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obverse
reverse
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1 New Sheqel – Israel

Circulating commemorative coins
Commemoration: Hanukkah
Israel
Context
Years: 1986–2010
Issuer: Israel Issuer flag
Period:
(since 1948)
Currency:
(since 1986)
Total mintage: 8,339,900
Material
Diameter: 18 mm
Weight: 4 g
Thickness: 2.1 mm
Shape: Round
Composition: Copper-nickel (75% Copper, 25% Nickel)
Technique: Milled
Alignment: Medal alignment
Obverse
OBVERSE ↑
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Reverse
REVERSE ↑
References
KM: #Click to copy to clipboard163
Numista: #9575
Value
Exchange value: 1 ILS = $0.32
Inflation-adjusted value: 10.96 ILS

Obverse

Description:
Lily, "Yehud" in ancient Hebrew, on a Judean coin from the Persian period (6th–4th century BCE).
Inscription:
יהד
Translation:
Judah
Script: Hebrew
Language: Hebrew
Engraver: Victor Huster

Reverse

Description:
"1 New Sheqel" in Hebrew and English; the date in Hebrew; "Israel" in Hebrew, Arabic, and English; and "Hanukka" in Hebrew and English separated by a small candelabrum.
Inscription:
اسرائيل • ISRAEL התשנ׳׳א ישראל

1

שקל

חדש

NEW SHEQEL

HANUKKA חנוכה
Translation:
Israel • ISRAEL Israel 5751

1

Sheqel

New

NEW SHEQEL

Hanukka Hanukkah
Scripts: Arabic, Hebrew, Latin
Languages: English, Hebrew
Engraver: Gabi Neumann

Edge

Plain

Mintings

YearMint MarkMintageQualityCollection
19861,056,000
19871,004,000
198828,800In sets
1988534,000
1989504,000
19902,052,000
19911,104,000
19921,044,000
1993922,000
199412,000In sets
199612,000In sets
19967,500In sets
19977,500In sets
199810,000In sets
19996,000In sets
20007,000In sets
20014,000In sets
20024,000In sets
20033,000In sets
20043,000In sets
20052,500In sets
20063,000In sets
20073,000In sets
20083,000In sets
20091,800In sets
20101,800In sets

Historical background

By the mid-1980s, Israel's economy was in a state of profound crisis, characterized by hyperinflation that had spiraled out of control, peaking at an annual rate of nearly 450% in 1984. This "inflationary whirlwind" was the result of decades of deep structural issues: massive government deficits used to fund extensive social programs, a large defense budget, and settlements, coupled with a heavily indexed economy where wages and prices were automatically linked to the cost-of-living index. This indexing created a vicious cycle, embedding inflation into the very fabric of economic life and eroding public confidence in the Israeli shekel, which had been repeatedly devalued and redenominated.

The situation reached a breaking point, compelling the national unity government of Shimon Peres to implement a radical and risky stabilization plan on July 1, 1985. Known simply as the Economic Stabilization Plan, it was a "shock therapy" program designed in collaboration with prominent American economists. Its key measures included a sharp, one-time devaluation of the shekel followed by a fixed exchange rate peg to the U.S. dollar, deep cuts to government subsidies and spending, a temporary freeze on wages and prices, and a severe tightening of monetary policy. Crucially, the plan was backed by a significant $1.5 billion emergency aid package from the United States.

The 1985 plan was a decisive turning point. It succeeded in abruptly halting hyperinflation, bringing the annual rate down to 20% within a year and restoring basic stability. However, the victory came at a significant short-term cost, including a recession and a spike in unemployment. The legacy of the 1986 currency situation, therefore, is one of a painful but necessary correction that ended an era of economic chaos. It established greater fiscal discipline and shifted Israel toward a more market-oriented economy, laying the essential groundwork for the high-tech boom and sustained growth that would follow in the 1990s and beyond.
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