Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Joseph Kunnappally
Context
Years: 1975–1982
Issuer: India Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1950)
Currency:
(since 1957)
Total mintage: 750,385,000
Material
Diameter: 28 mm
Weight: 8 g
Thickness: 2 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 clipboard78
Numista: #4855
Value
Exchange value: 1 INR = $0.01
Inflation-adjusted value: 31.38 INR

Obverse

Description:
Ashoka Lion Capitol types: Type 1: Toothless side lions, 2-3 fur rows, short "D" in INDIA. Type 2: More imposing pedestal, 3-4 fur rows, elegant "D" in INDIA. Type 3: Two teeth, 4-5 fur rows, smaller lion head, serifed inscriptions.
Inscription:
भारत INDIA
Translation:
India
Scripts: Devanagari, Latin
Languages: English, Hindi

Reverse

Description:
Corn, value, date.
Inscription:
रुपया 1 RUPEE

1976
Translation:
One Rupee
Scripts: Devanagari, Latin
Languages: English, Hindi

Edge

Security

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1975
1975
1975BProof
1976
1976161,895,000
1976BProof
1977177,105,000
1977BProof
1978
1978127,348,000
1978BProof
1979
1979
1979BProof
1980
198084,768,000
1980BProof
198182,458,000
1981BProof
1981
1982116,811,000

Historical background

In 1975, India's currency situation was dominated by the enduring challenges of a controlled economy and the lingering effects of the 1971 war. The Indian rupee was pegged to a basket of currencies, but its effective value was managed by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) with a strong bias towards a fixed exchange rate against the British pound sterling. This period was characterized by stringent foreign exchange regulations under the Foreign Exchange Regulation Act (FERA) of 1973, which heavily restricted the convertibility of the rupee and aimed to conserve scarce foreign reserves. The economy was largely insulated from global financial markets, with the rupee's international value being officially determined rather than market-driven.

The backdrop was one of persistent economic strain. The 1973 oil shock had severely inflated India's import bill, leading to a significant balance of payments deficit and dwindling foreign exchange reserves. High inflation, averaging around 20% in 1974-75, eroded domestic purchasing power. While the immediate political crisis of the Emergency, declared in June 1975, focused on internal governance, its economic policies indirectly impacted the currency situation by further centralizing control. The government's emphasis was on self-reliance and import substitution, which perpetuated a regime of import licensing and exchange controls to manage the external account.

Notably, 1975 did not see a major devaluation event like those in 1966 or 1991. Instead, it represented a period of stable but artificial currency valuation maintained through strict controls. The rupee was under constant pressure, but this pressure was contained by administrative measures rather than market adjustments. This environment of controlled stability, however, masked underlying vulnerabilities—low reserves, a large trade deficit, and an overvalued exchange rate—that would continue to accumulate and eventually precipitate a full-blown crisis in the decades to follow.
🌱 Very Common