In 1913, the Maldives operated under a complex and informal currency system, heavily influenced by its status as a British protectorate. The official and most valued medium of exchange was the
British Indian rupee, introduced and regulated by the British colonial administration in India. This silver rupee, along with its fractional annas and pice coins, was essential for external trade, government accounts, and transactions with the British political agent stationed in Colombo.
Alongside the rupee, the traditional Maldivian
larin—a small, bent silver wire coin—continued to circulate domestically, particularly in local and regional trade. More significantly, however, a chronic shortage of official coinage led to the widespread use of
cowrie shells (
cypraea moneta) as small change, especially in the outer atolls. This created a multi-tiered system where high-value transactions used rupees, while everyday local purchases were often conducted with cowries, requiring a fluctuating and locally determined exchange rate between the two.
The monetary situation was therefore characterized by dependency and fragmentation. The Maldivian economy and its currency were not sovereign but tied to the British Indian monetary system, which itself was on the gold exchange standard. This linkage meant that the Maldives' purchasing power and inflation were indirectly subject to decisions made in Bombay and London. The coexistence of modern coinage and ancient shell money underscored the islands' transitional economy, caught between its traditional Indian Ocean trade patterns and the integrating forces of the British Empire.