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obverse
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50000 Lira – Turkey

Non-circulating coins
Commemoration: FAO - Food Security
Turkey
Context
Year: 1999
Issuer: Turkey Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1923)
Currency:
(1923—2005)
Demonetization: 1 January 2005
Total mintage: 1,002,000
Material
Diameter: 20 mm
Weight: 1.5 g
Thickness: 2 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Aluminium
Magnetic: No
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Coin alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↓
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard1103
Numista: #6865
Value
Exchange value: 50000 TRL
Inflation-adjusted value: 8982613.00 TRL

Obverse

Description:
Wine seller
Inscription:
TÜRKİYE CUMHURİYETİ

50.000

LİRA

1999

d
Translation:
REPUBLIC OF TURKEY

50,000

LIRA

1999
Script: Latin
Language: Turkish

Reverse

Description:
Bronze Age depiction of Hurrian sky god Teshub.
Inscription:
XXI CENTURY.FAO. FOOD SECURITY
Script: Latin

Edge

Plain

Mints

NameMark
Turkish State Mint

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
19991,002,000

Historical background

In 1999, Turkey's currency situation was defined by a fragile and crisis-prone economic environment, culminating in the final, turbulent year before a major stabilization program. The Turkish Lira (TRL) was under severe pressure due to a combination of high public debt, chronic double-digit inflation (averaging around 65% annually), and massive short-term borrowing by the government to finance its deficits. This created a vicious cycle where high inflation led to a rapidly depreciating lira, and the government's reliance on high-interest domestic debt to attract capital only exacerbated the fiscal burden and market instability.

The core vulnerability was a deeply flawed exchange rate regime. Following a 1994 financial crisis, Turkey had adopted a "crawling peg" system, where the lira was loosely tied to a basket of currencies but allowed to devalue at a pre-announced rate. However, this rate consistently lagged behind actual inflation, leading to a significant overvaluation of the lira. This overvaluation encouraged excessive imports, widened the current account deficit, and created a speculative bubble, as markets increasingly believed a large, discrete devaluation was inevitable.

By late 1999, the situation had become untenable. Under the guidance of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the government designed a radical disinflation program centered on a new exchange rate-based anchor. Announced in December 1999 and launched in January 2000, this program committed to a pre-fixed, rigid crawling peg (transitioning to a full peg in 2001) to break inflationary expectations. Thus, the currency situation at the end of 1999 was one of precarious imbalance, setting the stage for a high-stakes gamble on a new monetary regime intended to end decades of instability.
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