The Bank of Mauritius gained full central bank authority in 1967, the same year the island achieved independence from Britain, and the rupee coinage that followed deliberately retained familiar subcontinental denominations — a nod to the Indian indentured labor history that shaped the island's demographic and economic foundations. This half rupee continued essentially unchanged across three and a half decades, a span covering multiple governments and a significant 2008 financial crisis that put real pressure on the currency.
The nickel-plated steel composition replaced earlier cupro-nickel, a cost-driven change common across small island economies managing tight mint budgets in the 1980s.
The Bank of Mauritius gained full central bank authority in 1967, the same year the island achieved independence from Britain, and the rupee coinage that followed deliberately retained familiar subcontinental denominations — a nod to the Indian indentured labor history that shaped the island's demographic and economic foundations. This half rupee continued essentially unchanged across three and a half decades, a span covering multiple governments and a significant 2008 financial crisis that put real pressure on the currency.
The nickel-plated steel composition replaced earlier cupro-nickel, a cost-driven change common across small island economies managing tight mint budgets in the 1980s.