Logo Title
obverse
reverse
brismike CC BY-NC
Context
Years: 2008–2025
Issuer: Italy Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1946)
Currency:
(since 2002)
Total mintage: 536,898,000
Material
Diameter: 23.25 mm
Weight: 7.5 g
Thickness: 2.33 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Bimetallic (Copper-nickel clad center, Nickel brass ring)
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard250
Numista: #6383
Value
Exchange value: 1 EUR = $1.18
Inflation-adjusted value: 1.37 EUR

Obverse

Description:
A reproduction of da Vinci's 1492 Vitruvian Man encircled by Europe's twelve stars.
Inscription:
RI

R 2016

LC
Script: Latin
Engraver: Laura Cretara

Reverse

Description:
A map displays Europe borderless beside its face value.
Inscription:
1 EURO LL
Script: Latin
Engraver: Luc Luycx

Edge

Alternating segments: three smooth, three finely ribbed

Categories

Map

Mints

NameMark
RomeR

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
2008R40,000BU
2008R135,040,000
2008R5,000Proof
2009R145,000,000
2009R43,000BU
2009R5,500Proof
2010R96,600,000
2010R38,000BU
2010R5,000Proof
2011R87,954,500
2011R40,000BU
2011R5,500Proof
2012R35,000BU
2012R3,990Proof
2012R4,971,010
2013R2,820Proof
2013R4,975,180
2013R35,000BU
2014R4,969,000
2014R27,000BU
2014R4,000Proof
2015R5,000,000
2015R24,000BU
2015R3,000Proof
2016R3,000,000
2016R23,000BU
2016R3,000Proof
2017R3,000,000
2017R23,000BU
2017R3,000Proof
2018R977,000
2018R20,000BU
2018R3,000Proof
2019R958,000
2019R40,000BU
2019R2,000Proof
2020R978,000
2020R22,000BU
2020R2,000Proof
2021R1,500Proof
2021R1,000,000
2021R16,000BU
2022R979,500
2022R18,000BU
2022R2,500Proof
2023R977,000
2023R4,000Proof
2023R19,000BU
2024R39,981,000
2024R15,000BU
2024R4,000Proof
2025RBU

Historical background

In 2008, Italy entered the global financial crisis already burdened by deep-seated economic vulnerabilities, but with a unique monetary shield: as a member of the Eurozone, it used the euro. This meant the country did not face a direct currency crisis or speculative attacks on the lira, as it had in the 1990s. However, the single currency also removed key national tools for adjustment. The Bank of Italy could not devalue the currency to boost competitiveness, nor could it set independent interest rates tailored to Italy's low-growth economy. Instead, monetary policy was set by the European Central Bank (ECB) for the entire Eurozone, which often did not align with Italy's specific needs, particularly as the crisis intensified.

The core of Italy's "currency situation" was therefore a competitiveness crisis within the Eurozone. Years of stagnant productivity, rigid labor markets, and rising unit labor costs had eroded its export competitiveness against core Eurozone partners like Germany. This loss of internal competitiveness, often called a "real exchange rate" misalignment, resulted in persistent trade deficits and sluggish growth. The euro acted as a straitjacket, locking Italy into a high-value currency regime that magnified these structural weaknesses. As the global crisis triggered a recession, these long-standing problems erupted into a sovereign debt crisis, with investor fears over high public debt (over 100% of GDP) leading to soaring borrowing costs for the Italian government.

Consequently, by the end of 2008, the situation was one of acute tension within the monetary union. Italy was reliant on the stability of the euro but was increasingly seen as a potential weak link, testing the solidarity of the Eurozone. The crisis shifted focus from currency markets to bond markets, where spreads between Italian and German government bonds (the BTP-Bund spread) widened dramatically. This marked the beginning of the European sovereign debt crisis, where Italy's struggle was not with its own currency collapsing, but with the risk of being priced out of the very currency union it depended upon, prompting eventual interventions by the ECB to preserve the euro's integrity.

Series: 2008 Italy circulation coins

10 Euro Cents obverse
10 Euro Cents reverse
10 Euro Cents
2008-2025
20 Euro Cents obverse
20 Euro Cents reverse
20 Euro Cents
2008-2025
50 Euro Cents obverse
50 Euro Cents reverse
50 Euro Cents
2008-2025
1 Euro obverse
1 Euro reverse
1 Euro
2008-2025
2 Euro obverse
2 Euro reverse
2 Euro
2008-2025
🌱 Very Common