Logo Title
obverse
reverse
Numista CC BY
Context
Years: 1990–1995
Issuer: South Africa Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1961)
Currency:
(since 1961)
Total mintage: 177,090,894
Material
Diameter: 22 mm
Weight: 5 g
Thickness: 1.9 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Steel (15% Plating-plated Tin)
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
flip
Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard137
Numista: #832
Value
Exchange value: 0.50 ZAR = $0.03
Inflation-adjusted value: 4.63 ZAR

Obverse

Description:
South Africa's coat of arms, featuring the motto "Ex Unitate Vires" and the country's name in Afrikaans and English, enclosed in a nonagon.
Inscription:
SUID-AFRIKA · SOUTH AFRICA

EX UNITATE VIRES

1994

ALS
Translation:
South Africa

Out of Unity, Strength

1994
Script: Latin
Languages: Afrikaans, Latin

Reverse

Description:
Bird-of-paradise flower (Strelitzia reginae), a South African native also called the crane flower, inside a nonagon.
Inscription:
50c GC
Script: Latin
Engraver: Grant Cogle

Edge

Reeded

Mints

NameMark
Pretoria
South African Mint

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
199012,230BU
199010,239Proof
199012,200
199123,988,200
199115,000BU
199112,000Proof
199215,087BU
199210,263Proof
199217,989,700
199364,992,200
199310,902BU
19937,790Proof
199411,994,100
19946,786BU
19945,804Proof
19955,816Proof
199557,994,100
19958,477BU

Historical background

In 1990, South Africa's currency, the Rand, operated within a complex and strained economic environment shaped by apartheid and international isolation. The country was facing severe economic sanctions, capital flight, and a debt crisis that had forced a unilateral moratorium on foreign debt repayments in 1985. Consequently, the financial rand, a dual-exchange rate mechanism introduced in that period, was still in effect. This system created a separation between commercial and financial rands, artificially controlling capital flows and creating a significant discount for non-resident investors seeking to repatriate funds, reflecting the high political risk premium demanded by international markets.

Domestically, the economy was in recession, grappling with high inflation (around 14%), stagnant growth, and rising unemployment. The Reserve Bank maintained a relatively high interest rate policy in an attempt to curb inflation and support the currency, but confidence was fundamentally low. The historic political developments of 1990—including the unbanning of liberation movements and Nelson Mandela's release—introduced profound uncertainty about the nation's future. While raising hopes for long-term stability, the immediate effect was increased volatility, as markets anxiously weighed the risks of a turbulent transition against the potential for a more inclusive and internationally accepted economy.

Thus, the currency situation was one of controlled vulnerability. The Rand's value was heavily managed and propped up by the dual-exchange rate system, masking its true market weakness. It was a currency under pressure, symbolizing an economy at a crossroads: constrained by the legacy of apartheid financial structures yet on the brink of a political transformation that would eventually necessitate its full reintegration into the global financial system and the abandonment of the financial rand mechanism in 1995.

Series: 1990 South Africa circulation coins

1 Cent obverse
1 Cent reverse
1 Cent
1990-1995
2 Cents obverse
2 Cents reverse
2 Cents
1990-1995
5 Cents obverse
5 Cents reverse
5 Cents
1990-1995
10 Cents obverse
10 Cents reverse
10 Cents
1990-1995
20 Cents obverse
20 Cents reverse
20 Cents
1990-1995
50 Cents obverse
50 Cents reverse
50 Cents
1990-1995
🌱 Very Common