Logo Title
obverse
reverse
nordboutik59
Context
Years: 1963–1967
Issuer: Israel Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1948)
Currency:
(1960—1980)
Demonetization: 31 March 1984
Total mintage: 644,129
Material
Diameter: 27.5 mm
Weight: 9 g
Thickness: 2.17 mm
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 clipboard37
Numista: #13490
Value
Exchange value: 1 ILP
Inflation-adjusted value: 118972.77 ILP

Obverse

Description:
Menorah with sprigs.
Inscription:
ISRAEL

اسرائيل‎‎

ישראל‎
Translation:
Israel
Israel
Israel
Scripts: Arabic, Hebrew, Latin
Languages: Arabic, Hebrew

Reverse

Inscription:
1

לירה

ישראלית

תשכ״ג
Translation:
One

Israeli

Lira

5723
Script: Hebrew
Language: Hebrew

Edge

Reeded

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1963
196410
1965166,053
1966290,000
1967188,066

Historical background

In 1963, Israel's currency, the lira (often called the Israeli pound or IL), was in a period of relative but fragile stability under a fixed exchange rate regime. The currency was pegged to a basket of foreign currencies, heavily weighted toward the British pound sterling, at a rate of IL 3 per US dollar. This stability, however, was largely artificial and maintained through stringent government controls. The Bank of Israel enforced a complex system of foreign currency regulations, limiting the amount of money citizens and businesses could exchange or transfer abroad, a necessity to protect the nation's modest foreign currency reserves and manage a persistent trade deficit.

This controlled environment masked underlying economic strains. The young state was still heavily reliant on capital imports, including foreign aid, loans, and reparations from Germany, to finance its rapid development and absorb large waves of immigration. The economy was characterized by a substantial public sector, high inflation by Western standards, and a balance of payments that was chronically in deficit. The fixed exchange rate, therefore, was not a reflection of natural market strength but a managed tool to provide predictability for planning and to curb inflationary pressures from imported goods.

The situation in 1963 represented a calm before a period of significant monetary adjustment. The pressures building beneath the surface of control would become increasingly difficult to contain. Within a few years, the strain would lead to a major devaluation in 1967 (to IL 3.5 per dollar) and the eventual abandonment of the sterling peg, marking the beginning of a long era of currency depreciation and high inflation that would only be decisively addressed with the economic stabilization plan of 1985 and the introduction of the new shekel.
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