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Heritage Auctions

1 Ounce (Parliament) – South Africa

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: 75th Anniversary of Parliament
South Africa
Context
Year: 1985
Issuer: South Africa Issuer flag
Issuing organization: South African Reserve Bank
Period:
(since 1961)
Currency:
(since 1961)
Total mintage: 3,019
Material
Diameter: 32.7 mm
Weight: 33.93 g
Gold weight: 31.11 g
Thickness: 2.92 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: 91.7% Gold
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
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Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard118
Numista: #341533
Value
Bullion value: $5157.41

Obverse

Description:
Crossed scepters divide a shield and lion, with a date below flanked by inscriptions.
Inscription:
SUID-AFRIKA . SOUTH AFRICA

. 1985 .
Script: Latin
Engraver: Timothy Bell

Reverse

Description:
Parliament building with text above and below.
Inscription:
PARLEMENT PARLIAMENT

1910 1985

1 OZ

FYNGOUD FINE GOLD

ALS
Script: Latin

Edge

Reeded

Mints

NameMark
Pretoria

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
19853,019Proof

Historical background

In 1985, South Africa faced a severe currency crisis that brought its economy to the brink of collapse and starkly exposed the financial cost of apartheid. The crisis was triggered by a perfect storm of internal political unrest and international pressure. Following the escalation of township revolts and the government's declaration of a State of Emergency, foreign banks, led by Chase Manhattan, refused to roll over short-term loans. This "debt standstill" created an immediate liquidity crisis, as South Africa was cut off from crucial international capital markets and faced the impossibility of servicing its approximately $24 billion in foreign debt.

The government's response was drastic. On August 27, 1985, President P.W. Botha delivered his defiant "Rubicon" speech, which instead of announcing expected reforms, further alarmed the international community. The following day, the South African Reserve Bank and government were forced to suspend trading on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange and announced a unilateral moratorium on foreign debt repayments. Crucially, they also instituted a dual-currency system: the commercial rand for domestic use and the financial rand (or "blocked rand") for foreign investment, which traded at a significant discount. This was a desperate measure to control capital flight and stabilize the collapsing value of the currency, which had plummeted by over 35% against the US dollar in the first eight months of the year.

The 1985 currency crisis had profound and lasting consequences. It forced the apartheid government into a series of humiliating negotiations with international creditors, leading to the 1987 "New York Agreement" to reschedule its debt. Economically, the crisis led to years of stagnation, high inflation, and capital controls, isolating the country further. Politically, it demonstrated that financial pressure could achieve what diplomacy alone had not, severely weakening the regime by crippling its economic engine and proving that the sustainability of apartheid was fundamentally incompatible with global financial integration.
Legendary