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obverse
reverse
Mike Bentley CC BY-NC

2 Euro (Euro Cash) – Ireland

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: 10 Years of Euro Cash
Ireland
Context
Year: 2012
Issuer: Ireland Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1937)
Currency:
(since 2002)
Total mintage: 1,350,759
Material
Diameter: 25.75 mm
Weight: 8.5 g
Thickness: 2.2 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Bimetallic (Nickel brass center, Copper-nickel ring)
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard71
Numista: #28194
Value
Exchange value: 2 EUR = $2.36
Inflation-adjusted value: 2.56 EUR

Obverse

Description:
A central euro symbol represents its global rise over ten years. Surrounding elements show its importance to people (a family), finance (the Eurotower), trade (a ship), industry (a factory), and energy/R&D (wind turbines). The designer's initials "A.H." are hidden between the ship and tower. The inner edge bears the issuing country and the years "2002 – 2012". The outer ring features the 12 stars of the EU.
Inscription:
éire

A.H.



2002 2012
Translation:
Ireland

A.H.



2002 2012
Script: Latin
Languages: English, Irish
Designer and engraver: Helmut Andexlinger

Reverse

Description:
A map shows Europe borderless beside its face value.
Inscription:
2 EURO

LL
Script: Latin
Designer and engraver: Luc Luycx

Edge

Legend:
2 ** 2 ** 2 ** 2 ** 2 ** 2 **

Mints

NameMark
Irish Mint

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
20121,345,759
20125,000Proof

Historical background

In 2012, Ireland was in its fifth year of a profound economic and banking crisis, but its currency situation was uniquely stable compared to the turmoil in other Eurozone periphery nations. As a founding member of the Euro, Ireland had used the euro since 1999, meaning it did not face the speculative currency attacks or devaluation fears that plagued countries like the UK. However, the fixed exchange rate within the Eurozone removed a key tool for economic adjustment, forcing all necessary correction onto domestic wages, prices, and severe fiscal austerity, a process known as "internal devaluation."

The core financial context was the aftermath of the EU-IMF bailout programme agreed in late 2010. By 2012, Ireland was midway through implementing this €85 billion rescue package, which was necessitated by the state's catastrophic guarantee of its insolvent banking sector. The currency stability provided by the euro was a double-edged sword: it prevented a bank run and a currency collapse, but it also locked Ireland into a high-interest-rate environment set by the ECB for the entire zone, which was inappropriate for a contracting economy. This exacerbated the deflationary pressure and deep recession.

Consequently, the national debate in 2012 was not about leaving the euro – "Grexit" fears were centred on Greece – but about the harsh social costs of regaining competitiveness within it. The government was focused on meeting stringent bailout targets to return to bond markets, a goal achieved with the successful issuance of a long-term bond in mid-2012. Thus, Ireland's currency situation was one of paradoxical stability within a storm, as the unshakeable peg to the euro provided a framework for a brutal but structured economic adjustment.

Series: 10 years of Euro

2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2012
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2012
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2012
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2012
50 Euro obverse
50 Euro reverse
50 Euro
2012
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2012
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2012

Series: Ireland 2 euro commemoratives

2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2007
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2009
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2012
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2015
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2016
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2019
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2022
🌱 Very Common