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obverse
reverse
Numista CC BY

1 Baht (King Rama IX reign) – Thailand

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: 50th Anniversary of reign of King Rama IX
Thailand
Context
Year: 1996
Thai Year: 2539
Issuer: Thailand Issuer flag
Currency:
(since 1897)
Total mintage: 272,572,000
Material
Diameter: 20 mm
Weight: 3.4 g
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper-nickel
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
Y: #Click to copy to clipboard330
Numista: #5607
Value
Exchange value: 1 THB = $0.03

Obverse

Description:
Front-facing bust of King Rama IX.
Inscription:
พระบาทสมเด็จพระปรมินทรมหาภูมิพลอดุลยเดชฯ สยามินทราธิราชบรมนาถบพิตร

รัชกาลที่ ๙
Translation:
His Majesty King Bhumibol Adulyadej the Great,
Sovereign of the Land of Siam,
the Supreme Protector.

The Ninth Reign.
Script: Thai
Language: Thai

Reverse

Description:
Royal Golden Jubilee emblem: a crowned privy seal between two seven-tiered parasol elephants, above a ribbon with "50" and mottos.
Inscription:
ฉลองสิริราชสมบัติครบ ๕๐ ปี กาญจนาภิเษก ๙ มิถุนายน ๒๕๓๙ ประเทศไทย

๕๐

ฉลองสิริราชสมบัติ ครบ ๕๐ ปี พุทธศักราช ๒๕๓๙

๑ บาท
Translation:
Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the Accession to the Throne, Golden Jubilee, 9 June 1996, Thailand

50

Celebrating the 50th Anniversary of the Accession to the Throne, Buddhist Era 2539

1 Baht
Script: Thai
Language: Thai

Edge

Reeded

Categories

Person> Monarch

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1996272,572,000

Historical background

In 1996, Thailand stood at the precipice of a financial catastrophe that would soon engulf much of East Asia. The country's economy, celebrated as an "Asian Tiger" for its rapid, export-led growth, was showing severe underlying strains. A decade of soaring growth had been fueled by massive capital inflows, particularly short-term foreign loans, which created a credit bubble and inflated asset prices, especially in real estate. The Thai baht was pegged at a fixed rate of approximately 25 to the US dollar, a policy intended to ensure stability for trade and investment but which increasingly masked fundamental economic weaknesses.

The situation was characterized by a dangerous triad: a large and growing current account deficit (exceeding 8% of GDP), a significant depletion of foreign exchange reserves as the Bank of Thailand (BOT) defended the peg, and a fragile financial sector burdened by non-performing loans. Export growth had stalled due to a loss of competitiveness—partly because the dollar-pegged baht had appreciated alongside the strong US currency—while China's rising manufacturing prowess presented a new challenge. Speculators, notably international hedge funds, began to recognize the unsustainability of the peg and started mounting massive attacks on the baht through forward contracts and short-selling.

Throughout 1996 and into 1997, the Bank of Thailand engaged in a costly and ultimately futile defense of the currency. It spent billions of dollars in reserves to buy baht and imposed capital controls, but market confidence had evaporated. The desperate measures only highlighted the severity of the crisis. By late 1997, the failed defense led to the baht's float and catastrophic devaluation, triggering the broader Asian Financial Crisis. Thus, 1996 represents the final, fragile year of the "Thai economic miracle," where accumulated vulnerabilities set the stage for a devastating collapse.

Series: Golden Jubilee of Rama IX

2 Bahts obverse
2 Bahts reverse
2 Bahts
1996
5 Bahts obverse
5 Bahts reverse
5 Bahts
1996
20 Bahts obverse
20 Bahts reverse
20 Bahts
1996
150 Bahts obverse
150 Bahts reverse
150 Bahts
1996
300 Bahts obverse
300 Bahts reverse
300 Bahts
1996
10 Bahts obverse
10 Bahts reverse
10 Bahts
1996
1 Baht obverse
1 Baht reverse
1 Baht
1996
🌱 Very Common