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obverse
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100 Sheqalim – Israel

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: Hanukkah for the Jewish year of 5745
Israel
Context
Year: 1985
Hebrew Year: 5745
Issuer: Israel Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1948)
Currency:
(1980—1985)
Demonetization: 4 September 1986
Total mintage: 2,000,000
Material
Diameter: 29 mm
Weight: 10.8 g
Thickness: 2.25 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper-nickel (75% Copper, 25% Nickel)
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
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Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard146
Numista: #2059
Value
Exchange value: 100 ILR
Inflation-adjusted value: 4494.77 ILR

Obverse

Description:
Replica of a Mattathias Antigonus coin (37-40 BCE) featuring the seven-branched menorah, Israel's state emblem, with "Israel" inscribed in Hebrew, English, and Arabic.
Inscription:
ישראל

إسرائيل • ישראל • ISRAEL
Translation:
Israel • Israel • ISRAEL
Scripts: Arabic, Hebrew, Latin
Languages: English, Arabic, Hebrew

Reverse

Description:
Hanukkiah with value and year.
Inscription:
100

שקלים

SHEQALIM

התשמ"ה

HANUKKA חנוכה
Translation:
One Hundred

Sheqels

SHEQALIM

The 5745

Hanukka Hanukka
Scripts: Hebrew, Latin
Language: Hebrew

Edge

Milled

Mints

NameMark
Jerusalem

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
19852,000,000

Historical background

In 1985, Israel faced a severe economic crisis characterized by hyperinflation, which had been accelerating since the early 1970s and peaked at an annual rate of nearly 450%. This "inflationary whirlwind" was the result of a deep structural imbalance: massive government deficits, largely financed by printing money, to fund extensive social programs, a large public sector, and military expenditures. Indexation mechanisms in the economy, while protecting wages and savings, had created a vicious cycle where prices and wages chased each other upward, eroding the currency's value and public confidence.

The situation reached a breaking point, compelling the national unity government led by Shimon Peres to implement a drastic and comprehensive stabilization plan in July 1985. Known as the Economic Stabilization Plan, its core measures included a sharp, one-time devaluation of the shekel followed by its pegging to the U.S. dollar, severe cuts to government subsidies and spending, a temporary freeze on wages and prices, and a commitment to cease financing the deficit by printing money. Crucially, the plan was supported by a significant $1.5 billion emergency loan from the United States.

The plan was a painful but resounding success. It abruptly halted hyperinflation, restoring stability to the Israeli shekel and marking a fundamental shift from a government-dominated economy toward greater liberalization and market orientation. The 1985 crisis and its resolution are considered a watershed moment in Israel's economic history, establishing fiscal discipline and laying the foundation for future growth, transforming the shekel from a notoriously weak currency into a stable one.
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