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1 Pound – United Kingdom

United Kingdom
Context
Years: 1987–1992
Currency:
Demonetization: 15 October 2017
Total mintage: 76,020,820
Material
Diameter: 22.5 mm
Weight: 9.5 g
Thickness: 3.15 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Nickel brass
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard948
Numista: #1392
Value
Exchange value: 1 GBP = $1.35
Inflation-adjusted value: 3.74 GBP

Obverse

Description:
Third crowned portrait of Queen Elizabeth II facing right, wearing the George IV State Diadem.
Inscription:
ELIZABETH II D·G·REG·F·D·1992

RDM
Translation:
Elizabeth II, by the Grace of God, Queen, Defender of the Faith, 1992
Script: Latin
Language: Latin

Reverse

Description:
An oak tree encircling a royal crown above the value.
Inscription:
ONE POUND
Script: Latin
Engraver: Leslie Durbin

Edge

Milled with incuse lettering
Legend:
DECUS ET TUTAMEN
Translation:
An ornament and a safeguard
Language: Latin

Categories

Symbol> Crown
Plant> Tree

Mints

NameMark
Royal Mint

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
198739,298,502
198788,659Proof
1987172,425BU
199236,320,487
199262,326Proof
199278,421BU

Historical background

In 1987, the United Kingdom's currency situation was dominated by the aftermath of the Plaza and Louvre Accords, which sought to manage the value of the US dollar. Sterling had experienced a sharp, destabilising depreciation in 1985, falling to near parity with the dollar, which stoked inflationary fears. By early 1987, under Chancellor Nigel Lawson, the government had adopted a policy of "shadowing" the Deutsche Mark, unofficially pegging sterling to the West German currency within a narrow band around DM 3.00. This was an attempt to import the anti-inflation credibility of the Bundesbank and provide stability, but it was pursued without a formal public announcement or agreement.

This policy created significant tensions. To maintain the peg, the Bank of England was forced to engage in heavy intervention, buying sterling and raising interest rates, even as the UK economy showed signs of slowing. The situation became increasingly unsustainable through the summer and autumn of 1987. The policy clashed fundamentally with the government's own economic objectives, as defending the exchange rate required tight monetary policy at a time when domestic considerations, particularly after the global stock market crash in October 1987, arguably called for lower rates to support growth.

The episode culminated in March 1988 when Chancellor Lawson, facing overwhelming market pressure and having spent billions in reserves, abruptly abandoned the shadowing policy. Sterling was allowed to float freely, and interest rates were cut. The failed experiment highlighted the difficulties of managing exchange rates within a system of increasingly mobile global capital. It reinforced the view that sterling could not be sustainably pegged without full commitment to a European exchange rate mechanism, a path the government would later controversially take in 1990.

Series: Royal Diadem series

1 Pound obverse
1 Pound reverse
1 Pound
1986-1991
1 Pound obverse
1 Pound reverse
1 Pound
1986-1991
1 Pound obverse
1 Pound reverse
1 Pound
1986
1 Pound obverse
1 Pound reverse
1 Pound
1987-1992
1 Pound obverse
1 Pound reverse
1 Pound
1987-1992
1 Pound obverse
1 Pound reverse
1 Pound
1987
1 Pound obverse
1 Pound reverse
1 Pound
1989
🌱 Very Common