Proof

Historical background

In 1985, the United Kingdom's currency situation was dominated by the ongoing struggle to manage the value of sterling within the complex framework of the European Monetary System (EMS). The UK had joined the EMS's Exchange Rate Mechanism (ERM) in 1979 but suspended its membership in 1985, a period often referred to as the "sterling crisis." Chancellor Nigel Lawson was a strong proponent of a policy known as "shadowing the Deutsche Mark," aiming to stabilize sterling by informally pegging it to the strong West German currency. This was driven by a desire to control inflation, which had been a historic weakness for the UK economy, by importing the credibility of the Bundesbank's anti-inflationary discipline.

However, this policy created significant tension within Margaret Thatcher's government and with the markets. To maintain the unofficial peg, the Bank of England was forced to engage in heavy intervention, buying sterling and raising interest rates to support its value. This conflicted with other domestic economic goals, as high interest rates threatened to stifle growth and increase unemployment. Furthermore, the policy was conducted largely in secret and without formal international agreement, leading to criticism that it was unsustainable and undermined the UK's control over its own monetary policy.

The situation culminated in early 1987, but its roots in 1985 set the stage. The core conflict was between the government's desire for exchange rate stability to foster European trade and combat inflation, and the opposing need for monetary policy autonomy to respond to domestic economic conditions. This period highlighted the difficulties of fixed exchange rate regimes and foreshadowed the even more severe ERM crisis the UK would face in 1992. Ultimately, the experience of 1985 reinforced a deep-seated British skepticism towards surrendering monetary sovereignty, a sentiment that would profoundly influence later debates about European economic and monetary union.
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