Jamaica's pre-decimal coinage was replaced on September 8, 1969, when the island adopted a decimal currency system — dollars and cents — abandoning the pounds, shillings, and pence it had used since the colonial period. The half penny denomination was an awkward holdover logic: the new cent was defined such that this coin equated to half a cent in purchasing terms, making it functionally marginal from day one. It was withdrawn from circulation relatively quickly as inflation rendered it worthless.
Jamaica's pre-decimal coinage was replaced on September 8, 1969, when the island adopted a decimal currency system — dollars and cents — abandoning the pounds, shillings, and pence it had used since the colonial period. The half penny denomination was an awkward holdover logic: the new cent was defined such that this coin equated to half a cent in purchasing terms, making it functionally marginal from day one. It was withdrawn from circulation relatively quickly as inflation rendered it worthless.