Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Ahmed Abdelsalam CC BY-NC-SA

50 Piastres (Egypt Air Tourism) – Egypt

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: 70 Years of Egypt Air Tourism - Karnak
Egypt
Context
Year: 2025
Islamic (Hijri) Year: 1446
Issuer: Egypt Issuer flag
Period:
Currency:
(since 1916)
Material
Diameter: 23 mm
Weight: 6.5 g
Thickness: 2.4 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Steel (Brass-plated Steel)
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Numista: #484101
Value
Exchange value: 0.50 EGP

Obverse

Description:
Arabic country name, denomination (Arabic/English), and issue year (Gregorian/Hijri in Arabic).
Inscription:
جمهورية مصر العربية

٥٠

قرشاً

١٤٤٦هـ ٢٠٢٥م

50 PIASTRES
Translation:
Arab Republic of Egypt

50

Piastres

1446H 2025AD
Scripts: Arabic, Latin
Language: Arabic

Reverse

Description:
Karnak Travel 70th Anniversary logo (70 Egypt Air Karnak)
Inscription:
الكرنك للسياحة

70

Egypt Air

Karnaʞ

مصر للطيران
Translation:
Karnak for Tourism

70

Egypt Air

Karnak

EgyptAir
Language: Arabic
Engraver: Norhan Yehia

Edge

Reeded

Mints

NameMark
Egyptian Mint Authority

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
2025

Historical background

As of 2025, Egypt's currency situation remains defined by a managed float and persistent pressures, representing a cautious stabilization following years of volatility. The Egyptian pound (EGP) has maintained a relatively stable but weakened official exchange rate against the US dollar, hovering around a new plateau following a series of significant devaluations in 2022 and 2024. This stability is largely underpinned by a landmark $35 billion Ras El-Hekma investment deal with the UAE and a bolstered $8 billion agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which together provided a critical influx of hard currency, eased the severe foreign exchange shortage, and restored some investor confidence.

However, this stability is fragile and comes at a high economic cost. Inflation, though decelerating from its peak near 40% in 2023, remains stubbornly high in double digits, eroding purchasing power and keeping pressure on the currency's real value. The Central Bank of Egypt (CBE) maintains high interest rates to combat inflation and support the pound, but this simultaneously constrains business growth and increases the government's debt servicing burden. Furthermore, while the parallel market premium has narrowed significantly, a gap with the official rate persists, indicating lingering market skepticism and residual demand for dollars that the formal banking system cannot fully satisfy.

Looking forward, the key challenge for Egyptian authorities in 2025 is transitioning from crisis management to sustainable reform. The success of the currency regime hinges on executing agreed-upon structural reforms, including further state asset sales, reducing the footprint of military-owned enterprises, and fostering a genuinely flexible exchange rate to attract long-term foreign direct investment beyond one-off deals. The government's ability to build foreign reserves through exports and tourism, rather than emergency financing, will be the ultimate test of whether the pound's current stability can evolve into lasting strength.
Legendary