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obverse
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Katz Coins Notes & Supplies Corp.

10 Rupees (Independence) – India

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: 25th Anniversary of Independence
India
Context
Year: 1972
Issuer: India Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1950)
Currency:
(since 1957)
Total mintage: 1,007,895
Material
Diameter: 39 mm
Weight: 22.5 g
Silver weight: 11.25 g
Thickness: 3 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Silver (50% Silver, 40% Copper, 5% Nickel, 5% Zinc)
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard187
Numista: #18684
Value
Exchange value: 10 INR = $0.11
Bullion value: $32.50
Inflation-adjusted value: 502.29 INR

Obverse

Description:
Asoka lion with denomination.
Inscription:
भारत INDIA

रूपये 10 RUPEES

B
Translation:
Ten Rupees
Scripts: Devanagari, Latin
Languages: Hindi, English

Reverse

Description:
Indian flag figures before parliament.
Inscription:
25 वीं स्वातंत्र्य जयंती

1947-1972
Translation:
25th Independence Anniversary

1947-1972
Script: Devanagari
Language: Hindi

Edge

Reeded


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1972
19721,000,000
1972B7,895Proof

Historical background

In 1972, India's currency situation was shaped by the lingering economic and political shockwaves of the 1971 Indo-Pakistani War, which led to the creation of Bangladesh. The war effort had placed a significant strain on the national exchequer, exacerbating existing fiscal deficits and inflationary pressures. While the immediate monetary crisis of 1971—which had triggered a rush on banks and a temporary freeze on foreign currency accounts—had been stabilized, the underlying vulnerabilities remained. The economy was grappling with high inflation, a growing trade deficit, and the burden of post-war reconstruction, all of which placed stress on the Indian rupee's stability and the government's foreign exchange reserves.

The international context further complicated India's currency management. The Bretton Woods system had effectively collapsed in 1971 with the US suspending gold convertibility, leading to global monetary uncertainty. For India, this meant the rupee's peg to the British pound (within the Sterling Area) became more volatile. Furthermore, the war had led to the suspension of most Western economic aid, except from the Soviet Union and a few other nations, tightening the availability of foreign exchange. The government, under Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, was therefore focused on conservative foreign exchange management, import restrictions, and seeking alternative sources of credit to shore up reserves and fund essential imports.

Domestically, 1972 was a year of consolidation rather than major monetary reform, setting the stage for the more dramatic measures that would follow later in the decade. The focus was on controlling inflation and managing the balance of payments through administrative measures, as the structural issues of low industrial growth and agricultural dependency persisted. This cautious holding pattern would ultimately prove insufficient, leading to the much more radical step of demonetizing high-value banknotes (₹1,000, ₹5,000, and ₹10,000) in 1978, an action partly prefigured by the economic pressures that were acutely felt in the period immediately following the 1971 war.
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