Logo Title
obverse
reverse
M@verick
Context
Years: 1995–2003
Issuer: Lebanon Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1943)
Currency:
(since 1939)
Total mintage: 10,045,000
Material
Diameter: 23.5 mm
Weight: 5 g
Thickness: 1.82 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Aluminium bronze
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard36
Numista: #6181
Value
Exchange value: 250 LBP

Obverse

Description:
٢٥٠ above a cedar tree, "مصرف لبنان," denomination, and year in Arabic digits.
Inscription:
مصرف لبنان

٢٥٠ ليرة

١٩٩٦
Translation:
Banque du Liban

250 Livres

1996
Script: Arabic
Language: Arabic

Reverse

Description:
Large 250 in ellipse, 'BANQUE DU LIBAN', denomination, and year.
Inscription:
1996

250 LIVRES

BANQUE DU LIBAN
Translation:
1996

250 Pounds

Bank of Lebanon
Script: Latin
Language: French

Edge

Reeded

Categories

Plant> Tree


Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
1995
1995Proof
1996
2000Proof
200010,045,000
2003

Historical background

In 1995, Lebanon's currency, the Lebanese pound (LBP), was in a period of remarkable but artificial stability, a direct result of a fixed exchange rate policy implemented by the central bank, Banque du Liban (BDL), in the aftermath of the civil war (1975-1990). Governor Riad Salameh, appointed in 1993, pegged the pound at 1,507.5 LBP to the US dollar, a rate that would become sacrosanct for nearly three decades. This peg was intended as a cornerstone for reconstruction and economic recovery, designed to curb hyperinflation, restore public confidence in the national currency, and attract crucial foreign investment and diaspora remittances.

This stability, however, was maintained through costly financial engineering. BDL offered exceptionally high interest rates on pound-denominated deposits to attract the dollars needed to back the peg, leading to a rapid increase in public debt as the state borrowed heavily from the local banking sector. The economy became increasingly dollarized in practice, with many major transactions and imports priced in US dollars, while the fixed peg created a growing imbalance between the official exchange rate and underlying economic fundamentals. The model relied on continuous inflows of foreign capital to sustain the country's large current account and budget deficits.

Consequently, 1995 represents a pivotal calm before the storm. The policies solidified that year successfully provided a decade of monetary stability, which fueled a post-war consumer and real estate boom in Beirut. However, they also entrenched the structural weaknesses—a bloated public sector, stagnant productive sectors, and a banking model overly reliant on sovereign debt—that would decades later culminate in a catastrophic financial collapse. The fixed rate of 1,507.5, a symbol of recovery in 1995, would eventually become a stark symbol of a broken economic system when the peg finally unraveled in 2019.

Series: 1995 Lebanon circulation coins

250 Livres obverse
250 Livres reverse
250 Livres
1995-2003
100 Livres obverse
100 Livres reverse
100 Livres
1995-2000
500 Livres obverse
500 Livres reverse
500 Livres
1995-2009
🌱 Very Common